A radical Huguenot work, issued 1574 under the pseudonym Eusèbe Philadelphe Cosmopolite, cf.[1]. [2] suggests it was by Barnaud and Theodore Beza, following J. H. M. Salmon, The French Religious Wars in English Political Thought. Harold Laski identifies La Boétie as contributing, reckoning Barnaud as possibly the compiler [3].
h-france.net
A radical Huguenot work, issued 1574 under the pseudonym Eusèbe Philadelphe Cosmopolite, cf.[1]. [2] suggests it was by Barnaud and Theodore Beza, following J. H. M. Salmon, The French Religious Wars in English Political Thought. Harold Laski identifies La Boétie as contributing, reckoning Barnaud as possibly the compiler [3].
hermetics.org
This idea was put about by Johann Salomon Semler in the late eighteenth century. Arthur Edward Waite, The Pictorial Symbols of Alchemy (PDF), would have it that Barnaud was looking for Rosicrucians.
lewrockwell.com
archive.lewrockwell.com
A radical Huguenot work, issued 1574 under the pseudonym Eusèbe Philadelphe Cosmopolite, cf.[1]. [2] suggests it was by Barnaud and Theodore Beza, following J. H. M. Salmon, The French Religious Wars in English Political Thought. Harold Laski identifies La Boétie as contributing, reckoning Barnaud as possibly the compiler [3].