The Star-Spangled Banner
arrane ashoonagh ny Steatyn Unnaneysit
She arrane ashoonagh Steatyn Unnaneysit America eh "The Star-Spangled Banner" (Gaelg: Y Brattagh Gialrollageagh). Va ny focklyn screeuit liorish Francis Scott Key ayns 1814, erreish da ren eh fakin ny Goaldee jannoo soiagh er Fort McHenry ayns Baltimore, Maryland car Caggey 1812.
"The Star-Spangled Banner" Gaelg: Y Brattagh Gialrollageagh | |
---|---|
Coip 1814 jeh "The Star-Spangled Banner" | |
Çheer | Ny Steatyn Unnaneysit |
Focklyn | Francis Scott Key, 1814 |
Kiaull | John Stafford Smith, c. 1773 |
Doltit | 3 Mayrnt 1931 |
Ta ny focklyn currit rish yn arrane iuderagh Goaldagh enmyssit "To Anacreon in Heaven". Ta kiare raneyn ec yn arrane, agh cha nel sleih goaill agh y chied rane. [1] [2]
Imraaghyn reagh
- ↑ "NMAH". amhistory.si.edu. Feddynit magh er 7 Mean Fouyir 2023.
- ↑ Brockell, Gillian (18 Jerrey Fouyir 2020). "The ugly reason 'The Star-Spangled Banner' didn't become our national anthem for a century". Washington Post. Feddynit magh er 7 Mean Fouyir 2023.
Kianglaghyn magh reagh
Ta tooilley mean ayns Wikimedia Commons bentyn rish: The Star-Spangled Banner.
- "New book reveals the dark history behind the Star Spangled Banner", CBS This Morning, 13 Mean Fouyir 2014 (trooid YouTube).
- "Star-Spangled History: 5 Facts About the Making of the National Anthem", Biography.com.
- "'Star-Spangled Banner' writer had a complex record on race", Mary Carole McCauley, The Baltimore Sun, 26 Jerrey Souree 2014.