Anthem of the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic information
1945–1991 anthem of the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic
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Moldova Sovietică Молдова Советикэ
English: 'Soviet Moldavia'
Former regional anthem of the Moldavian SSR
Lyrics
Emilian Bukov and Bogdan Istru (Ivan Bodarev)
Music
Ștefan Neaga (1945) Eduard Lazarev (musical renovation in 1980)
Adopted
1945 (original version) 1980 (renewed version)
Relinquished
1980 (original version) 1991 (renewed version)
Preceded by
Deșteaptă-te, române!
Succeeded by
Deșteaptă-te, române!(until 1994) Limba Noastra
National anthems of Moldova
"Deșteaptă-te, române!"
1917–1918
"The Internationale"
1924–1945
"Moldova Sovietică"
1945–1991
"Deșteaptă-te, române!"
1991–1994
"Limba noastră"
1994–present
v
t
e
”Moldova Sovietică” (Moldovan Cyrillic: Молдова Советикэ, lit.'Soviet Moldavia') was the regional anthem of the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic, a constituent republic of the Soviet Union.[1]
Originally, the anthem began with the words, "Moldova cu doine străbune pe plaiuri"[2] and was composed by Ștefan Neaga, with lyrics by the poets Emilian Bukov and Bogdan Istru (Ivan Bodarev) in 1945.
Ivan Bodiul, the First Secretary of the Communist Party of Moldavia, authorized composer Eduard Lazarev to modify the anthem in a "Musical Renovation". (Second Edition of the Anthem).[3]
The lyrics were rewritten, removing all references to Joseph Stalin. The music was also altered, removing the original three-stanza structure in favor of a single-stanza three-part structure.[1]
The beginning words of the anthem were changed to "Moldova Sovietică".
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