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A Jesuit theologian, b. 1554, d. at Wilna, Poland, 28 February,
1590-91. After two years at Merton College, Oxford (1568-70) under the
tuition of John Potts, a well-known Philosopher, he went to the Jesuit
college at Louvain where he took his B.A. After some time spent in
Paris he entered the University of Munich under the patronage of Duke
William of Bavaria, proceeding M.A. The date of his entrance into the
Society of {ln:Jesus} is disputed, some authorities giving 1570, others
1575, the year in which he went to the English College, Rome, to pursue
his studies in theology. lt is certain, however, that on the latter
occasion he added Lawrence to his baptisal name, Arthur. He was soon
made professor of divinity and attracted the favourable attention of
Gregory XIII, who on the establishment of the Jesuit college at Posen
in 1581, appointed him rector. He was also professor of Greek there for
three years of moral theology and controversy for nine more, are was
held in highest repute among both ecclesiastical and secular
authorities. His chief theological works are: "De Christi in terris
Ecclesia, quaenam et penes quos existat" (Posen, 1584.), "Coenae
Lutheranorum et Calvinistarum oppugnatio ac catholicae Eucharitiae
defensio" (Posen, 1586); "Apologia libri sui de invocatione ac
veneratione Sanctorum" (Cologne, 1589).
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