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Tune Identifier:"^nitomany_ny_mpamonjy_nanini$"

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[The Saviour wept]

Appears in 5 hymnals Incipit: 34332 23355 555 Used With Text: Nitomany ny Mpamonjy (The Saviour wept)

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Nitomany ny Mpamonjy (The Saviour wept)

Appears in 2 hymnals Used With Tune: [The Saviour wept]
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Al pie de la cruz, llorando

Author: J. B. Cabrera Appears in 2 hymnals Used With Tune: STABAT MATER Text Sources: Tr. de Stabat Mater
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Stabat mater dolorosa

Author: Karl Schneider; Giacopone da Todi Appears in 17 hymnals First Line: Schaut die Mutter voller Schmerzen Used With Tune: [Schaut die Mutter voller Schmerzen]

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

Nitomany ny Mpamonjy (The Saviour wept)

Hymnal: Protestant Madagascar Hymnal, 2001 #87 (2001) Languages: Malagasy Tune Title: [The Saviour wept]
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Nitomany ny Mpamonjy (The Saviour wept)

Hymnal: Small Church Music #6539 Languages: Malagasy Tune Title: [The Saviour wept]
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Al pie de la cruz, llorando

Author: J. B. Cabrera Hymnal: El Himnario para el uso de las Iglesias Evangelicas de Habla Espanola en Todo el Mundo #94 (1931) Languages: Spanish Tune Title: STABAT MATER

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Jacopone, da Todi

1230 - 1306 Person Name: Giacopone da Todi Author of "Stabat mater dolorosa" in Sammlung Kirchlicher Lieder Jacobus de Benedictis, commonly known as Jacopone, was born at Todi in Umbria, early in the 13th century, his proper name being Jacopone di Benedetti. He was descended from a noble family, and for some time led a secular life. Some remarkable circumstances which attended the violent death of his wife, led him to withdraw himself from the world, and to enter the Order of St. Francis, in which he remained as a lay brother till his death, at an advanced age, in 1306. His zeal led him to attack the religious abuses of the day. This brought him into conflict with Pope Boniface VIII., the result being imprisonment for long periods. His poetical pieces were written, some in Italian, and some in Latin, the most famous of the latter being "Cur mundus militat sub vana gloria" (possibly by Walter Mapes), and the "Stabat Mater dolorosa." Archbishop Trench says of him:— “An earnest humourist, he carried the being a fool for Christ into every-day life. The things which with this intent he did, some morally striking enough, others mere extravagances and pieces of gross spiritual buffoonery—wisdom and folly, such as we often find, side by side, in the saints of the Roman Calendar—are largely reported by Wadding, the historian of the Franciscan Order, and by Lisco, in a separate monograph on the Stabat Mater, Berlin, 1843, p. 23. These often leave one in doubt whether he was indeed perfectly sound in his mind, or only a Christian Brutus, feigning folly, that he might impress his wisdom the more deeply, and utter it with more freedom." Sacred Latin Poetry, 3rd ed., 1874, p. 268. Sketches of the life and writings of Jacopone, drawn entirely from the original sources (Trench), have been published as follows:— (1) By Mohnike, Studien Stralsund, 1825, vol. i. pp. 335-406; (2) by Ozanam, Les Poétes Franciscains en Italie au Treizieme Siecle, Paris. In addition there are articles in the Biographie Universelle; Macmillan’s Magazine, Aug., 1873; and the Encyclopedia Britannica , 9th ed. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907) ============================ See also in: Wikipedia

Giovanni Maria Nanino

1543 - 1607 Person Name: G. Nanini Composer of "[The Saviour wept]" in Protestant Madagascar Hymnal, 2001 Giovanni Maria Nanini

Juan Bautista Cabrera Ivars

1837 - 1916 Person Name: J. B. Cabrera Translator of "Al pie de la cruz, llorando" in El Himnario para el uso de las Iglesias Evangelicas de Habla Espanola en Todo el Mundo Juan Bautista Cabrera Ivars was born in Benisa, Spain, April 23, 1837. He attended seminary in Valencia, studying Hebrew and Greek, and was ordained as a priest. He fled to Gibraltar in 1863 due to religious persecution where he abandoned Catholicism. He worked as a teacher and as a translator. One of the works he translated was E.H. Brown's work on the thirty-nine articles of the Anglican Church, which was his introduction to Protestantism. He was a leader of a Spanish Reformed Church in Gibraltar. He continued as a leader in this church when he returned to Spain after the government of Isabel II fell, but continued to face legal difficulties. He then organized the Spanish Reformed Episcopal Church and was consecrated as bishop in 1894. He recognized the influence of music and literature on evangelism which led him to write and translate hymns. Dianne Shapiro, from Real Academia de la Historia (https://dbe.rah.es/biografias/39825/juan-bautista-cabrera-ivars) and Himnos Cristanos (https://www.himnos-cristianos.com/biografia-juan-bautista-cabrera/) (accessed 7/30/2021)