The Royal Anthem of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
"The Royal Anthem of Jordan" (Arabic: السلام الملكي الأردني, romanized: as-Salām al-Malakī al-ʾUrdunī) is the national anthem of Jordan, adopted in 1946. The lyrics were written by ʿAbdel Munʿim al-Rifāʿī, and the music was composed by ʿAbdul al-Qādir al-Tanīr. The first version of the lyrics was very short, as it only contained the first stanza of the current version.[1][2] Since then, the anthem has been expanded. The abridged version of the anthem is usually used, while the full version is reserved for special occasions.[3]
English: The Royal Anthem of Jordan | |
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السلام الملكي الأردني | |
National anthem of Jordan | |
Also known as | عاش المليك (English: Long live the King!) |
Lyrics | ʿAbdel Munʿim al-Rifāʿī |
Music | ʿAbdul al-Qādir al-Tanīr |
Adopted | 25 May 1946 |
Audio sample | |
U.S. Navy Band instrumental version (original verse only)
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Lyrics
Arabic original[4][5] | Romanization | IPA transcription[lower-alpha 1] | English translation[6] |
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١ |
I |
1 |
I |
Notes
- See Help:IPA/Arabic and Jordanian Arabic § Phonology.
- Translated literally. Meaning: "Getting from you the manners you have!"
References
- "Jordan". nationalanthems.info.
- "National Anthem". King Abdullah II Official Website.
- "Jordan National anthem". Index Mundi. January 20, 2018.
- "السلام الملكي". King Abdullah II. Archived from the original on 2020-05-13.
- "كلمات النشيد الوطني الأردني". Saaih.
- "Jordan National Anthem". AnthemWorld.com.
External links
- Jordan: Al-salam Al-malaki Al-urdoni (Royal Anthem of Jordan) - Audio of the national anthem of Jordan, with information and lyrics (archive link)
- The full vocal version of The National Anthem of Jordan performed by a military band with mixed chorus in the early 80's. (YouTube) (archive link)
- Instrumental version of "As-salam al-malaki al-urdoni" in RealAudio
- Himnuszok – a vocal version of the full Anthem, featured on szbszig's "Himnuszok" website. The song is performed by a military band with mixed chorus. The full version is only played for special occasions like the King's Birthday.