"The Prayer of Russians" is a song that was used as the national anthem of Imperial Russia from 1816 to 1833.
Portrait of Alexander I in the Military Gallery of the Winter Palace.
"God Save the King" is the national anthem of the United Kingdom and the royal anthem of each of the British Crown Dependencies, one of two national anthems of New Zealand, and the royal anthem of most Commonwealth realms. The author of the tune is unknown and it may originate in plainchant, but an attribution to the composer John Bull has sometimes been made.
The phrase "God Save the King" in use as a rallying cry to the support of the monarch and the UK's forces during the First World War
Stratford-upon-Avon Town Hall (built 1767), bearing the painted slogan, "God Save the King".
The fourth Hickson verse (with "o'er" misspelled as "o're") on a British-American friendship plaque in St Nicholas' Church, Charlwood, Surrey.