An English translation, entitled A Sovereign Antidote against Arian Poyson, appeared in London, 1719, and again "revised, corrected, and, in a few places, abridged", by Abraham Booth, under the title of The Deity of Jesus Christ essential to the Christian Religion, 1777.
Friedrich Gustav Jakob Henle | St. Jakob-Park | Jakob Böhme | Philipp Jakob Cretzschmar | Johann Jakob Engel | Jakob Michael Reinhold Lenz | Johann Jakob Reiske | Jakob von Uexküll | Jakob Nielsen (usability consultant) | Jakob Nielsen | Jakob Heine | Jakob Altaras | Emil Jakob Schindler | Johann Jakob Kaup | Jakob Steiner | Jakob Sporrenberg | Jakob Friedrich Fries | Jakob Erhardt | Jakob Bogdani | Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen | Carl Jakob Adolf Christian Gerhardt | Walter Jakob Gehring | Sankt Jakob in Defereggen | Rudolf Jakob Camerarius | portrait of Jakob Muffel | Johann Jakob von Tschudi | Johann Jakob Moser | Johann Jakob Haid | Johann Jakob Bethmann | Johann Jakob Bachofen |
One of the earliest scholars to claim that he could trace the ten lost tribes of Israel to France was the French Huguenot writer, Jacques Abbadie, who fled French Roman Catholic persecution and later settled in London, England.