Difference between revisions of "Giovanni Luzzi (1856-1948), scholar"

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====Books====
====Books====
*[[Fatti degli apostoli (1899 Luzzi), book]]
*[[Fatti degli apostoli (1899 Luzzi), book]]
*[[Le epistole di S. Paolo: seconda parte (1908 Bosio/Luzzi), book]]
*[[Le epistole di S. Paolo: seconda parte (1908 Bosio/Luzzi), book]]
*[[La Bibbia (1921-1930 Luzzi), book]]


==External links==
==External links==
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[[Category:Scholars|Luzzi]]
[[Category:Scholars|Luzzi]]


[[Category:Swiss|Luzzi]]
[[Category:Swiss|1856 Luzzi]]


[[Category:Italian|Luzzi]]
[[Category:Italian|1856 Luzzi]]
[[Category:Italian Scholars|1856 Luzzi]]
[[Category:Italian Scholars|1856 Luzzi]]
[[Category:People of Florence|1856 Luzzi]]


[[Category:Born in the 1850s| 1856 Luzzi]]
[[Category:Born in the 1850s| 1856 Luzzi]]
[[Category:Died in the 1940s| 1948 Luzzi]]
[[Category:Died in the 1940s| 1948 Luzzi]]

Latest revision as of 09:48, 6 April 2013

Giovanni Luzzi (1856-1948) was an Swiss Italian scholar.

Biography

Biblical scholar. Giovanni Luzzi was born at Tschlin (Switzerland), but grew up at Lucca, Italy. In Florence, attended the Waldensian Theological Seminary and learned Hebrew with David Castelli. After some additional years of study at Edinburgh, Scotland, went back to Florence, where in 1902 became Professor at the Waldensian Theological Seminary and began his monumental work of translating the Bible from the original texts. Luzzi befriended the leaders of the modernist Catholic movement, Ernesto Buonaiuti, Brizio Casciola, Romolo Murri, Giovanni Semeria, Umberto Fracassini, and others. He also maintained close relationship with international scholarship and in 1911-12 visited the United Studies, lecturing at Princeton, Harvard, New York and Washington. When the Waldensian Faculty moved to Rome in 1920, after only a couple of year preferred to leave the teaching and serve instead as a pastor at Poschiavo, Scwitzerland. In 1930 went back to Florence and during World War II, again to Poschiavo, where he would eventually die in 1948.

Works on Second Temple Judaism

Books

External links