- John the
Baptist (c. 6 BC – c. AD 30) was a
Jewish preacher active in the area of the
Jordan River in the
early first century AD. He is also
known as Saint...
- Pope John Paul II (born
Karol Józef Wojtyła; 18 May 1920 – 2
April 2005) was head of the
Catholic Church and
sovereign of the
Vatican City
State from 16...
-
Iohannes (floruit 456) was a
politician of the
Eastern Roman Empire.
Iohannes is
known only
through the
inscriptions that
recorded him as the
Consul of...
- John Amos
Comenius (/kəˈmiːniəs/; Czech: Jan Amos Komenský; German:
Johann Amos Comenius; Polish: Jan Amos Komeński; Latinized:
Ioannes Amos Comenius;...
- John
Chrysostom (/ˈkrɪsəstəm, krɪˈsɒstəm/; Gr****: Ἰωάννης ὁ Χρυσόστομος, Latin:
Ioannes Chrysostomus; c. 347 – 14
September 407) was an
important Church...
- John of
Damascus or John Damascene, born Yūḥana ibn Manṣūr ibn Sarjūn, was an Arab
Christian monk, priest, hymnographer, and apologist. He was born and...
- Fear and
Trembling (Danish:
Frygt og Bæven) is a
philosophical work by Søren Kierkegaard,
published in 1843
under the
pseudonym Johannes de
silentio (Latin...
-
origin Mic****e D. Johannes,
American volleyball player and
physicist Iohannes (consul 467),
Roman consul in 467 Joannes,
Roman emperor in 423–425 Schinderhannes...
-
Johann Maier von Eck (13
November 1486 – 13
February 1543),
often anglicized as John Eck, was a
German Catholic theologian, scholastic, prelate, and opponent...
-
perhaps a floruit.
Arnaldi 1982.
Modern scholarship sometimes Latinizes it
Iohannes Codagnellus.
Arnaldi 1982; Dell'Aprovitola &
Hartmann 2016.
Arnaldi 1982...