"Nonesuch" is also known as "None Such" and "A la Mode de France".
King Henry VIII built an opulent hunting lodge in Duddington, near Epson, Surrey, in 1538 and called it Nonesuch. It was the most extravagant of Henry's 14 houses, played a key role in the development of Tudor architecture and the introduction of Renaissance style in England, and was built from scratch to adorn Henry's new hunting estate close to London. Nonesuch took almost ten years to complete, and was not quite done when Henry died in 1547. Queen Mary I allowed it to go to Henry Fitzalan, 12th Earl of Arundel in exchange for some of Arundel's Norfolk estates. Young Queen Elizabeth I enjoyed visiting Nonesuch as a guest of Lord Lumley, son-in-law of the Earl of Arundel, and it was recorded that "there is much dancing of country dances in the privy chamber at Nonesuch, before the Queen's majesty, who is exceeding pleased therewith." Elizabeth enjoyed Nonesuch so much that she purchased the estate in the last decade of her reign, returning it to the crown.
"None Such" was published in the first edition of The English Dancing Master (1651). Under the alternate title it appears in Musick's Delight on the Cithren and Musick's Recreation on the Lyra-Viol, sometimes in a major key.
It was also printed in Chappell's Popular Music of the Olden Time, vol. 1, (1859), Karpeles & Schofield's A Selection of 100 English Folk Dance Airs (1951) and Sharp's Country Dance Tunes, (1909).
It was recorded on The English Country Dancing Master by The Telemann Society and, I believe, on one of the Golden Ring albums.