Johann Ludwig Schönleben
Johann Ludwig Schönleben (November 16, 1618 – October 15, 1681; Slovene: Janez Ludvik, Latin: Joannis Ludovici) was a Carniolan priest, rhetorician, and historian. Life and workSchönleben was born in Ljubljana, the son of the politician Ludwig Schönleben and his wife Susanna Kuschlan[1] and baptized Joan. Ludovicus Shönliebel.[2] The family originally stemmed from Württemberg.[3] He attended the Jesuit college in Ljubljana and joined the order on October 15, 1635.[1] Schönleben studied in Vienna, Graz, and Passau. He left the Jesuit order in 1653, received a doctorate in Padua, and then returned to Ljubljana.[1] Schönleben was a well-known rhetorician and some of his speeches were also published. He was important in theology as a proponent of the Immaculate Conception. As a historian, he wrote a series of genealogies of Carniolan noble families. His most important work was Carniolia antiqua et nova (Carniola Old and New; Ljubljana, 1681). He was the teacher of Johann Weikhard von Valvasor.[4] Schönleben died in Ljubljana and was buried in St. James's Church.[3] References
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