Hans Van Shluben
No, that would be John Calvin. Zwingli was in Zurich, not Geneva.
Huldrych Zwingli was the leader of the Protestant Reformation in Zurich. He was a Swiss priest who believed in reforming the Catholic Church through his teachings and writings. Zwingli's ideas laid the foundation for the development of Protestantism in Switzerland.
The disagreement between the Protestants and Catholics eventually led to civil war in Switzerland.
Martin Luther was the leader of the Protestant Reformation.
It was into Switzerland's atmosphere of freedom and diversity that a priest named Ulrich Zwingli (1484-1531) stepped forward in 1518 to attack the sale of indulgences. When Zwingli was appointed to the post of "Peoples priest" in the Swiss city of Zurich. Under Zwingli's leadership, the Reformation spread from Zuriich throughout Switzerland. Not all Swiss cantons, however joined Zwingli in the Reormation. But several was between Swiss Protestant and Romanist did little to alter Switzerland in anyway.
There were three of them in Switzerland: Huldrych Zwingli, John Calvin, and Guillaume Farel..from the website, History of Switzerland:The reformation of the church in Switzerland by Huldrych Zwingli,John Calvin and Guillaume Farel came a little later than the reformation in Germany by Martin Luther, but it did have a certain independence and it was more radical. As in Germany, the Reformation began in Switzerland as a religious renewal movementand ended in a deep political division between the progressive cities of northern and western Switzerland and the conservative rural areas of central Switzerland.
John Calvin
John Calvin was the most influential leader of the Protestant Reformation.
Martin Luther
Ulrich Zwingli
Martin Luther
Ignatius Loyala