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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 ).
Jan Łaski herbu Korab (ur. 1456 w Łasku, zm. 19 maja 1531 w Kaliszu) – arcybiskup gnieźnieński i prymas Polski w latach 1510–1531, kanclerz wielki koronny od 1503, sekretarz królewski od 1501, kantor poznańskiej kapituły katedralnej w 1484 roku, kantor gnieźnieńskiej kapituły katedralnej w 1487 roku, kanonik gnieźnieńskiej kapituły katedralnej w...
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...
- Zuzanna z Bąkowej Góry
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.
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.
- 1510 - 1531
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.
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 »