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Jean-Jacques and Burlamaqui
The true forerunner of human rights discourse was the concept of natural rights which appeared as part of the medieval Natural law tradition that became prominent during the Enlightenment with such philosophers as John Locke, Francis Hutcheson, and Jean-Jacques Burlamaqui, and featured prominently in the political discourse of the American Revolution and the French Revolution.
* 1694 – Jean-Jacques Burlamaqui, Swiss theorist ( d. 1748 )
The term came into wide usage in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries with the writings of Hugo Grotius ( 1653 ), Cornelius van Bynkershoek ( 1707 ), and Jean-Jacques Burlamaqui ( 1732 ), among others, and the rise of the political doctrine of jus ad bellum or " just war theory ".
The philosopher Jean-Jacques Burlamaqui ( 1694 – 1750 ) and the celebrated international lawyer Emeric de Vattel ( 1714 1767 ) were natives of Neuchâtel, though de Vattle only returned to die in the city.
Vattel was one of a number of 18th century European scholars who wrote on international law and were " well known in America " at the time, including Jean-Jacques Burlamaqui, Cornelius van Bynkershoek, Hugo Grotius, Samuel von Pufendorf, Thomas Rutherforth, and Wolff.
Jean-Jacques Burlamaqui
A precursor of Montesquieu and of Rousseau was Jean-Jacques Burlamaqui ( 1694 – 1750 ) in his Principes du droit naturel et politique ( 1747 and 1751, issued together in 1763 ), while the celebrated international lawyer, Emeric de Vattel ( 1714 1767 ), was a native of Neuchâtel by birth and descent, and, though he spent most of his life at foreign courts, died at Neuchâtel, not so very long after the publication of his famous Droit des gens ( 1758 ).
Jean-Jacques Burlamaqui.
Jean-Jacques Burlamaqui ( 24 June 1694 – 3 April 1748 ) was a Swiss legal and political theorist who popularised a number of ideas propounded by other thinkers.
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