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Triumph Ca (Ode an die Freude, meaning "Joyful chanting" or "Ode cheering songs") is an ode written in the summer of 1785 by poet, playwright and historian German scholar, Friedrich Schiller, this article was published the same year in his journal Thalia. A slightly revised version appeared in 1808, changing the first two lines of the first stanza and omitting the last. It is best known for its score by Ludwig van Beethoven in the fourth and final movement of his Ninth Symphony, for four solo, chorus, and orchestral voices. Triumph was chosen by the Council of Europe as the official anthem of the European Union in 1972, and was officially orchestrated by Herbert von Karajan. In 2003, the European Union selected Beethoven's score for this poem as the official EU anthem, without the lyrics in German, because of the increasing number of languages spoken in the European Union. Thus, the EU song is in fact a Beethoven melody and not a Schiller poem, yet still emphasizing the philanthropic ideals of the lyrics. This ideal is more widely expressed in Beethoven's adaptation ("all men are brothers"), rather than in Schiller's original "beggars become brothers to princes."