Lavater, Johann Caspar (Zurich, 1741-1801, Zurich), entered the Church and immediately engaged in a campaign against corruption in high places in Canton Zurich, which ended with the successful prosecution of the influential Landrat Grebel in 1762. Having thereby understandably made enemies, he travelled for a year in North Germany, making contact with several writers of the day, including F. G. Klopstock, J. W. L. Gleim, M. Mendelssohn, and K. W. Ramler. On his return he began to write, publishing Gereimte Psalmen (1768) and Zwey Hundert Christliche Lieder (1771) and editing a moralizing weekly, Der Erinnerer. In 1769 he was appointed deacon (Diakonus) to the Zurich orphanage and soon acquired a reputation as an eloquent and original preacher. In 1768 he began to express his emotional Christianity in Aussichten in die Ewigkeit, which was followed by the pietistic Geheimes Tagebuch von einem Beobachter seiner selbst (1771). His best-known work is the Physiognomische Fragmente zur Beförderung der Menschenkenntnis und Menschenliebe, which appeared in 4 vols., 1775-8. The work was abundantly illustrated by engravings. The Physiognomische Fragmente sets out to interpret the links between the face and the soul, but the work is rashly executed without an adequate basis of investigation. In this it corresponds to the author's impulsive and enthusiastic character.
In 1778 Lavater was appointed pastor to St Peter's church in Zurich. His friendship with Goethe, begun on their Rhine journey of 1774 (see Zwischen Lavater und Basedow), was terminated by Goethe in 1786. Lavater extended his Christian physiognomical studies to anthropology in Pontius Pilatus oder der Mensch in allen Gestalten (1782-5). In 1800, when Zurich was taken by the French, he was shot while carrying out spiritual ministrations, and died of the consequences many months later. Goethe ridiculed Lavater in the Xenien and in Faust, Part One, as the crane (Kranich) in the Walpurgisnachtstraum, but he passed a more considered judgement in Bk. 14 of Dichtung und Wahrheit.
Sämtliche Werke (6 vols.) appeared 1834-8; a select edition by E. Stähelin (4 vols.) in 1943; reprints include Sämtliche kleinere prosaische Schriften (1987) and Vermischte Schriften (1988).





