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Tune Identifier:"^die_sach_ist_dein_haydn$"
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Felician Martin von Zaremba

1794 - 1874 Person Name: F. von Zaremba Author of "Deich Sach' ist dein!" in 349 Lieder Felician Martin von Zaremba was born in Zaroy bei Grodno, Poland (modern Hrodna in Belarus). He studied in Dorpat and Moscow. He gave up a diplomatic career after contacts with the Pietist movement and became a missionary with the Basel Mission and worked with August Heinrich Dittrich in the Caucusus in the 19th Century. Czar Alexander I was sympathetic to evangelical missions, but his successor Nicholas I ended the Caucusus mission by mandate in 1833. Zaremba worked, however, from 1822-1838 in the region, moving into Armenia. He founded an evangelical printing press and college in Armenia. He coined the expression: "The Orient can only be reached by the Orient." He moved twice back and forth between the Caucasus and Basel, working with and for the mission agency, and died in Basel. He authored three books. Fred Foster (historian) via email

S. Preiswert

Author of "Gebet" in Sammlung Kirchlicher Lieder

Ḥabīb Khūrī

Person Name: حبيب خوري Author of "ها نحن في وادي الظلال" in كتاب الترانيم الروحية للكنائس الإنجيلية حبيب خوري

Adolf Maurer

1883 - 1976 Author of "Thine Is the Kingdom" in Songs of Light

Clara E. Schauffler

Person Name: Mrs. Clara E. Schauffler Translator of "The cause is thine, Lord Jesus Christ" in Mission Songs

Federico Fliedner

1845 - 1901 Person Name: Federico Fliedner, 1845-1901 Translator of "La causa es tuya, ¡oh Salvador!" in Culto Cristiano [Friedrich Ludwig Fliedner, Fritz Fliedner] Born: June 10, 1845, Kaiserswerth, Düsseldorf, Germany. Died: April 25, 1901, Madrid, Spain, of typhus. Buried: Civil cemetery, Madrid, Spain. Son of Theodor Fliedner, founder of the Kaiserswerth Deaconess Institute, Federico was educated at the Gymnasium in Gütersloh, studied theology at Halle (1864-46) and earned his PhD at Tübingen (1867). He served as a nurse in the Austro-Prussian war of 1866, and taught school for a year in rural Hilden. After ordination in 1870, he left Germany to be a missionary to Spain, settling in Madrid and becoming a chaplain at the German embassy. He learned Spanish, attended a Spanish high school, and studied medicine at the Universidad Central. Fliedner was instrumental in creating what is now known as the Iglesia Evangélica Española. In 1873, Fliedner founded the Librería Nacional y Extranjera, an extensive collection of text books and periodicals. Among these was The Children’s Friend, published from 1874 to 1939. Fliedner wrote biographies of John Howard, Elizabeth Fry, missionary-explorer David Livingstone, Martin Luther (1878), and his own parents, Theodore Fliedner of Kaiserswerth (1883) and Caroline Fliedner of Kaiserswerth (1883). He also wrote an autobiography, published first in German in two volumes (Aus meinem Leben, 1901-03), then translated into Spanish and published posthumously in the Christian Magazine (Nos. 513 to 553). He started a Spanish translation of the New Testament with notes from Frenchman Edouard Faivre. --www.hymntime.com/tch

James Siordet

Person Name: J. E. Siordet Translator (French) of "Die Sach ist dein, Herr Jesu Christ" in Cantate Domino

Julius Koebner

Person Name: Julius Köbner Author of "Vollkommne, heil'ge Majestät" in Die Glaubensharfe (With Melodies)

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