O du fröhliche is a German Christmas carol. The author of the original is the famous Weimar "orphan father" Johannes Daniel Falk (1768-1826). Heinrich Holzschuher (1798-1847) from Wunsiedel wrote the latter three verses, which are sung today.
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After Johannes Daniel Falk lost four of his seven children to typhoid fever, he founded das Rettungshaus für verwahrloste Kinder (lit. the rescue center for abandoned children) in Weimar. In 1816 he dedicated this song to the children of the orphanage. The Melody was taken from „O sanctissima, o piisima, dulcis Virgo Maria“ which is still sung in Italy and the Roman Catholic Church. Falk found this song in Johann Gottfried Herders (1744-1803) collection Stimmen der Völker in Liedern.[1] In its original version, the song was titled „Allerdreifeiertagslied“, or „A Song for Three Holidays“ in which is mentioned the three major festivals of Christianity Christmas, Easter and Pentecost.
Original German | Literal translation |
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O du fröhliche, o du selige, |
O (you) joyful, O (you) blessed, |
The song became famous as a christmas carol which took its first verse verbatim from John Daniel Falk. The second and third verses were written by Heinrich Holzschuher, an assistant to Falk, in 1829. Its current form (with some regional differences in the text) is:
Modern German | Literal translation |
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O du fröhliche, o du selige, |
O (you) joyful, O blessed, |
O Du Fröhliche has been translated into many languages including English (Oh how joyfully) French, Latin, and Swedish (O du saliga, o du heliga,).
Lyrics to the English version are:
Oh, how joyfully; Oh, how merrily
Christmas comes with its grace divine
Grace again is beaming
Christ the world redeeming;
Hail, ye Christians,
Hail the joyous Christmas time
The song is used in the protestant Evangelische Gesangbuch (EG 44), in various parts of the German Catholic Church's Gotteslobs, in the Free Church Feiern & Loben (F&L 220) and in the Mennonite Mennonitische Gesangbuch (MG 264). In the protestant churches of Germany, the song is traditionally sung at the end of Christmas Eve services.