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・ Ludwik Malinowski
・ Ludwik Margules
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Ludwig Wenzel Lachnith
・ Ludwig Western Railway
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・ Ludwig Wilding
・ Ludwig Wilhelm Gilbert
・ Ludwig Wilhelm Maurer
・ Ludwig Wilhelm Wichmann
・ Ludwig Wilhelm, Prince of Bentheim and Steinfurt
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・ Ludwig Wittgenstein's philosophy of mathematics
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Ludwig Wenzel Lachnith : ウィキペディア英語版
Ludwig Wenzel Lachnith
Ludwig Wenzel Lachnith (Prague, July 7, 1746 – Paris, October 3, 1820)〔(Slonimsky 1958),p. 894〕 was a Bohemian horn player and versatile composer influenced by Joseph Haydn and Ignaz Pleyel. Today he is chiefly remembered because of his adaptions of operas by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. The French composer and writer Hector Berlioz immortalized him in a diatribe in his autobiography.
==Biography==

Lachnith was born in Prague.
After early studies with his father Franz, an able church musician in Prague, Lachnith from 1768 onwards became a member of the court orchestra in Zweibrücken.〔(Biographical Article "Lachnith" in: Österreichisches Biographisches Lexikon 1815 – 1950 (in German) )〕
In 1773 he went to Paris to study French horn with Johann Josef Rudolf (Rodolphe) and later composition with François-André Danican Philidor.〔(Biographical Article "Lachnith" in: Oesterreichisches Musiklexikon ONLINE (in German) )〕 Since 1783 he was living permanently in Paris, where his symphonies were played in the ''Concerts de la Reine'' (Marie Antoinette).
With the onset of the French Revolution he got in trouble with the new authorities and had to resign from his post at the Paris opera. He fled from the terror of the revolution in 1790, came back and henceforth eked out a meagre existence by giving private lessons and arranging operas and even oratorios for Parisian theatres. In 1801 he became instructor at the Paris Opera, but had to leave the following year, only to be reemployed in 1806. He died in Paris.
He is remembered chiefly as a composer of pasticcios, using the music of several composers in one piece. His arrangement of the music and libretto of Mozart's Magic Flute (Zauberflöte), appearing under the title ''Les Mystères d'Isis'', was an instant success but also parodied as ''Les Misères d'ici''. In several of his ventures he had Christian Kalkbrenner, father of the pianist and composer Friedrich Kalkbrenner, as his collaborator.

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