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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jan_ŁaskiJan Łaski - Wikipedia

    Jan Łaski or Johannes à Lasco (1499 – 8 January 1560) was a Polish Calvinist reformer. Owing to his influential work in England (1548–1553) during the English Reformation , he is known to the English-speaking world by the Anglicised form John à Lasco (or less commonly, John Laski ).

  2. Jan Łaski herbu Korab, znany też jako: Joannes a Lasco, Jan z Łaska, Lascius, (ur. 1499 w Łasku, zm. 8 stycznia 1560 w Pińczowie) – początkowo ksiądz katolicki, prepozyt kapituły katedralnej poznańskiej w latach 1506–1512 [1], proboszcz gnieźnieński i łęczycki, kustosz płocki, archidiakon warszawski, kanonik krakowski [2], następnie minister (pa...

  3. He was the second most important person in the country after the king. His nephew, Jan Łaski (born in 1499) and later became known throughout Europe as a Protestant reformer and organizer of religious communities. He died on 8 January 1560. by Michał Rzeczycki.

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  4. In Reformed and Presbyterian churches: Reformed churches in eastern Europe. …an influential Reformed theologian in Jan Łaski (d. 1560), the Counter-Reformation reduced Reformed churches to the status of a small sect in Poland by the 17th century.

  5. Jan Łaski (1456 in Łask – 19 May 1531 in Kalisz, Poland) was a Polish nobleman, Grand Chancellor of the Crown (1503–10), diplomat, from 1490 secretary to Poland's King Casimir IV Jagiellon and from 1508 coadjutor to the Archbishop of Lwów.

  6. Overview. Jan Łaski. (1499—1560) Quick Reference. (Eng., John of Lasco, John the Younger; Fr., Johannes à Lasko; 1499–1560), Polish Calvinist reformer. Łaski was the son of Yaroslav, a fairly well-to-do nobleman of central Poland, who became ... From: Łaski, Jan in The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Reformation »

  7. The armorial binding was created especially for Jan Łaski, also known as Johannes a Lasco, a Polish humanist and reformer (see left). Having grown up in Krakow where he received education from his uncle (Jan Łaski the Elder, Archbishop of Gniezno and head of the Polish church), Łaski continued his studies in Italy.