Andrew Louth
![Louth speaking at [[St Edmund Hall, Oxford]], in 2017 in front of a portrait of [[A. B. Emden]]](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f3/Andrew_Louth.jpg)
use both this parameter and |birth_date to display the person's date of birth, date of death, and age at death) -->
| death_place =
| spouse =
| module =
Eastern Orthodox)
| church =
| ordained = | 2003 (Eastern Orthodox priest)}}
| congregations =
| offices_held =
}}
| module2 =
| thesis_title =
| thesis_year =
| school_tradition =
| doctoral_advisor =
| academic_advisors =
| influences =
| era =
| discipline =
| sub_discipline =
Patristics
| workplaces =
| doctoral_students =
| notable_students =
| main_interests =
| notable_works =
| notable_ideas =
| influenced =
}}
| signature =
| signature_alt =
}}
Andrew Louth (; born 11 November 1944) is an English
theologian. He is an emeritus professor of
patristic and Byzantine studies in the Department of Theology and Religion of
Durham University. Louth has been at Durham University since 1996. Previously he taught at the
University of Oxford (mostly patristics) and at
Goldsmiths' College in Byzantine and
early medieval history. He is a fellow of the
British Academy and was a member of the British Academy Council from 2011 to 2014. He was President of the
Ecclesiastical History Society (2009–10).
Born on 11 November 1944 in
Louth,
Lincolnshire, he was educated at the universities of
Cambridge and
Edinburgh. His former students include Romanian theologian and politician
Mihail Neamțu. On the theology of
Dumitru Stăniloae (1903–1993), Louth takes a position similar to Neamțu, stating that Stăniloae's
apologetics was shaped by confessional bias and rhetorical clichés.
Formerly an
Anglican priest, he converted to
Eastern Orthodoxy in 1989 and was ordained as an Eastern Orthodox priest in 2003.
Provided by Wikipedia