Ludwig

"Variant of Louis. Renowned warrior"

♂ Männlich · Germanic
germanic royal classic distinguished philosophical

📖 Über Ludwig

Ludwig ist die germanische Form von Louis — aus dem Althochdeutschen ‛berühmter Krieger“ — und einer der bedeutendsten Namen der Geschichte: getragen von Beethoven (der seine größten Werke als Gehörloser schrieb), Ludwig II. von Bayern (der Neuschwanstein baute) und dem Philosophen Wittgenstein.

📍 Details

  • HerkunftGermanic
  • Geschlecht♂ Männlich
  • BedeutungVariant of Louis. Renowned warrior

🔀 Varianten & Verwandte Namen

⭐ Berühmte Persönlichkeiten

  • Ludwig van Beethoven — German composer (1770–1827), widely considered the greatest composer of Western classical music; his nine symphonies, 32 piano sonatas, and 16 string quartets are cornerstones of the repertoire; composed his final and most celebrated works — including the Ninth Symphony with its choral finale setting Schiller’s “Ode to Joy” — after becoming completely deaf, making his story one of the most extraordinary in the history of human creativity.
  • Ludwig II of Bavaria — King of Bavaria (1845–1886), known as the Fairy-tale King or Mad King Ludwig; commissioned the extravagant Neuschwanstein Castle (the model for Disney’s Sleeping Beauty castle), was the devoted patron of composer Richard Wagner, and died mysteriously by drowning in Lake Starnberg in 1886; one of the most romantic, enigmatic, and culturally influential monarchs of the 19th century.
  • Ludwig Wittgenstein — Austrian-British philosopher (1889–1951), considered one of the most influential philosophers of the 20th century; his early work Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus (1921) attempted to define the limits of language and thought; his later Philosophical Investigations (published posthumously 1953) revolutionised the philosophy of language, mind, and meaning.
  • Ludwig Feuerbach — German philosopher (1804–1872) whose materialist critique of religion — arguing that God is a projection of human nature — profoundly influenced Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, and the development of socialist and atheist thought; his major work The Essence of Christianity (1841) was a landmark in 19th-century intellectual history.
  • Clovis I (Chlodwig) — King of the Franks (c. 466–511 AD), the original bearer of the name Chlodwig (the Frankish ancestor of Ludwig); united the Frankish tribes, converted to Christianity in 496 AD — a pivotal moment in European history — and established the Merovingian kingdom that became the foundation of France and the Holy Roman Empire.