Imperial Anthem of Iran
Royal and national anthem of Iran (1933–1979)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Imperial Anthem of Iran,[a] also known by its incipit "Long Live our King of Kings",[b] was the royal anthem (stanza 1) of Iran from 1933 until the Iranian Revolution of 1979, when the monarchy was abolished.[1][2]
| English: Imperial Anthem of Iran | |
|---|---|
| سرود شاهنشاهی ایران | |
Former royal anthem of Iran | |
| Lyrics | Sheikh Afsar, 1933[1] |
| Music | Davud Najmi Moqaddam, 1933[1] |
| Adopted | 1933[1] |
| Relinquished | 11 February 1979[1] |
| Preceded by | Salute of the Sublime State of Persia |
| Succeeded by | "Ey Iran" (de facto, as national anthem) "Payandeh Bada Iran" (de jure, as national anthem) |
| Audio sample | |
"Sorud-e Shâhanshâhi" (vocal, first stanza) | |
Its tune, when set to a different respective set of lyrics, also simultaneously served as both the country's national (stanza 3) and flag anthem (stanza 2). This anthem was composed by the order of Reza Shah, with lyrics written by Sheikh Afsar (stanza 1) and Abdolrahman Parsa Tuyserkani (stanza 2) and prepared by the Literary Association of Iran ahead of Reza Shah's visit to Turkey.[3][4][5]
Lyrics
|
Notes
- Persian: سرود شاهنشاهی ایران, romanized: Sorud-e Shâhanshâhi-ye Irân, pronounced [soˈɹuːde ʃɒːˌhæn.ʃɒːˈhiːje ʔiːˈɹɒːn]
- Persian: شاهنشه ما زنده بادا, romanized: Shâhanshâh-e mâ zende bâdâ, pronounced [ˌʃɒːhænˈʃɒːhe mɒː zenˈde bɒːˈdɒː]

