Rado ide Srbin u vojnike

Rado ide Srbin u vojnike (Serbian Cyrillic: Радо иде Србин у војнике), translated as "The Serb Enlists Gladly in the Army",[1] is a Serbian popular patriotic song.[2] Its music composition by Kornelije Stanković was adopted alongside Sunce jarko into Tchaikovsky's Marche Slave.[3] It was adopted with its lyrics changed to the Croatian public.[4][5]

Serbian recruits singing the song while mobilized into World War I (1914).

See also

References

  1. Stana Đurić-Klajn (1972). A Survey of Serbian Music Through the Ages. Association of Composers of Serbia. p. 52.
  2. Serbian Studies. 9–10. North American Society for Serbian Studies. 1995. p. 84. Nikola Djurkovic is the author of the well-known song that has been sung for more than a century: "Rado ide Srbin u vojnike" (Gladly goes a Serb into the army).
  3. Basil W. R. Jenkins; Anita Dorich (1996). A brief history of Serbian music. Serbian Orthodox Diocese of Western America. p. 79.
  4. Stanislav J. Kirschbaum (1988). East European History: Selected Papers of the Third World Congress for Soviet and Eastern European Studies. Slavica Publishers. p. 146. ISBN 978-0-89357-193-1.
  5. Stjepan R. Ban (1903). Hrvatski razgovori i odgovori. Štamparija Gjorgja Ivkovića. p. 188.
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