Digital Logos Edition
Considered the “father of modern education,” John Amos Comenius was a Czech teacher, educator, and writer. In 1614 he was ordained into the ministry of the Moravian Brethren, and he considered pastoral work the most important of all his duties. His influence over education, however, would be his greatest legacy, and in his work Didactica Magna, he outlined a school system that would be generally adopted worldwide. Other important works of his influenced the general theory, the subject matter, and the method of education. Alongside his pastoral work and travels, Bishop Comenius still found time to write religious works and hymns. John Amos Comenius by Simon Laurie chronicles his life, travels, works, and legacy.
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Mr. Laurie deserves the thanks of the educational world for his sketch of a remarkable man, whose success, in an unworldly sense, was great, and whose failures are almost more instructive than his success.
—Athenaeum
Mr. Laurie has given us a good memoir of John Amos Comenius, the earnest, simple-minded Moravian Bishop, who set about reforming the schools of Europe in the midst of the confusion of the Thirty Years’ War. His name is far less known than it deserves to be, and Mr. Laurie has done good service in erecting this monument to his memory.
—Westminster Review
The work is a systematic, earnest, and conscientious effort in educational biography. The introduction, which seeks to explain the relation of Comenius to the Humanistic and Realistic Schools, which were the outcome of the Renaissance, is well thought out and well written, and the analysis of Comenius’ educational writings is executed with intelligence and thoroughness.
—Scotsman