Returning to England, he was offered considerable preferment by King James on condition of becoming a member of the Church of England. This offer he refused, and he returned to France in 1604, when he was appointed professor of civil law in the university of Angers[?]. He died at Angers in 1608. His principal works were De Regno el Regali Potestate,(1600), a strenuous defence of the rights of kings, in which he refutes the doctrines of George Buchanan, “Junius Brutus” (Hubert Languet) and Jean Boucher[?]; and De Potestate Papae, (1609), in opposition to the usurpation of temporal powers by the pope, which called forth the celebrated reply of Cardinal Bellarmine[?]; also commentaries on some of the titles of the Pandects.
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