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Person Results

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Showing 11 - 20 of 22Results Per Page: 102050

Michael Gannon

Person Name: Michael V. Gannon Author of "Behold a Virgin Bearing Him" in One in Faith

Martin L. Seltz

1909 - 1967 Person Name: M. L. Seltz, 1909-67 Translator of "O Savior, Rend the Heavens Wide" in Evangelical Lutheran Hymnary

Charles Frischmann

Person Name: Charles G. Frischmann Harmonizer of "O HEILAND, REISS DIE HIMMEL AUF" in One in Faith

James Waring McCrady

b. 1938 Person Name: James Waring McCrady, b. 1938 Author (st. 3) of "O God, creation's secret force" in The Hymnal 1982

Esther Wiebe

Harmonizer of "O HEILAND, REISS DIE HIMMEL AUF" in The Mennonite Hymnal

Paul Bunjes

1914 - 1998 Person Name: Paul G. Bunjes, 1914-1998 Arranger of "O HEILAND, REISS DIE HIMMEL AUF" in Christian Worship Paul G. Bunjes (b. September 27, 1914; d. June 27, 1998) was an organist, author, and organ designer. He wrote The Praetorius Organ (four volumes), numerous articles for periodicals, and was an accomplished composer and arranger. He was a major contributor to the Lutheran Book of Worship (1978) and Lutheran Worship (1982). Bunjes was Professor of Music at Concordia University for many years. Laura de Jong

David Gregor Corner

1585 - 1648 Author (st. 7) of "O Heiland, reiß die Himmel aur" in Antwort Finden in alten und neuen Liedern, in Worten zum Nachdenken und Beten David Gregor Corner, born circa 1585 in Hirschberg, Germany (now Jelenia Góra, Poland) was a German Benedictine abbot, hymn writer and theologian best known for his influential 1631 Gross Catholisches Gesängbuch ("Great Catholic Hymnal"). He studied theology at Prague, Graz and Vienna, where he earned a doctorate. He became a pastor in Retz in 1614. In 1628 he became a novice monk at Göttweig Abbey. By 1636, Corner was the abbot of Göttweig, where he became a leading figure of the Counter-Reformation, and was made Rector of the University of Vienna in 1638. He died 9 January 1648 at Göttweig. His magnum opus, the Catholische Gesängbuch was published in 1625, and a later publication from 1631 contained 546 hymns and 276 melodies (including 76 Latin hymns), one of the largest song books of the 16th and 17th century. This collection featured devotional Catholic hymns for use in church, church festivals and processions. The collection was derived from a large variety of sources - earlier Jesuit hymn collections, manuscripts, and even Protestant writers. In the introduction to his work, he notes that he initially considered leaving out "all hymns found in heretical collections" but decided that they should be included after a colleague reminded him that many of the hymns of Martin Luther and other Protestant composers were derived from earlier Catholic melodies, and "it was in no way desirable to leave out such good old hymns...simply because they have been used by the enemies of the true faith and falsely ascribed to them." A separate collection, Geistliche Nachtigal ("Holy Nightingale") was published in 1649, perhaps posthumously. This contained 363 hymns and 181 melodies (including 42 Latin hymns), and was essentially a retitled and revised version of his original collection. After his death, editions of Geistliche Nachtigal were published in 1658, 1674 and 1676. --en.wikipedia.org/wiki/

Guido Holz

1920 - 1989 Translator of "Ĉielojn fendu, ho Sinjor'" in TTT-Himnaro Cigneta Guido Holz in the Esperanto Wikipedia.

Monastery of Our Lady of the Rosary (Summit, N.J.)

Person Name: DNS Harmonizer of "O HEILAND, REISS DIE HIMMEL AUF" in The Summit Choirbook The Monastery of Our Lady of the Rosary is a Dominican convent in Summit, New Jersey. It was founded in 1919.

Henrietta Ten Harmsel

Author of "When Israel Fled from Egypt Land" in Psalms for All Seasons Henrietta Ten Harmsel (b. Hull, IA, 1921; d. Grand Rapids, MI, March 16, 2012) versified this psalm in 1985 for the Psalter Hymnal. Ten Harmsel attended Calvin College, Grand Rapids, Michigan, and the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. From 1949 to 1957 she taught English at Western Christian High School in Hull, Iowa, and from 1960 until retirement in 1985 was a member of the English department at Calvin College. Many factors contributed to Ten Harmsel's interest in the psalms. As a child she learned Dutch from her parents, and they instilled in her a love for the Dutch Psalter. Later J. W. Schulte Nordholt, poet, hymnologist, and professor of American history at the University of Leiden, became a great promoter of her interest in Dutch language and literature and her translation work. Ten Harmsel's translations from Dutch include Jacobus Revius: Dutch Metaphysical Poet (1968) and two collections of children's poems: Pink Lemonade (1981) and Good Friday (1984). In 1984 Ten Harmsel was awarded the Martinus Nijhoff translation award. Bert Polman

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