Property Owned As Tenants In Common
Law1 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by natalie_1982. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.There was a similar question some months back and I tried to search for it. (Ed - It's definitely time the search facility had something major done to it! - I got everything from Christmas Cards to Mobile Phones but nothing about National Anthem)
Anyway the National Anthem has been around for at least a couple of hundred years, Natalie.
This is the piece that FP meant (if I have made the link work)
http://www.theanswerbank.co.uk/People_and_Places/Questio n104092.html
Someone will, no doubt, come up with a much earlier date for part of the tune, but the anthem we have today is largely the work of George Frederick Handel, and was for a time the German anthem, and is a tune still used by some other countries.
I guess it was adopted in Britain during the Georgean period when the present Queen's family took over when they moved in from Germany around 1706.
First sung in 1740, says Wikipedia. Americans sing 'My country 'tis of thee Sweet land of liberty Of thee I sing' to the same tune, and Liechtenstein and Norway use it for their anthems too. Somewhat dreary waltz imho.
Wiki also says it's traditional but not official - so you could try writing a new one. Or we could just switch to Bohemian Rhapsody.
'God Save The King' was a patriotic song first publicly performed in London in 1745, which came to be referred to as the National Anthem from the beginning of the nineteenth century. The words and tune are anonymous, and may date back to the seventeenth century.
In September 1745 the 'Young Pretender' to the British Throne, Prince Charles Edward Stuart, defeated the army of King George II at Prestonpans, near Edinburgh. In a fit of patriotic fervour after news of Prestonpans had reached London, the leader of the band at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, arranged 'God Save The King' for performance after a play. It was a tremendous success and was repeated nightly thereafter. This practice soon spread to other theatres, and the custom of greeting the Monarch with the song as he or she entered a place of public entertainment was thus established.
There is no authorised version of the National Anthem as the words are a matter of tradition. Additional verses have been added down the years, but these are rarely used. The words used are those sung in 1745, substituting 'Queen' for 'King' where appropriate. On official occasions, only the first verse is usually sung.
As it is a matter of tradition, it is unlikely that it will get changed. If it was to change officially, no doiubt it would be an act opf parliament or something.