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Bennie Carl Nulisch

Author of "Vacationing in Heaven"

Nabor Nunes Filho

b. 1944 Author of "Nosso Pai Que Estás no Céu"

Alejandro Nuñez Allauca

Composer of "PERÚ" in El Himnario

Benjamin Núñez

Person Name: Benjamin Nuñez Author of "Cantemos Todos, Cantemos (Together Let Us Sing Praises" in Oramos Cantando = We Pray In Song

José Luis Núñez

Composer of "[Cielo y tierra cantad]" in Flor y Canto

R. L. Nunly

Author of "The Lord of Light"

E. Cuthbert Nunn

Translator of "Bring a Torch, Jeannette, Isabella"

J. E. Nunn

Composer of "MARGALLA HILLS" in The Cyber Hymnal

Marianne Nunn

1778 - 1847 Author of "Han eisker bedst" Marianne Nunn United Kingdom 1778-1847. Born at Colchester, Essex, England, she lived a life of relative seclusion. She authored a few hymns and was interested in mission work. Her brother, John, a minister, published a song book “Psalms and hymns”,(containing her hymn noted below), eventually circulated. She also published a book, “The benevolent merchant”. In 1830 Joshua Leavitt included her hymn in his song book, “The Christian lyre”, which was later in America. She died unmarried. John Perry ========= Nunn, Marianne, was born May 17, 1778, and died unmarried, in 1847. She published The Benevolent Merchant, and wrote a few hymns, including the following:— One there is above all others, O how He loves. [The love of Jesus.] This was written to adapt John Newton's hymn “One there is above all others, Well deserves the name of friend," to the Welsh air, Ar hy-d y nos, and consisted of one stanza of 5 lines, with the refrain "Oh how He loves!" at the end of lines 1, 2 and 5, and the remaining 3 stanzas in 5 lines without the refrain, it being understood that the refrain was to be repeated. (Original text in Lyra Britanica, 1867, p. 449.) It was first published in her brother's, the Rev. John Munn's Psalms & Hymns, 1817. It has undergone several changes at various hands. In Curwen's The New Child's Own Hymn Book, 1874, it begins, "There's a Friend above all others," which is adopted from the American collections. It also sometimes begins, "One is kind above all others." In addition, where the original first line is given the rest of the hymn is considerably altered. Its use as a hymn for children is very extensive. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Philip Nunn

b. 1961 Composer of "GREENSBOROUGH" in Sound the Bamboo

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