Vattel, Emerich de
Emerich de Vattel (ā´mərĬkh də vätĕl´), 1714–67, Swiss philosopher and jurist. He served (1746–58) as Saxon minister at Bern and later in the cabinet of Augustus III at Dresden. He is famous for one book, Droit des gens; ou, Principes de la loi naturelle appliqués à la conduite et aux affaires des nations et des souverains (1758; tr. Law of Nations, 1760). This book, founded on the writings of Christian von Wolff, was important chiefly because it supplied a justification for liberal revolution. It also illustrated the growing attention to international law based on natural laws that were superior to positive legislation.
See P. P. Remec, The Position of the Individual in International Law (1960).
More From encyclopedia.com
Paul Langevin , Langevin, Paul
Langevin, Paul
(b. Paris, France, 23 January 1872; d. Paris, 19 December 1946)
physics.
Langevin, the second son of Victor Langevin, a… Pierre Bouguer , Bouguer, Pierre
Bouguer, Pierre
geodesy, hydrography, physics.
The son of Jean Bouguer, royal professor of hydrography, Pierre Bouguer was a prodigy… Nicolas-theodore De Saussure , Saussure, Nicolas-Théodore De
SAUSSURE, NICOLAS-THéODORE DE
chemistry, plant physiology.
Saussure was the son of the scientist Horace-Bénédict de Sau… Edouard Claparede , Claparède, Édouard (1873-1940)
Édouard Claparède, a Swiss physician and psychologist, was born March 24, 1873, in Geneva, where he died September 30,… Jean-etienne Guettard , geology, natural history, botany.
A versatile scientist trained in medicine and chemistry, Guettard gradually acquired knowledge of the various branc… De Broglie , de Broglie
You Might Also Like
NEARBY TERMS
Vattel, Emerich de