30 years since the adoption of the National Anthem Act
The seventh stanza of Zdravljica [A Toast], by France Prešeren, set to a piece of music of the same name composed by Stanko Premrl, became the Slovenian national anthem. The journey to the final decision was long. According to historian Božo Repe, Zdravljica is one of the few non-militant anthems.
To date, the Slovenian people have lived in four great supranational formations: the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation (or German Empire for short), the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Yugoslavia and now the European Union. In each of these periods, we had a different anthem. But, only in 1990 did we get our own official Slovenian anthem, Zdravljica.
Prešeren's Zdravljica is in essence a toast and is one of the few non-militant anthems that were influenced by the ideas of the French Revolution and liberation and combined the national idea with internationalism. The Slovenian anthem rejects wars and disputes and emphasises ties and friendship among nations. Although the poem was written as far back as 1844, it has proven to be topical time and again. Particularly so in the current crisis, when humanism is again tested, at both the national and international levels.
Zdravljica stands out among the European anthems, in a positive way. Its message transcends nationalism, and in particular in the stanza before last (God’s blessing on all nations) the poem reaches a culmination in praising the values of peace, tolerance and cooperation among nations.
Slovenian poem Zdravljica receives European Heritage Label
Zdravljica, a poem written in the 1840s by Slovenia's France Prešeren to celebrates peace, freedom and fraternity, has been awarded the European Heritage Label. The European Commission conferred the honour on Tuesday on ten pieces of heritage which testify about European ideals, values, history and integration.
The seventh stanza of Zdravljica, or A Toast in English, set to music by Stanko Premrl in 1905, was chosen to be Slovenia's national anthem in March 1990.
The winners of European Heritage Label were chosen by a jury from among entries sent in by EU member states, the European Commission said.
A total of 48 sites have so far been given the title, two of which in Slovenia: the WWII Franja Partisan Hospital and the Church of the Holy Spirit on Javorca hill.