For those saying that it sounds "Arabic" or "Turkish", This is traditional Balkanic music. It's not Arabic or the such, that is because this is ultimately traced back to Greece, which influenced both Turkish, Arabic & middle-eastern/oriental music. The idea that it was brought by Turks to begin with is nullified, seeing as it dates back to the Hellenistic Era. Ultimately, these are the reasons why this singing style is present in Old Roman Chants, Byzantine Chants, Orthodox Chants but also Islamic Chants and traditional/folk songs of the region.
Considering Anton Pann originated in Ottoman Bulgaria. the influences are typical. This music is not the typical folklore of the populace, it is evidently not shepherd music.
@lunasicerul I live in the south, this isn't necessarily the case. This is urban music either way, so ... it is the urban music style of Phanariot era Wallachia.
Melodia este in stilul.cintecelor lui.Anton Pann Seamana putin cu Bordeias bordei.bordei Mi a evocat.cintecele de pe la 1820.incoace Cu putin " iz fanariot" evoca povestile de la inceputul sec 19 Tatal meu fiind compozitor am studiat mult muzica desi nu mi sm facut meserie din asta Deci asa am simtit eu acest cintec
Fie ca vorbim de perioada fanarioata sau cea reala , reproducerea este una superba. Multa lume nu intelege cam cum ar suna muzica medievala valaha de secol 14-13. Ei bine cam asa si evident asta sub puternica influenta bizantina de la Sud.
Ai greșit anii de domnie Romanian Aquila , Mircea cel Bătrân a fost domn al Tarii Românești între secolele xiv-xv mai exact între anii 1386-1418 , iar în timpul sau , Tara romaneasca a cunoscut marea întindere cuprinzând teritoriul original , precum și parti din Transilvania ( Amlas, Făgăraș, Cetatea Bologa ) , Banatul de Severin ( parte a județului Caraș-Severin de astazi) , Sudul Basarabiei, Muntenia ,Oltenia ,Dobrogea și Valea Timocului ( Serbia de astăzi ).
Mai exact, dupa ce am dat un research, el a avut 2 domnii, prima intre 1386-1394 (unele articole spun si 1395), iari a doua a fost intre 1397-1418. Dar multumesc ca mi-ai atras atentia!
Problema e că unii consideră domn și pe Vlad Uzurpatorul, urcat pe tron cu susținere turco-polonă în timpul războiului cu Baiazid, autoritatea lui Mircea era limitată la niște loialiști în câteva locuri în perioada Octombrie 1394/Mai 1395 - Decembrie 1396/Ianuarie 1397, el fiind retras în Ardeal, la tratative cu ungurii.
@@CantecePatriotice Ba nu, Transilvania și Moldova încă erau țări separate, doar că aveau același voievod. Țara Românească a lui Mihai Viteazul nu includea Făgărașul, Amlașul, Banatul de Severin, Podunavia și cea mai mare parte a Dobrogei
Romania as a country may have not existed but Romanian people still existed for a long time. We just were in control of the Ottomans and Austro Hungarians but our language, culture and ethnicity still existed in medieval times.
Romanians* Vlach is an exonym ( = a name used exclusively by foreigners). Romanians (be they moldovan, transilvanian or wallachian) called themselves romanians. Wallachia itself is an exonym. Its romanian name (the native one used by its inhabitants în their native tongue) was "Țara Românească" (meaning "Land of the romans/romanians"). Moldova too appears as "Țara Românească a Moldovei" in internal documents.
@@claudiu8426 Yes thats why im calling them all Romanian. It doesnt matter what names others gave us. The Romanian people/ethnicity existed since long ago.
Domnul României Mircea cel Bătrân C-o suită mica se plimbă-n tărâmu (x2) Ca să afle păsul bietului plugar Și să-i îndulcească traiul cel amar (x2) Iată că ajunge la o cârciumioara Unde vindea vinul Lelea Mărioară (x2) Suita domnească ordinul primește Să plece-nainte iar el se oprește (x2) - Măi cârciumăriță, dragă Mărioară, Ia fă bine, leică, ieși puțin afară! (x2) Lelea Mărioară iată-n prag s-arată Și al ei ochi negru pe domn îl săgeată (x2) - Mai ai pelin roșu? - Am boierul meu! - Ia să-mi scoți o oală ca să gust și eu. (x2) Măria într-o clipă cu oala a venit Și-apoi Craiul Mircea astfel i-a vorbit: (x2) - Ia spune-mi tu mie, dragă Mărioară Cam de câtă vreme ești tu vaduvioară? (x2) - De 2 ani aproape sunt fără bărbat. - Și te lasă-n pace flăcaii din sat? (x2) - Niciun flăcău nu e ca bărbatul meu Ce muri în oaste pentru neamul său!(x2) - Cum îl chemă oare pe bărbatul tau, Crișul sau Crișanul puișor de zmău?(x2) - Cunosc eu un Criș, dragă Mărioară Un crai ce se luptă pentru astă țară, (x2) De când avea numai 16 ani Astăzi poate tocmai vreo 60 de ani. (x2) - Vrei tu Mărioară a te mărita Cu Crișul acesta eu te-oi cununa. (x2) - Vârlitam de mine, dar ce am greșit Să-mi leg eu viața de un om zbârcit? (x2) - Iți vei schimba gândul când îl vei vedea Ia mai dă-mi o oală de vin, draga mea! (x2) Maria aduce o oala de vin Și Mircea o suflă ca pe-a de pelin. (x2) Și o sărutare Mircea îi cerea, Lelea Mărioara frumos i-o dădea. (x2) Apoi ca un fulger pe cal o răpi Și cu ea călare în clipă pieri. (x2) English Mircea The Elder The Lord of Romania, Mircea The Elder,1 Is walking through the lands with a small cohort, (x2) To find out what's ailing the poor peasants And make their life a little bit better. (x2) Look, he arrived at a small pub Where Mary is selling her wine. (x2) The cohort recieves order to go on ahead While He's stopping there. (x2) - Inkeeper, dear Mary, Come on, come here for a bit! (x2) Mary shows up in the door And sharply glances at Him with her black eyes (X2) - Do you still have red pelin wine? - Yes, my lord! - Get me a pot, will you, i wanna taste some. (x2) Mary came imediatly with a pot of wine And King Mircea spoke to her: (x2) - Tell me, dear Mary How long have you been a widow? (x2) - It's almost 2 years since i'm without a man. - But the lads are not interested in you? (x2) - No lad is like my man Who died in the army for his people! (x2) - What's the name of your man, Criș or Crișan, fierce as a dragon? (x2) - I know a Criș, dear Mary, He's a King that is fighting for this country (x2) Since he was only 16 years old, Now he's like 60 years old. (x2) - Mary, If you want to marry I'll wed you to this King. (x2) - Poor me, what did i do wrong To be tied to this wrinkly man? (x2) - You will change your mind when you will see him, Give me one more pot of wine, my
Aquila, poate dacă găsești muzică compusă de Dimitrie Cantemir mai ok, poate cu versuri, dar nu știu dacă are în repertoriul său, ar fi foarte mișto. E mai cunoscut în Turcia și Rusia decât la noi din păcate.
Dimitrie Cantemir mare Român a fost, păcat că nu este atât de cunoscut. Dar în Ruzia este cunoscut că vor să-o folosească ca propagandă că "uite domne că Moldovenii și Rușii sunt prieteni buni"
I actually don't think when Mircea writes "ambele parti ale Podunaviei" Eng: both sides of Podunavia (when writing which regions he rules over) is Timok Valley. The reason being is that first, Timok Valley wouldn't be of any strategic values and he writes "on both sides" and that has no meaning when it is about the region of Timok Valley in Serbia. Now if we look at coins from Second Bulgarian Empire (also known Vlacho-Bulgar Empire) is that the Emperors portraits themselves in Byzantine style clothing, which Mircea the Great is the first one in Wallachia to do the same thing. I believe that Podunavia might be an old name for the Danube River and that Mircea was the overlord of the Bulgarian Empire or he claimed to be one, which hence might make Wallachia even bigger than we thought🤔
The only lands over the Danube he is attested to control was Dobrogea, inherited from the ruler Dobrotici and assumingly had suzerainty over the Timoc region, where is also assumed that he built the KaraVlași (black/north Vlachs) church, either after the Battle of Rovine or after the Battle of Negotin, against the Ottomans, in memory of the Christians who died in the Battle of Rovine or Negotin.
@@Sofia-0001 The Serbian despot also documented that he ruled over the Timok region in the same time as Mircea did, so it is unlikely that Mircea ruled over the same region as another sovereign ruler. The name "Podunavia" is of slavic origin meaning "Land's over the river/Danube river". It could suggest that Mircea saw himself sovereign over the former Vlachian Empire/Bulgarian, as Mircea's father, Radu the First (nicknamed the "wise" by the Poles) mentioned himself as ruler over Vidin and Oblast of Vidin. In an Italian chronicle, Radu is mentioned as ruler over "Bulgaria", likely referring to Tsardom of Tarnovo. Mircea, might have inherited the same idea, but just because he claimed to be ruler over the lands beyond the river danube, doesn't mean he did, as ruler's usually claimed titles just for show of power. As even the Hungarian King's claimed to be ruler's over the Vlachian Empire when in reality they weren't...
@@InAeternumRomaMater Hai sa ne concentram pe fapte istorice nu fantezii nationaliste. The Serbian despot died at Rovine, along all the other Balkan rulers. Is assumed that Mircea gained control over the Danube while the power struggle lasted in the Ottoman empire. But not as you claim, of the entire Bulgaria, because there the Ottomans were still in charge. Trnovo, Vidin, Sofia were always under Ottoman control all this time and Dobrogea was taken by the Ottomans in 1417 and Mircea had to recognize Ottoman suzerainty , pay a modical tribute and send a son. He managed though to maintain full authority, reinforced the treaty of Nicople, where the Ottomans committed not to impose Islam or to build Mosques on Christian land, or to interfere in the administration and laws of the country. I would strongly challenge the Pod Dunavian origin and etymology as Slavic, given the very Latin term Podium - to Stand On, on Top Of, and the river Dunavia as a direct Dacian, Getae name. A compound of Duna - parallel shores and AB, AP, AV, AVi, AVE cognate of Water in some PIE languages. So doesn't stand any chance as Slavic Iranian or German construct, even German clearly adopted the name of Donau from some other Satemized IEs, so is clearly a distinct IE form. in my view related to above mentioned IE languages. And here should give credit, appeal to languages that feature a consistently and distinctively common, even restrained vocabulary, with Romanian. So I would go for a 100 Dacian origin of Dunavia and even Pod could be Dacian cognate of Latin Podium.
@@Sofia-0001 "Let's not get nationalistic here" And then you start with a whole dacopathic propaganda. In what university of linguistics did you go to? Because I assume you must have had a great degree to start assuming the origin's of the word. However, I never stated that Mircea (or Ioan Mircea) ruled over whole Bulgaria (aka Vlachia), I stated what the Italian chronicle might have referred to Tsardom of Tarnovo when saying that Mircea's father, Radu the Wise/First was ruler of "Bulgaria".
"And then you start with a whole dacopathic propaganda. In what university of linguistics did you go to?" London, Bucharest, Michigan, many renowned world libraries, history, linguistics archeology, anthropology museums and sites, genetic evolution of populations since Neolithic to date. And you? Can you read different Latin stages? How about ancient Greek? Not to mention Anatolian, Paleo Balkan, PII, PB. One simple Slavopathic dummy traitor, who buys any propaganda, without proper knowledge. I spent over 30 years on research and telling you elementary linguistics: 'pod' root = 'base' in PIE. Paleo Balkan and Anatolian languages, since more than 4800 years ago, through which also entered Ancient Greek and Pre Latin. In your simplicity you even buy the Slavic origin crap of Latin Podium, so how would you know. Not to mention the assumingly Latin inherited preposition "pe" "pă", also retained iby Slavic as 'po', of so called Romanian origin, in fact a much older linguistic family, than Daco-Thracian and Latin.
How do you know this song dates back to the times of Mircea the Great. He was later called by the chroniclers, Mircea the Old to differentiate from another Mircea who reigned over Wallachia much later. I will greatly appreciate if you will answer my question.
'The Elder' appellative was given to Mircea I Bassarab, to distinguish him between the later rulers of same name. The legend refers to Mircea I, who ruled for 27 years. He is also known to have had many illegitimate sons. Later rulers with a name of Mircea ruled for few years and didn't get old.
Asta nu e folclor vechi romanesc, e o inventie a unui grup de lautari care vor sa para autentici. Nu exista nici un cantec vechi care sa inceapa cu "domnul Romaniei, Mircea cel batran"...
@Gigi-ho2qk ce auzim aici nu e folclor autentic, este o facatura foarte noua a unui grup de tineri entuziasti. Daca nu ai aflat inca, Mircea nu a fost "domnul Romaniei" ci al Tarei Romanesti. Pe vremea domniei lui, intre 1394 si 1418, Romania nu exista. Iar folclorul romanesc nu e nici foarte vechi nici foarte diversificat.
For those saying that it sounds "Arabic" or "Turkish", This is traditional Balkanic music.
It's not Arabic or the such, that is because this is ultimately traced back to Greece, which influenced both Turkish, Arabic & middle-eastern/oriental music.
The idea that it was brought by Turks to begin with is nullified, seeing as it dates back to the Hellenistic Era.
Ultimately, these are the reasons why this singing style is present in Old Roman Chants, Byzantine Chants, Orthodox Chants but also Islamic Chants and traditional/folk songs of the region.
Considering Anton Pann originated in Ottoman Bulgaria. the influences are typical. This music is not the typical folklore of the populace, it is evidently not shepherd music.
@lunasicerul I live in the south, this isn't necessarily the case. This is urban music either way, so ... it is the urban music style of Phanariot era Wallachia.
@lunasicerul Înțeleg ce vrei să zici dar nu-i chiar același lucru.
@@sticlavoda5632
Its byzantine, not arab music.
It uses the same structure as orthodox church music.
@@r3ge Ottomans are not Arab. Have you never heard Ottoman music?
❤👍😎👏🥲👋Hi from Sofia , Bulgaria.
This is a certified Romanian classic
Melodia este in stilul.cintecelor lui.Anton Pann
Seamana putin cu Bordeias bordei.bordei
Mi a evocat.cintecele de pe la 1820.incoace
Cu putin " iz fanariot" evoca povestile de la inceputul sec 19
Tatal meu fiind compozitor am studiat mult muzica desi nu mi sm facut meserie din asta
Deci asa am simtit eu acest cintec
Fie ca vorbim de perioada fanarioata sau cea reala , reproducerea este una superba. Multa lume nu intelege cam cum ar suna muzica medievala valaha de secol 14-13. Ei bine cam asa si evident asta sub puternica influenta bizantina de la Sud.
Anton Pann 💙💛❤️
❤from Serbia!
☦️🇷🇴❤️🇷🇸☦️
KOSOVO
Ai greșit anii de domnie Romanian Aquila , Mircea cel Bătrân a fost domn al Tarii Românești între secolele xiv-xv mai exact între anii 1386-1418 , iar în timpul sau , Tara romaneasca a cunoscut marea întindere cuprinzând teritoriul original , precum și parti din Transilvania ( Amlas, Făgăraș, Cetatea Bologa ) , Banatul de Severin ( parte a județului Caraș-Severin de astazi) , Sudul Basarabiei, Muntenia ,Oltenia ,Dobrogea și Valea Timocului ( Serbia de astăzi ).
Mai exact, dupa ce am dat un research, el a avut 2 domnii, prima intre 1386-1394 (unele articole spun si 1395), iari a doua a fost intre 1397-1418. Dar multumesc ca mi-ai atras atentia!
Problema e că unii consideră domn și pe Vlad Uzurpatorul, urcat pe tron cu susținere turco-polonă în timpul războiului cu Baiazid, autoritatea lui Mircea era limitată la niște loialiști în câteva locuri în perioada Octombrie 1394/Mai 1395 - Decembrie 1396/Ianuarie 1397, el fiind retras în Ardeal, la tratative cu ungurii.
Gresit Mihai Viteazul a facut ca mai mare intindere a Valahiei
@@CantecePatriotice Ba nu, Transilvania și Moldova încă erau țări separate, doar că aveau același voievod. Țara Românească a lui Mihai Viteazul nu includea Făgărașul, Amlașul, Banatul de Severin, Podunavia și cea mai mare parte a Dobrogei
nu a grest deloc !
Such a nice song😊 I love Romanian culture very much! Greetings from Turkia 🇹🇷🇷🇴
❤ 2:55
Va mulțumesc pentru tot ceea ce
Romania as a country may have not existed but Romanian people still existed for a long time. We just were in control of the Ottomans and Austro Hungarians but our language, culture and ethnicity still existed in medieval times.
Romanians*
Vlach is an exonym ( = a name used exclusively by foreigners).
Romanians (be they moldovan, transilvanian or wallachian) called themselves romanians.
Wallachia itself is an exonym. Its romanian name (the native one used by its inhabitants în their native tongue) was "Țara Românească" (meaning "Land of the romans/romanians").
Moldova too appears as "Țara Românească a Moldovei" in internal documents.
@@claudiu8426 Yes thats why im calling them all Romanian. It doesnt matter what names others gave us. The Romanian people/ethnicity existed since long ago.
Wow amazing 😊
Domnul României Mircea cel Bătrân
C-o suită mica se plimbă-n tărâmu (x2)
Ca să afle păsul bietului plugar
Și să-i îndulcească traiul cel amar (x2)
Iată că ajunge la o cârciumioara
Unde vindea vinul Lelea Mărioară (x2)
Suita domnească ordinul primește
Să plece-nainte iar el se oprește (x2)
- Măi cârciumăriță, dragă Mărioară,
Ia fă bine, leică, ieși puțin afară! (x2)
Lelea Mărioară iată-n prag s-arată
Și al ei ochi negru pe domn îl săgeată (x2)
- Mai ai pelin roșu?
- Am boierul meu!
- Ia să-mi scoți o oală ca să gust și eu. (x2)
Măria într-o clipă cu oala a venit
Și-apoi Craiul Mircea astfel i-a vorbit: (x2)
- Ia spune-mi tu mie, dragă Mărioară
Cam de câtă vreme ești tu vaduvioară? (x2)
- De 2 ani aproape sunt fără bărbat.
- Și te lasă-n pace flăcaii din sat? (x2)
- Niciun flăcău nu e ca bărbatul meu
Ce muri în oaste pentru neamul său!(x2)
- Cum îl chemă oare pe bărbatul tau,
Crișul sau Crișanul puișor de zmău?(x2)
- Cunosc eu un Criș, dragă Mărioară
Un crai ce se luptă pentru astă țară, (x2)
De când avea numai 16 ani
Astăzi poate tocmai vreo 60 de ani. (x2)
- Vrei tu Mărioară a te mărita
Cu Crișul acesta eu te-oi cununa. (x2)
- Vârlitam de mine, dar ce am greșit
Să-mi leg eu viața de un om zbârcit? (x2)
- Iți vei schimba gândul când îl vei vedea
Ia mai dă-mi o oală de vin, draga mea! (x2)
Maria aduce o oala de vin
Și Mircea o suflă ca pe-a de pelin. (x2)
Și o sărutare Mircea îi cerea,
Lelea Mărioara frumos i-o dădea. (x2)
Apoi ca un fulger pe cal o răpi
Și cu ea călare în clipă pieri. (x2)
English
Mircea The Elder
The Lord of Romania, Mircea The Elder,1
Is walking through the lands with a small cohort, (x2)
To find out what's ailing the poor peasants
And make their life a little bit better. (x2)
Look, he arrived at a small pub
Where Mary is selling her wine. (x2)
The cohort recieves order to go on ahead
While He's stopping there. (x2)
- Inkeeper, dear Mary,
Come on, come here for a bit! (x2)
Mary shows up in the door
And sharply glances at Him with her black eyes (X2)
- Do you still have red pelin wine?
- Yes, my lord!
- Get me a pot, will you, i wanna taste some. (x2)
Mary came imediatly with a pot of wine
And King Mircea spoke to her: (x2)
- Tell me, dear Mary
How long have you been a widow? (x2)
- It's almost 2 years since i'm without a man.
- But the lads are not interested in you? (x2)
- No lad is like my man
Who died in the army for his people! (x2)
- What's the name of your man,
Criș or Crișan, fierce as a dragon? (x2)
- I know a Criș, dear Mary,
He's a King that is fighting for this country (x2)
Since he was only 16 years old,
Now he's like 60 years old. (x2)
- Mary, If you want to marry
I'll wed you to this King. (x2)
- Poor me, what did i do wrong
To be tied to this wrinkly man? (x2)
- You will change your mind when you will see him,
Give me one more pot of wine, my
Romania nu exista atunci
@@fpostolacheThat sounds about right.
@@4ft8y7yyggyyy.8yreally ?!
♥️🇷🇴
❤️❤️❤️❤️
😍
Aquila, poate dacă găsești muzică compusă de Dimitrie Cantemir mai ok, poate cu versuri, dar nu știu dacă are în repertoriul său, ar fi foarte mișto. E mai cunoscut în Turcia și Rusia decât la noi din păcate.
O sa ma interesez
@@romanianaquila578 Ar fi frumos sa faci si pentru "la poarta la stefan voda".
@@sticlavoda5632 asta e mai mult colind, ar merge în timpul sărbătorilor de iarnă.
@@George-romanul1918 Pai e colind.
Dimitrie Cantemir mare Român a fost, păcat că nu este atât de cunoscut. Dar în Ruzia este cunoscut că vor să-o folosească ca propagandă că "uite domne că Moldovenii și Rușii sunt prieteni buni"
👋👋👋👋👋👋👋🤟🤟🌹🌹
❤👍
I actually don't think when Mircea writes "ambele parti ale Podunaviei" Eng: both sides of Podunavia (when writing which regions he rules over) is Timok Valley. The reason being is that first, Timok Valley wouldn't be of any strategic values and he writes "on both sides" and that has no meaning when it is about the region of Timok Valley in Serbia. Now if we look at coins from Second Bulgarian Empire (also known Vlacho-Bulgar Empire) is that the Emperors portraits themselves in Byzantine style clothing, which Mircea the Great is the first one in Wallachia to do the same thing. I believe that Podunavia might be an old name for the Danube River and that Mircea was the overlord of the Bulgarian Empire or he claimed to be one, which hence might make Wallachia even bigger than we thought🤔
The only lands over the Danube he is attested to control was Dobrogea, inherited from the ruler Dobrotici and assumingly had suzerainty over the Timoc region, where is also assumed that he built the KaraVlași (black/north Vlachs) church, either after the Battle of Rovine or after the Battle of Negotin, against the Ottomans, in memory of the Christians who died in the Battle of Rovine or Negotin.
@@Sofia-0001 The Serbian despot also documented that he ruled over the Timok region in the same time as Mircea did, so it is unlikely that Mircea ruled over the same region as another sovereign ruler. The name "Podunavia" is of slavic origin meaning "Land's over the river/Danube river". It could suggest that Mircea saw himself sovereign over the former Vlachian Empire/Bulgarian, as Mircea's father, Radu the First (nicknamed the "wise" by the Poles) mentioned himself as ruler over Vidin and Oblast of Vidin. In an Italian chronicle, Radu is mentioned as ruler over "Bulgaria", likely referring to Tsardom of Tarnovo. Mircea, might have inherited the same idea, but just because he claimed to be ruler over the lands beyond the river danube, doesn't mean he did, as ruler's usually claimed titles just for show of power. As even the Hungarian King's claimed to be ruler's over the Vlachian Empire when in reality they weren't...
@@InAeternumRomaMater Hai sa ne concentram pe fapte istorice nu fantezii nationaliste. The Serbian despot died at Rovine, along all the other Balkan rulers. Is assumed that Mircea gained control over the Danube while the power struggle lasted in the Ottoman empire. But not as you claim, of the entire Bulgaria, because there the Ottomans were still in charge. Trnovo, Vidin, Sofia were always under Ottoman control all this time and Dobrogea was taken by the Ottomans in 1417 and Mircea had to recognize Ottoman suzerainty , pay a modical tribute and send a son. He managed though to maintain full authority, reinforced the treaty of Nicople, where the Ottomans committed not to impose Islam or to build Mosques on Christian land, or to interfere in the administration and laws of the country.
I would strongly challenge the Pod Dunavian origin and etymology as Slavic, given the very Latin term Podium - to Stand On, on Top Of, and the river Dunavia as a direct Dacian, Getae name. A compound of Duna - parallel shores and AB, AP, AV, AVi, AVE cognate of Water in some PIE languages. So doesn't stand any chance as Slavic Iranian or German construct, even German clearly adopted the name of Donau from some other Satemized IEs, so is clearly a distinct IE form. in my view related to above mentioned IE languages. And here should give credit, appeal to languages that feature a consistently and distinctively common, even restrained vocabulary, with Romanian. So I would go for a 100 Dacian origin of Dunavia and even Pod could be Dacian cognate of Latin Podium.
@@Sofia-0001 "Let's not get nationalistic here"
And then you start with a whole dacopathic propaganda. In what university of linguistics did you go to? Because I assume you must have had a great degree to start assuming the origin's of the word. However, I never stated that Mircea (or Ioan Mircea) ruled over whole Bulgaria (aka Vlachia), I stated what the Italian chronicle might have referred to Tsardom of Tarnovo when saying that Mircea's father, Radu the Wise/First was ruler of "Bulgaria".
"And then you start with a whole dacopathic propaganda. In what university of linguistics did you go to?" London, Bucharest, Michigan, many renowned world libraries, history, linguistics archeology, anthropology museums and sites, genetic evolution of populations since Neolithic to date. And you? Can you read different Latin stages? How about ancient Greek? Not to mention Anatolian, Paleo Balkan, PII, PB. One simple Slavopathic dummy traitor, who buys any propaganda, without proper knowledge. I spent over 30 years on research and telling you elementary linguistics: 'pod' root = 'base' in PIE. Paleo Balkan and Anatolian languages, since more than 4800 years ago, through which also entered Ancient Greek and Pre Latin. In your simplicity you even buy the Slavic origin crap of Latin Podium, so how would you know. Not to mention the assumingly Latin inherited preposition "pe" "pă", also retained iby Slavic as 'po', of so called Romanian origin, in fact a much older linguistic family, than Daco-Thracian and Latin.
How do you know this song dates back to the times of Mircea the Great. He was later called by the chroniclers, Mircea the Old to differentiate from another Mircea who reigned over Wallachia much later. I will greatly appreciate if you will answer my question.
'The Elder' appellative was given to Mircea I Bassarab, to distinguish him between the later rulers of same name. The legend refers to Mircea I, who ruled for 27 years. He is also known to have had many illegitimate sons. Later rulers with a name of Mircea ruled for few years and didn't get old.
He does not claim the song to be from the time of Mircea , in fact the description is very clear.
Read the descripcion
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Eu sunt barbat. Mmmm Eu sunt femeie.🇹🇩🇹🇩🇹🇩 Romania, Buna sunt Jake Im pare bine 🙂😇😊☺️😘🥰😍😌😛😋😚😙🧐🤨🤪😜😝🥳🤩😏🤗🤭😆😁😄😃😀🥹 I am a fan.
Play at 1,75 speed for indian version
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Is this a historical song thats been preserved or your own composition?
Cand sa nascut si a murit anton pann
de ce nu cauti pe google , ti-e greu sa scrii Anton Pann , si apoi sa dai cautare ?!
@@dand7763 nugger
wow ce edgy esti@@ciocoflender
@@su1t0n11 bine iubi
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Romanian mixed!
Cei asta ?? Mircea a fost Roman allooo ?? Asta suna turceste. Bre.
Vlad Dracula
petitor de seama:))))nu gluma
AVEA doar un ochi ? sarmana
Plicticos
Asta nu e folclor vechi romanesc, e o inventie a unui grup de lautari care vor sa para autentici. Nu exista nici un cantec vechi care sa inceapa cu "domnul Romaniei, Mircea cel batran"...
@Gigi-ho2qk ce auzim aici nu e folclor autentic, este o facatura foarte noua a unui grup de tineri entuziasti. Daca nu ai aflat inca, Mircea nu a fost "domnul Romaniei" ci al Tarei Romanesti. Pe vremea domniei lui, intre 1394 si 1418, Romania nu exista. Iar folclorul romanesc nu e nici foarte vechi nici foarte diversificat.
@@d74rjm Muzica a fost scrisa de Anton Pann in sec 19
@@SirAdrian87 Melodia - da ! Versurile - nu !
why does this sound so arabic tho
It's byzantine/oriental(Ottoman) tune
@@George-romanul1918 H u h ? b r o i t s r o m a n i a n
@@NSanthems I said "tune" like instrumental influence of the piece. The english language is hard, yeah...
It doesn't sound "arabic", it has Arabic/Byzantine influences, especially considering our geographic position in Europe it's pretty normal.
@@NSanthems sper că stii că arabii și au luat stilul muzical de la romanii orientali (bizantini)
Melodia asta mi a adus aminte "Carlo Martello ritorna dalla Battaglia di Poitiers" lui Fabrizio de André
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