Daniel Lucas (Ebrary)

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Daniel Lucas
1st Sovereign Protector of Ebrary
Assumed office
15 June 1983
President (current)
Preceded byOffice established
Jacobo VI as King of Ebrary
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
In office
1964–1966
Personal details
Born27 Feb 1936
CitizenshipEbrarian
Children2
Alma materEgschwil Christian University
OccupationPastor, politician

Daniel Gio Lucas (born 27 February 1936) is an Ebrarian Christenist pastor, revolutionary, and the first and current Sovereign Protector of Ebrary, in office since 1983.

Early life

Lucas was the third child born in the small village of Dubros, in northern Opa Province, to Gulielmo Lucas and Maria Ferrero. He had two older brothers, and two younger brothers and a younger sister. His father was of Ebraricized Vorstish descent while his mother was of mixed Ebrarian and Vorstish ancestry. His father was a traveling salesman and veteran of the Ebrarian Republican Army in the Ebrarian Civil War and his mother was a homemaker. Lucas's father was raised in the Church of Ebrary but did not attend church, and his mother was a devout Christenist and regularly took Lucas and his siblings to church services. Neither Lucas's father nor mother spoke Vorstish, and Lucas did not learn the language himself until his late 30s.

Daniel Lucas attended Egschwil Christian University from 1955 - 1959, receiving a Bachelor's Degree in theology. Lucas married Anna (née Rodrigo) in 1960. They had two children together, a daughter Mariah (born 1962) and son Paulo (born 1963).

Early political and religious career

Lucas ran for office as a member of the Christian Social Movement in his home village of Dubros, winning a seat in the lower house (Chamber of Deputies) of the Parliament of the then-Kingdom of Ebrary. Lucas held this seat until 1966 when the Christian Social Movement was banned for subversive activities under the authority of the King, and Lucas was imprisoned for three years in a prison in northern Adansema. He was released after the monarch issued a blanket pardon of all members of the party, but one condition of this release was that those pardoned would never again run for political office in Ebrary.

Unable to return to politics, Lucas was able to find a spot in 1971 as a pastor of a small congregation of the Christenist Union of Ebrary in northern Laverna province. It was during this period in which Lucas began his prolific and controversial writings concerning politics, theology, and philosophy.