His papers were edited by his brother Johannes (1605), who published the major book De arcanis rerum publicarum libri sex; there were later editions by Johannes Arnoldi Corvinus (1641), and Martinus Schoock (1668, 1672).
With Gerard de Wassenaer and Pieter de la Court he was one of a group of legal writers with Remonstrant sympathies who commented on reason of state; Corvinus did this in an edition of the De arcanis rerumpublicarum of Arnoldus Clapmarius (1641).
Johannes Vermeer | Johannes Kepler | Johannes Gutenberg | Johannes Peter Müller | Matthias Corvinus | Johannes Ockeghem | Johannes Rau | Johannes Müller | Johannes Heesters | Corvinus University of Budapest | Johannes Zukertort | Johannes Meursius | Cornelis Johannes van Houten | Johannes Meyer | Johannes Itten | Johannes Blaskowitz | Johannes von Lahnstein | Johannes Mötsch | Johannes Hevelius | Johannes Ciconia | Johannes von Trapp | Johannes von Müller | Johannes Ullrich | Johannes Trithemius | Johannes Theodor Reinhardt | Johannes Magnus | Johannes Leimena | Johannes Ghiselin | Johannes Gad | Johannes Ewald |
Johannes Arnoldi Corvinus then disputed the interpretation, and pointed out that James I had refused to put the resulting Lambeth Articles on the same footing as the Thirty-Nine Articles.