Dance Festivals accompanying the song festival.
Mu isamaa, mu õnn ja rõõm(" My Fatherland, My Happiness and Joy "; was officially adopted as the national anthem of the Republic of Estonia in 1920, and again in 1991.
The lyrics were written by Johann Voldemar Jannsen and are set to a melody composed in 1848 by Fredrik( Friedrich) Pacius which is also that of the national anthem of Finland: Maamme. During the Soviet occupation since 1944, Mu isamaa, mu õnn ja rõõm was banned. Between 1945 and 1990 the Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic had a different anthem. Yet, the people of Estonia could often hear the melody, as Finland ' s state broadcaster Yleisradio, whose radio and television broadcasts were received in Northern Estonia, played an instrumental version of the Finnish national anthem, identical to this song( except for an additional repetition of the last verse in the Finnish version), at closedown every night. Heres a link to the song- https:// www. youtube. com / watch? v = 0wwQFsyqym0
Kama is a traditional Estonian finely milled flour mixture. The kama powder is a mixture of roasted barley, rye, oat and pea flour. The oat flour may be completely replaced by wheat flour, or kibbled black beans may be added to the mixture.
Historically kama was a non-perishable, easy-to-carry food that could be quickly fashioned into a stomach-filling snack by rolling it into butter or lard; it didn ' t require baking, as it was already roasted.
Nowadays it is used for making some desserts. It is mostly enjoyed for breakfast mixed with milk, buttermilk or kefir as mush. It is frequently sweetened with sugar and especially with blueberry, more rarely with other fruits or honey or served unsweetened. It is also used for milk or sour desserts, together with the forest berries typical in Estonia.
Kama can be bought as a souvenir in Estonia. It is one of the most distinctive national foods of Estonia.
Estonia flag.
Estonian flag colour combination blue-blackwhite idea was born in 1881, 29th September in Tartu. What these colour mean? There is not a precise anserw for this. The colours needed to: Show estonians nature. Popular national clothes colour.