Religious Communities of the Name of Jesus
Feast of the Holy Name of Mary
Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary
United Dioceses of Narni and Terni
Catholic Young Men's National Union
Feast of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary
Sisters of Charity of Nazareth
Sts. Nereus and Achilleus, Domitilla and Pancratius
Felix-Jean-Baptiste-Joseph Nève
Vicariate Apostolic of New Caldonia
Vicariate Apostolic of New Hebrides
Vicariate Apostolic of New Pomerania
Republic and Diocese of Nicaragua
Nicene and Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed
Diocese of Nicopolis (Nicopolitana)
Titular Archdiocese of Nicosia
Diocese of Nicotera and Tropea
Juan Eusebio Nieremberg y Otin
Nominalism, Realism, Conceptualism
Prefecture Apostolic of the Northern Territory
Notitia Provinciarum et Civitatum Africae
Nonnus, of Panopolis in Upper Egypt (c. 400), the reputed author of two poems in hexameters; one, Dionysiaka, about the mysteries of Bacchus, and the other the "Paraphrase of the Fourth Gospel". Dräseke proposes Apollinaris of Laodicea (Theolog. Litteraturzeitung, 1891, 332), and a fourteenth-century Manuscript suggests Ammonius as the author of the "Paraphrase", but the similarity of style makes it very probable that the two poems have the same author. Nonnus would then seem to have been a pagan when he wrote the first, and afterwards to have become a Christian. Nothing else is known of his life. The "Paraphrase" is not completely extant; 3750 lines of it, now divided into twenty-one chapters, are known. It has some importance as evidence of the text its author used, and has been studied as a source of textual criticism (Blass, "Evang. Sec. Ioh. cum variæ lectionis delectu", Leipzig, 1902; Janssen in "Texte u. Untersuchungen", XXIII, 4, Leipzig, 1903). Otherwise it has little interest or merit. It is merely a repetition of the Gospel, verse by verse, inflated with fantastic epithets and the addition of imaginary details. The "Paraphrase" was first published by the Aldine Press in 1501. The edition of Heinsius (Leyden, 1627) is reprinted in P. G., XLIII, 749-1228. The best modern edition is by Scheindler: "Nonni Panopolitani paraphrasis s. evang. Ioannei" (Leipzig, 1881).
FABRICIUS-HARLES, Bibl. græca, VIII (Hamburg, 1802), 601-12; KOECHLY, Opuscula philologica, I (Leipzig, 1881), 421-46; KINKEL, Die Ueberlieferung der Paraphrase des en. Ioh. von Nonnos, I (Zurich, 1870); TIEDKE, Nonniana (Berlin, 1883).
ADRIAN FORTESCUE.