Laotze

Laotze (i.e. the old Philosopher), a Chinese sage, born in the province of Ho-nan about 565 B.C., a contemporary of Confucius, who wrote the celebrated “Tao-te-King,” canon, that is, of the Tao, or divine reason, and of virtue, one—and deservedly so on account of its high ethics—of the sacred books of China; he was the founder of one of the three principal religions of China, Confucianism and Buddhism being the other two, although his followers, the Tao-sze as they are called, are now degenerated into a set of jugglers.

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Laomedon * La Pérouse
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Languedoc
Lanka
Lannes, Jean, Duc de Montebello
Lansdowne, Henry, third Marquis of
Lansdowne, Henry, fifth Marquis of
Lanterne, La
Laocöon
Laodamia
Laodicea
Laomedon
Laotze
La Pérouse
Lapithæ
Laplace
Lapland
La Plata
La Plata River
Lapsi
Laputa
Lardner, Dionysius
Lardner, Nathaniel