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Hymn and Liberty
The Hymn to Liberty or Hymn to Freedom (, Ýmnos is tin Eleftherían ) is a poem written by Dionýsios Solomós in 1823 that consists of 158 stanzas, which is used as the national anthem of Greece.
This resulted to the decision by the Council of Ministers to adopt as the official anthem of Cyprus, the Hymn to Liberty, on 16 November 1966.
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* Thomas Cooke-A Hymn to Liberty
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The tragic event of the destruction of Psara inspired the poet Dionysios Solomos — the author of the Hymn to Libertyto write a poem about it called " The Destruction of Psara ".
* Hymn to Liberty
His widely known composition was until recently the musical setting for the poem of Dionysios Solomos ' Ýmnos eis tīn Eleutherían ( Hymn to Liberty, 1829 – 1830 ), the first and second stanzas of which were adopted initially in 1864 as the Royal Anthem of Greece and on 28 June 1865 as the Greek national anthem.
* Mantzaros-Solomos: The Hymn to the Liberty ( Lyra, CD0064, 1991 )
* Full version of the Hymn to Liberty at YouTube

Hymn and was
A book of Lerner's lyrics entitled A Hymn To Him, edited by British writer Benny Green, was published in 1987.
This was replaced only five years later by the first " Christadelphian Hymn Book " ( 1869 ), compiled by J. J. and A. Andrew, and this was revised and expanded in 1874, 1932 and 1964.
The phrase " Cretans, always liars " was quoted by the poet Callimachus in his Hymn to Zeus, with the same theological intent as Epimenides:
Puccini's 1919 Inno a Roma ( Hymn to Rome ), although not written for the Fascists, was widely played during Fascist street parades and public ceremonies.
According to the Homeric Hymn III to Delian Apollo, Hera detained Eileithyia to already prevent Leto from going into labor with Artemis and Apollo, since the father was Zeus.
The phrase introduces the 1866 poem Hymn to Proserpine, which was Algernon Charles Swinburne's elaboration of what a philosophic pagan might have felt at the triumph of Christianity.
Another version, in the Homeric Hymn to Delian Apollo and in an Orphic hymn, states that Artemis was born before Apollo, on the island of Ortygia, and that she helped Leto cross the sea to Delos the next day to give birth there to Apollo.
Hymn singing, though, was not without controversy, particularly within the official church, the Church of England.
The ubiquitous Red and Black Sandinista flag was used during the election process along with the pink as it was one of the colours of a campaign that finished its popular appearances with John Lennon's Give Peace a Chance and the Sandinista Hymn " fighting against Yanqui agressors, enemies of humanity.
During the Winter Olympics, the National Olympic Committees ( NOCs ) of the constituent countries had not yet been affiliated to the IOC, so the Olympic Flag was used in place of a national flag at the Opening Ceremony and at medals ceremonies, and the Olympic Hymn was played for gold medallists.
Where an EUN individual won a medal, the national flag of the medallist's nation was raised rather than the Olympic flag, and a gold medallist's national anthem was played rather than the Olympic Hymn.
1, A Hymn to the Virgin ( 1930 ) and a set of choral variations A Boy was Born, written in 1933 for the BBC Singers, who first performed it the following year.
Though the Greek myth of Semele was localized in Thebes, the fragmentary Homeric Hymn to Dionysus makes the place where Zeus gave a second birth to the god a distant one, and mythically vague:
According to the Homeric Hymn III to Delian Apollo, Hera detained Eileithyia, who was coming from the Hyperboreans in the far north, to prevent Leto from going into labor with Artemis and Apollo, because the father was Zeus.
Celeus or Keleus () was the king of Eleusis in Greek mythology, husband of Metaneira and father of several daughters, who are called Callidice, Demo, Cleisidice and Callithoe in the Homeric Hymn to Demeter, and Diogeneia, Pammerope and Saesara by Pausanias.
In the Homeric Hymn to Demeter, Celeus was one of the original priests of Demeter, one of the first people to learn the secret rites and mysteries of Demeter's cult the Eleusinian Mysteries.
Tithonus was a Trojan by birth, the son of King Laomedon of Troy by a water nymph named Strymo ( Στρυμώ promises too much, and might beguile Anchises into expecting too much, even an ageless immortality " ( p. 149 ).</ ref > According to the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite, when Eos asked Zeus to make Tithonus immortal, she forgot to ask for eternal youth ( 218-38 ).
Karl Kerenyi points out that the older tales mentioned two dragons, who were perhaps intentionally conflated ; the other was a female dragon ( drakaina ) named Delphyne in the Homeric Hymn to Apollo, with whom dwelt a male serpent named Typhon: " The narrators seem to have confused the dragon of Delphi, Python, with Typhon or Typhoeus, the adversary of Zeus ".
Once paired in later myths with her Titan brother Hyperion as her husband, " mild-eyed Euryphaessa, the far-shining one " of the Homeric Hymn to Helios, was said to be the mother of Helios ( the Sun ), Selene ( the Moon ), and Eos ( the Dawn ).
The first-known poem in English by a Welshman was Hymn to the Virgin written c. 1470 by Ieuan ap Hywel Swrdwal.

Hymn and also
Arya tribes charged into battle to the beating of the war drum and chanting of a hymn that appears in Book VI of the Rig Veda and also the Atharva Veda where it is referred to as the " Hymn to the battle drum ".
The melody in this movement is also termed the " Emperor's Hymn.
Proserpina's figure inspired many artistic compositions, eminently in sculpture ( Bernini, see The Rape of Proserpina ( Bernini ) ) in painting ( D. G. Rossetti, a fresco by Pomarancio, J. Heintz, A. Durer, Dell ' Abbate, M. Parrish ) and in literature ( Goethe's Proserpina and Swinburne's Hymn to Proserpine and The Garden of Proserpine ) The statue of the Rape of Prosepina by Pluto that stands in the Great Garden ( more correctly, Großer Garten ) of Dresden, Germany is also referred to as " Time Ravages Beauty ".
The School Hymn is also used in other Schools in Hong Kong:
Giuseppe Verdi quotes from " La Marseillaise " in his patriotic anthem Hymn of the Nations, which also incorporates " God Save the King " and " Il Canto degli Italiani ".
He also used another pipe organ for " The Only Way ( Hymn )" from Tarkus.
" In the Orphic Hymn to Prothyraeia, the association of a goddess of childbirth as an epithet of virginal Artemis, making the death-dealing huntress also " she who comes to the aid of women in childbirth ," ( Graves 1955 15. a. 1 ), would be inexplicable in purely Olympian terms:
Besides sermons, Spurgeon also wrote several hymns and published a new collection of worship songs in 1866 called " Our Own Hymn Book ".
" Lofsöngur " (" Hymn "), also known as " Ó Guð vors lands " (" O, God of Our Land "), is the national anthem of Iceland.
He also wrote Protestant Hymn songbooks ( Gesangbuch ).
In 1975 he also appeared ( in an acting role alongside Jose Feliciano and David Carradine ) in the episode " Battle Hymn " in the third season of the TV series Kung Fu.
The Alma Mater song, also played at sporting events from time to time, is " Glory Hast Thou ," written to the tune of Haydn's " Austrian Hymn ," and better known as the tune used for " Deutschlandlied ," the German national anthem.
In 1746 he wrote his much-praised " Hymn to the Naiads ", and he also became a contributor to Dodsley's Museum, or Literary and Historical Register.
The Te Deum ( also known as Ambrosian Hymn or A Song of the Church ) is an early Christian hymn of praise.
Edmund Spenser wrote his Hymn of Heavenly Beauty using rhyme royal but he also derived his own Spenserian stanza with the rhyme scheme a-b-a-b-b-c-b-c-c partly by adapting rhyme royal.
Melanie also recorded a song called " Psychotherapy ", sung to the tune of the " Battle Hymn of the Republic ", which parodies aspects of Freudian psychoanalysis.
It has also been pointed out that the note progression of the tune has a noticeable family resemblance to the famous lay Catholic hymn " O Sanctissima " ( also known as " The Sicilian Mariner's Hymn ") collected ( or composed ) in Italy by Johann Gottfried Herder in the late 18th Century.
It is also referenced in Homeric Hymn 33 to the Dioscuri who were from Homeric times associated with it.
The Great Hymn to the Aten is also found in his Amarna tomb which was built during his service under Akhenaten.
He was also, from 1874 to 1896, editor of a religious periodical, The Sunday Magazine, in which he published several of his own hymns, among which is " Now let us see thy beauty, Lord ", which has appeared in several editions of the Methodist Hymn Book, in Congregational Praise and in the Australian Hymnbook, though not in its successor, Sing Alleluia.
Hamauzu also contributed the Piano Collections arranged album of the game, which he described as his most challenging work, and the track named " feel ", an arrangement of " Hymn of the Fayth ", from the EP feel / Go dream: Yuna & Tidus.
A second, abridged version ( with the second stanza omitted ), appeared as early as 1778 in Hymns and Psalms for the Service of Fitz-Roy Chapel ( London, 1778 ), then in the Wesleyan " Large Hymn Book " of 1780, and thence in many others, chiefly British and predominantly Anglican, but including also many later official Methodist hymn books.
The Hymn of the Pearl ( also Hymn of the Soul, Hymn of the Robe of Glory or Hymn of Judas Thomas the Apostle ) is a passage of the apocryphal Acts of Thomas.

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