PEOPLE KNOWN FOR: Christianity

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Jesus
Jesus was a religious leader revered in Christianity, one of the world’s major religions. He is regarded by most Christians as the Incarnation of God. The history of Christian reflection on the teachings...
Caravaggio: The Conversion of St. Paul (second version)
Christian Apostle
St. Paul the Apostle was one of the leaders of the first generation of Christians, often considered to be the most important person after Jesus in the history of Christianity. In his own day, although...
Martin Buber
German religious philosopher
Martin Buber was a German-Jewish religious philosopher, biblical translator and interpreter, and master of German prose style. Buber’s philosophy was centred on the encounter, or dialogue, of man with...
Jan Hus
Bohemian religious leader
Jan Hus was the most important 15th-century Czech religious reformer, whose work was transitional between the medieval and the Reformation periods and anticipated the Lutheran Reformation by a full century....
St. Albertus Magnus
German theologian, scientist, and philosopher
St. Albertus Magnus ; canonized December 16, 1931; feast day November 15) was a Dominican bishop and philosopher best known as a teacher of St. Thomas Aquinas and as a proponent of Aristotelianism at the...
Nikolaus Ludwig, Graf (count) von Zinzendorf
German religious leader
Nikolaus Ludwig, count von Zinzendorf was a religious and social reformer of the German Pietist movement who, as leader of the Moravian church (Unitas Fratrum), sought to create an ecumenical Protestant...
Vladimir I
grand prince of Kyiv
Vladimir I ; feast day July 15) was the grand prince of Kyiv and the first Christian ruler in Kievan Rus. His military conquests consolidated the provinces of Kyiv and Novgorod into a single state, and...
Jerome of Prague
Czech philosopher
Jerome of Prague was a Czech philosopher and theologian whose advocacy of sweeping religious reform in the Western church made him one of the first Reformation leaders in central Europe. A student at the...
Russian philosopher
Nikolay Aleksandrovich Berdyayev was a religious thinker, philosopher, and Marxist who became a critic of Russian implementation of Karl Marx’s views and a leading representative of Christian existentialism,...
Syrian bishop
Theōdūrus Abū Qurrah was a Syrian Melchite bishop, theologian, and linguist. He was an early exponent of cultural exchange with Islamic and other non-Christian peoples, and the first known Christian writer...
David I
king of Scotland
David I was one of the most powerful Scottish kings (reigned from 1124). He admitted into Scotland an Anglo-French (Norman) aristocracy that played a major part in the later history of the kingdom. He...
Hindu philosopher and social reformer
Keshab Chunder Sen was a Hindu philosopher and social reformer who attempted to incorporate Christian theology within the framework of Hindu thought. Although not of the Brahman class (varna), Sen’s family...
William Carey.
British missionary
William Carey was the founder of the English Baptist Missionary Society (1792), a lifelong missionary to India, and an educator whose mission at Shrirampur (Serampore) set the pattern for modern missionary...
king of Norway
Olaf II Haraldsson ; feast day July 29) was the first effective king of all Norway and the country’s patron saint, who achieved a 12-year respite from Danish domination and extensively increased the acceptance...
Susan Lincoln Tolman Mills.
American missionary and educator
Susan Lincoln Tolman Mills was an American missionary and educator who, with her husband, established what would become the first U.S. women’s college on the west coast. Susan Tolman graduated from Mount...
American physician and missionary
Mary Hannah Fulton was an American physician and missionary to China who ministered to many thousands not only through her own practice but by greatly expanding the availability of medical education in...
Byzantine philosopher, theologian, and statesman
Michael Psellus was a Byzantine philosopher, theologian, and statesman whose advocacy of Platonic philosophy as ideally integrable with Christian doctrine initiated a renewal of Byzantine classical learning...
Joseph Brant
Mohawk chief
Joseph Brant was a Mohawk Indian chief who served not only as a spokesman for his people but also as a Christian missionary and a British military officer during the American Revolution (1775–83). Brant...
emperor of Vietnam
Minh Mang was an emperor (1820–41) of central Vietnam who was known for his anti-Western policies, especially his persecution of Christian missionaries. Prince Chi Dam was the fourth son of Emperor Gia...
Vietnamese statesman
Le Van Duyet was a Vietnamese military strategist and government official who served as a diplomatic liaison between Vietnam and France and defended Christian missionaries against the early Nguyen emperors....
Michelozzo: Palazzo Medici-Riccardi
Italian artist
Michelozzo was an architect and sculptor, notable in the development of Florentine Renaissance architecture. Michelozzo studied with the celebrated sculptor Lorenzo Ghiberti, in whose workshop he acquired...
Stephen I
king of Hungary
Stephen I ; canonized 1083; feast day August 16) was the first king of Hungary, who is considered to be the founder of the Hungarian state and one of the most-renowned figures in Hungarian history. Stephen...
pope
Blessed Urban V ; beatified March 10, 1870) ; feast day December 19) was the pope from 1362 to 1370. Of noble birth, he joined the Benedictines, later teaching law at Avignon. He became abbot of Saint-Germain,...
king of Norway
Olaf Tryggvason was a Viking king of Norway (995–c. 1000), much celebrated in Scandinavian literature, who made the first effective effort to Christianize Norway. Olaf, the great-grandson of the Norwegian...
Christian theologian
Pelagius was a monk and theologian whose heterodox theological system known as Pelagianism emphasized the primacy of human effort in spiritual salvation. Coming to Rome about 380, Pelagius, though not...
American author and educator
Edith Hamilton was an American educator and author who was a notable popularizer of classical literature. Born in Germany of American parents, Hamilton grew up in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Her sister Alice...
Russian painter
Saint Andrey Rublyov ; feast day January 29) was one of the greatest medieval Russian painters, whose masterpiece is a magnificent icon of “The Old Testament Trinity,” now in the Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow....
emperor of Vietnam
Tu Duc was the emperor of Vietnam who followed a policy of conservatism and isolation and whose persecution of Christian missionaries foreshadowed the French conquest of Vietnam. The son of Emperor Thieu...
Whiston, oil painting by an unknown artist after a portrait by Sarah Hoadly, c. 1720; in the National Portrait Gallery, London
Anglican priest and mathematician
William Whiston was an Anglican priest and mathematician who sought to harmonize religion and science, and who is remembered for reviving in England the heretical views of Arianism. Ordained in 1693, Whiston...
prince of Poland
Bolesław III was a prince of Poland who introduced into his country the senioriate system, by which the eldest son received the major part of the royal inheritance. He converted the people of Pomerania...
French Judaic scholar
Jacob ben Meir Tam was a French Jew, an outstanding Talmudic authority of his time, who was responsible for a series of far-reaching decisions governing relationships between Christians and Jews in medieval...
Herrera, Juan de: Cathedral of Valladolid
Spanish architect
Juan de Herrera was an architect, principal designer of the monumental Escorial, a structure that expressed the ideals of imperial Spain in the 16th century. Serving as the royal inspector of monuments,...
American religious leader and writer
Margaret McDonald Bottome American columnist and religious organizer, founder of the Christian spiritual development and service organization now known as the International Order of the King’s Daughters...
Wenceslas I
prince of Bohemia
Wenceslas I ; feast day September 28) was the prince of Bohemia, a martyr, and the patron saint of the Czech Republic. Wencelas was raised a Christian by his grandmother St. Ludmila, but his ambitious...
Migne, engraving by E. Tailland
French priest and publisher
Jacques-Paul Migne was a French Roman Catholic priest who became one of the foremost 19th-century publishers of theological literature. Migne studied theology at Orléans, France, where he was ordained...
shogun of Japan
Tokugawa Hidetada was the second Tokugawa shogun, who completed the consolidation of his family’s rule, eliminated Christianity from Japan, and took the first steps toward closing the country to all trade...
Fāṭimid caliph
Al-Ḥākim was the sixth ruler of the Egyptian Shiʿi Fatimid dynasty, noted for his eccentricities and cruelty, especially his persecutions of Sunni Muslims, Christians, and Jews. He is held by adherents...
Foucauld, Charles Eugène, vicomte de
French ascetic
Charles Eugène, vicomte de Foucauld was a French soldier, explorer, and ascetic who is best known for his life of study and prayer after 1905 in the Sahara desert. Foucauld first visited North Africa in...
Olaf
king of Sweden
Olaf was the king of Sweden (c. 980–1022) whose apparent efforts to impose Christianity were frustrated by the leading non-Christian Swedish chieftains. The son of King Erik the Victorious and Gunhild,...
ruler of Lithuania
Mindaugas was a ruler of Lithuania, considered the founder of the Lithuanian state. He was also the first Lithuanian ruler to become a Christian. Mindaugas successfully asserted himself over other leading...
king of Mercia
Wulfhere was the king of the Mercians from 657, who made himself overlord of much of England south of the River Humber. He exercised control over Essex, London, Surrey, and the West Saxon lands, or Wessex,...
Vietnamese ruler
Hien Vuong was a member of the Nguyen family who ruled in southern Vietnam in 1648–87. He persecuted European Christian missionaries, expanded the territory under his control, and made notable agricultural...
French philosopher
Maurice Blondel was a French dialectical philosopher who formulated a “philosophy of action” that integrated classical Neoplatonic thought with modern pragmatism in the context of a Christian philosophy...
English author and editor
Hugh Paulin Cressy was an English Benedictine monk, historian, apologist, and spiritual writer noted for his editorship of writings by Counter-Reformation mystics. Educated at Merton College, Oxford, Cressy...
British theologian
John Caird was a British theologian and preacher, and an exponent of theism in Hegelian terms. Ordained as a Presbyterian minister on graduating from Glasgow University (1845), Caird made a nation-wide...
Clark, William Smith
American educator
William Smith Clark was an American educator and agricultural expert who helped organize Sapporo Agricultural School, later Hokkaido University, in Japan. He also stimulated the development of a Christian...
king of Norway
Harald II Eiriksson was a Norwegian king who, along with his brothers, overthrew Haakon I about 961 and ruled oppressively until about 970. He is credited with establishing the first Christian missions...
king of Denmark
Harald I was the king of Denmark from c. 958? to c. 985, credited with the first unification of the country. He was the son of Gorm the Old, the first significant figure in a new royal line centred at...
British bishop
Thomas Valpy French was the first Anglican bishop of Lahore (now in Pakistan). French was educated at Rugby School and University College, Oxford, of which he became a fellow in 1848. In 1850 he was accepted...
British biblical scholar
Christian David Ginsburg was a Hebrew and biblical scholar who was the foremost authority in England on the Masorah (authoritative Jewish tradition concerning the correct text of the Hebrew Bible). Ginsburg,...