I'm so confused. I always thought verbuňk was a truly Czech dance. Now I heard from one source it's actually from Hungary, from another source it's actually Slovak and from a third that the name comes from the German word "Werbung" (for recrution). I'm German and other than the Schuhplattler, which is NOTHING alike to any Slavic dance I don't think Germans have any dances that are only 1% this beautiful and wild and powerful(and Austria neither). So where does this dance come from originally and can you even say it's a Czech dance? Or do you have to say it's a Slovak/Hungarian dance only danced by Czechs? I've been trying for so long to find a wild Czech dance, not only Polka and stuff but dances like verbunk or odzemek and now I'm not even sure they actually are Czech...
Vynikající!
Moc šikovný šohaj 😊
Přenádherné❤
I'm so confused. I always thought verbuňk was a truly Czech dance. Now I heard from one source it's actually from Hungary, from another source it's actually Slovak and from a third that the name comes from the German word "Werbung" (for recrution). I'm German and other than the Schuhplattler, which is NOTHING alike to any Slavic dance I don't think Germans have any dances that are only 1% this beautiful and wild and powerful(and Austria neither). So where does this dance come from originally and can you even say it's a Czech dance? Or do you have to say it's a Slovak/Hungarian dance only danced by Czechs? I've been trying for so long to find a wild Czech dance, not only Polka and stuff but dances like verbunk or odzemek and now I'm not even sure they actually are Czech...
drive.google.com/file/d/1e_F88Wj1ED9R8W3TMu4CZw1Izx7lqE8S/view?usp=drive_link
Originated in moravia, the name is derived from german because a lot of people used to speak it here.
Moravské kung-fu:)
Tak Staňa, no:)