Pappenheimer Marsch (Michael Haydn)
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- Опубліковано 16 жов 2024
- Pappenheimer Marsch.
Michael Haydn.
A reminder of the Thirty Years'War, this piece is also known as the "March of the Pappenheim Horsemen", and refers to General Heinrich Duke of Pappenheim, who in 1623 commanded a regiment of cuirassiers in the Imperial army, and was killed as an ally of Wallenstein at the Battle of Lützen in 1632.
The Pappenheimer Marsch was included in the list of historical marches of the Imperial Austrian army, to whose 8th regiment of Dragoons it was assigned.
greetings to German brothers from Spain
Wunderbar!
I don't think Michael Haydn actually composed this
Sources seem to point that the song was written long before his time
Yeah, it isn't composed by him originally, but this might be played from a version of his or something, I'm not sure though.
@@Juubelimies Haydn composed a different march called ''Marsch der Pappenheimer Reiterschwadron'', which samples the melody from this and Schiller's ''Wohlauf, Kameraden aufs Pferd''. The march in the video was not composed by Haydn at all and dates from the Thirty Years' War. From what I know, the composer of this march is unknown.
"Ich kenne uns're Pappenheimer"
"Daran erkenn ich meine Pappenheimer" läßt Schiller Wallenstein in seinem Theaterstück sagen. Der Ausspruch ist also nicht "historisch belegt" :-) Und er war rein positiv gemeint, die Pappenheimer standen damals für Kühnheit und Ritterlichkeit, während die Redensart heute negativ verwendet wird, im Sinn von "erzähl mir nichts, ich kenne dich doch".
Ich auch, denn ich wohne nicht weit entfernt von Pappenheim.
@@justusliebig2442 Genauso ist es! Der Ausspruch Wallensteins war absolut anerkennend in Bezug auf seine Soldaten gemeint!
Wunderbarer österreichischer Marsch.
Immer noch deutscher Marsch um 1645 während des 30-jährigen Krieges.Gottfried Heinrich Graf zu Pappenheim war ein General im Dreißigjährigen Krieges.Geboren in Pappenheim, verstorben in Leipzig.
Fränkischer Marsch
Ja, damals Österreich als der mächtigste Deutsche Staat im heiligen römischen Reich. Aber nicht alle Kürassiere Pappenheims waren Österreicher. Jedoch alle Deustch
name of the first march?
What first march ? At the beginning you hear the "Fanfare der Pappenheimer" followed by the march of the Pappenheimer.
What do you mean by a first march? This whole thing is called "Pappenheimer Marsch", or so I thought at least.
Fanfare der Pappenheimer
wunderbarer preussischer marsch
Michael Haydn aus Niederöserreich war der Komponist
woran merkt man die preussische Herkunf den preussischen Komponisten
Der Marsch ist nicht Preußisch sondern Österreichisch oder Bayerisch. Alleine schon der Umstand, dass Pappenheim gegen die Preußen gekämpft hat, sollte dich von deiner Annahme abgehalten haben.
@@Timrath die Pappenheimer waren auch massgeblich an der Plünderung und Brandschatzung von Magdeburg im 30 jährigen Krieg beteiligt!
@@Timrath Pappenheim kämpfte nicht gegen die Preussen, die es damals als Großmacht ja gar nicht gab, sondern gegen die Protestanten, also gegen die Schweden, Hannoveraner etc. Und der Marsch ist von seiner musikalischen Struktur natürlich preussisch, gar keine Frage
Ich vermute das es ein Kavallerie Marsch ist.
Imagine: Haydn, an austrian guy wrote the german national anthem....
Joseph Haydn (Michael's more famous brother) wrote the "Kaiserhymne" as a personal anthem for the Holy Roman Emperor Francis II. The Holy Roman Empire, which was dissolved during the Napoleonic wars, but the Austrian Hapsburg emperors continued to use it. The 2nd German Empire (Bismarck's), was proclaimed in 1870 and used the tune known in America as "My Country 'Tis of Thee," and in England as "God Save the Queen," which was not written by Haydn, as its national anthem. (The same tune is used by several other European monarchies and/or principalities even today.) The Weimar Republic appropriated the Kaiserhymne, with nationalistic lyrics, as opposed to the personally oriented lyrics of the original, and the tune is used to this day by the Bundesrepublic.
@@steveonmareisland5268 Joseph Haydn from lower Ausftria heard the folk song from croatian workers in his homeland. He made the Kaiserquartett and than theVolksmne for the House of Austria, lyrics in all languags of Austria, the Danub a monarchie, German, Germ,an, GErman,????
13 nationalities in Austria, after 1867 was the country devided and named Austria Hungary, a lot of compositions and marches where from AusRIA HUNGARY
stolen by the Germans, eben the melody of the German anthem, a folk song composed by Croats
@@busodelor1977 Nach dieser Logik könnte man ebenso sagen, dass die Deutschen Reichsinsignien in der Wiener Schatzkammer gestohlen sind...
And another performance that plays the march too slowly. :(
Did you watch until 0:39 ? That's where the actual song is.