One of the fun things about the internet (and about books) is that you can learn so many things without learning anything about how those things are pronounced.
Joseph Lawende, for me, is one of those things. He's such an important figure, and I have no idea how to say his name.
He was born in Warsaw, presumably his name is either German/Yiddish or Polish. As a speaker of Polish, I am fairly confident that Lawende is not a Polish name. In either case, in all three of those languages it would be pronounced fairly similarly: with the w as a v.
I can't find much of a record of Lawende as a last name, though, so I can't confirm that it is German/Yiddish. And of course, who knows how he himself would have pronounced it after moving to England, or how Englishmen would pronounce that name.
How do people here personally say it? How is it rendered by the tour guides on the various Ripper tours etc?
Joseph Lawende, for me, is one of those things. He's such an important figure, and I have no idea how to say his name.
He was born in Warsaw, presumably his name is either German/Yiddish or Polish. As a speaker of Polish, I am fairly confident that Lawende is not a Polish name. In either case, in all three of those languages it would be pronounced fairly similarly: with the w as a v.
I can't find much of a record of Lawende as a last name, though, so I can't confirm that it is German/Yiddish. And of course, who knows how he himself would have pronounced it after moving to England, or how Englishmen would pronounce that name.
How do people here personally say it? How is it rendered by the tour guides on the various Ripper tours etc?

I went to school with a John Lavender, but since that was more than 20 years ago and we didn't keep in touch I'm afraid that's no help whatsoever in terms of being able to ask him what he knows about the origin of his name.
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