Jean Barbeyrac - Wikipedia Jean Barbeyrac (French: [baʁbɛʁak]; 15 March 1674 – 3 March 1744) was a French jurist and translator A French Huguenot, he translated influential works by Hugo Grotius, Samuel von Pufendorf, Richard Cumberland and others into French
Jean Barbeyrac | Online Library of Liberty Jean Barbeyrac (1674-1744) was a Huguenot refugee from religious persecution in France He taught in Germany, Switzerland, and Holland and became one of the most important disseminators of Protestant natural law as well as an important rights-theorist
Barbeyrac, Jean | SpringerLink Jean Barbeyrac (1674–1744) was an influential figure in the Republic of Letters of early modern era He is best known for his French translations of Samuel Pufendorf’s and Hugo Grotius’s natural law treatises
Barbeyrac, Jean - Biblical Cyclopedia Barbeyrac, Jean a famous French jurist, was born March 15, 1674, at Beziers, where his father was a minister of the Gospel After the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, he went with his parents to Lausanne, where he pursued his theological studies
Jean Barbeyracs Theory of Permissive Natural Law and the . . . - JSTOR Jean Jean Jean Barbeyrac Barbeyrac Barbeyrac was was was born born born ininin Beziers Beziers Beziers ininin 1674, 1674, 1674, fleeing fleeing fleeing with with with hishishis family family family tototo Lau- Lau- Lau-sanne sanne sanne after after after the the the Revocation Revocation Revocation ofofof the the the Edict Edict Edict ofofof
Barbeyrac, Jean - Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and . . . a famous French jurist, was born March 15, 1674, at Beziers, where his father was a minister of the Gospel After the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, he went with his parents to Lausanne, where he pursued his theological studies
(PDF) Jean Barbeyrac’s Theory of Permissive Natural Law and the . . . The paper considers Jean Barbeyrac's theory of permissive natural law, in particular its significance for his account of natural property rights This interpretation contributes to current debates on permissive natural law in the early modern period by arguing that Barbeyrac’s theory was more significant than hitherto acknowledged