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Ludwig Lavater

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Ludwig Lavater

Ludwig Lavater (4 March 1527; Kyburg (castle) – 5 July 1586 in Zurich) was a Swiss Reformed theologian working in the circle of his father-in-law, Heinrich Bullinger. He served as Archdeacon at the Grossmünster in Zurich and briefly Antistes of the Zurich church as the successor of Rudolf Gwalther.

Lavater was a prolific author, composing homilies, commentaries, a survey of the liturgical practices of the Zurich church, a history of the Lord's Supper controversy, as well as biographies of Bullinger and Konrad Pellikan. His work on ghosts (De spectris ...) was one of the most frequently printed demonological works of the early modern period, going into at least nineteen early modern editions in German, Latin, French, English and Italian.[1]

Works

  • "Ludwig Lavater". Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL) (in German).
  • Hans Ulrich Bächtold: Lavater, Ludwig in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
  • Georg von Wyß (1883), "Lavater, Ludwig", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 18, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 83–84
  • Katrin Moeller, Lavater, Ludwig., in Lexikon zur Geschichte der Hexenverfolgung. ed. Gudrun Gersmann, Katrin Moeller and Jürgen-Michael Schmidt, in historicum.net
  • Works of Ludwig Lavater in the Munich Digitization Center
  • Works of Lavater at the Post-Reformation Digital Library

References

  1. ^ Moeller, Katrin: Lavater, Ludwig. In: Lexikon zur Geschichte der Hexenverfolgung, hrsg. v. Gudrun Gersmann, Katrin Moeller und Jürgen-Michael Schmidt, in: historicum.net, URL: http://www.historicum.net/no_cache/persistent/artikel/5519/ Accessed April 8, 2010
Religious titles
Preceded by Antistes of Zurich
1585-1586
Succeeded by

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