, in Latin Baduellus, a Protestant divine of the sixteenth century,
, in Latin Baduellus, a Protestant divine of the sixteenth century, was a native of
Nismes, and taught in the university of that city. In 1557
he went into Switzerland, and became the pastor of a
church in the vicinity of Geneva, and“taught philosophy
and mathematics till his death in 1561. He translated several of Calvin’s sermons into Latin, which he published
at Geneva, also
” Acta Martyrum nostri sseculi,“Genev.
1556
” Oratio ad Instituendum Gymnasium Nemausensi
de Studiis Literarum“” De Collegio et Universitate Nemausensi;“”Epistola Paracnetica ad Paulum filium de
vero patrimonio et hsereditate quam Christiani parentes
suis liberis debent relinquere,“and some other works, all
in Latin, which he was thought to write with great fluency.
But his most remarkable work was entitled
” De ratione
vitoe studiosa3 ac literatas in Matrimonio collocandae ac degendae," which has been three times printed in 8vo and 4to,
1544, 1577, and 1581. A defence of marriage, at that
time, was an object of some importance, and its advantages
to men of literature are displayed with good sense in this
work. Bayle gives a long account of it, and a farther list
of BaduePs works may be seen in Gesner’s Bibliotheca.