We Are the First Brigade
| English: We Are the First Brigade | |
|---|---|
A monument dedicated to the Polish Legions in Kraków displaying the first four lines of one of the versions of "My, Pierwsza Brygada" | |
Anthem of Polish Land Forces | |
| Also known as | Marsz Pierwszej Brygady (English: The March of the First Brigade) Legiony to żołnierska nuta (English: The Legions Are a Soldiers' Song) |
| Lyrics | Colonel Andrzej Hałaciński and Legions officer Tadeusz Biernacki, 1917 |
"My, Pierwsza Brygada" (We Are the First Brigade, lit. 'We, the First Brigade'), also known as Marsz Pierwszej Brygady (The March of the First Brigade) and Legiony to żołnierska nuta (The Legions Are the Soldiers' Song), is one of the best-known patriotic marches of the Polish Legions formed during World War I by Józef Piłsudski.
Extolling the First Brigade of the Polish Legions, the song is considered an important emblem of the early-20th-century struggle for Polish independence. It is also now an official anthem of the Polish Army.[1]
The song melody was borrowed from Kielce March #10 in the songbook of the Kielce Fire Department band. It had probably been composed by Captain Andrzej Brzuchal-Sikorski, the band's conductor from 1905, and later bandmaster of the First Brigade of the Polish Legions. It was he who arranged and first conducted the song.[2]
The earliest recognized version of the song appeared in 1917, with the lyrics written spontaneously during the war by several individuals including Colonel Andrzej Hałaciński and Legions officer Tadeusz Biernacki.
Between the May Coup and the designation of Mazurek Dąbrowskiego as the national anthem of Poland in February 1927, many of Piłsudski's supporters viewed the song as the interim national anthem.
Lyrics
| Polish | English |
|---|---|
Legiony to żołnierska nuta, |
The Legions are the soldiers' song, |
Notes
- ^ "Decyzja Nr 374/MON Ministra Obrony Narodowej z dnia 15 sierpnia 2007 r. w sprawie ustanowienia Pieśni Reprezentacyjnej Wojska Polskiego" (PDF) (in Polish). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-10. Retrieved 2008-04-27.
- ^ Leszek Marciniec, Vademecum Kuracjusza 21 Wojskowego Szpitala Uzdrowiskowo-Rehabilitacyjnego w Busku-Zdroju: przewodnik po Busku-Zdroju, 2005, p. 47.