Hermetic Emblems of the French Revolution by Claude Paradin and Christopher Templesage is an English homage to Devises Héroïques which presents the Hermetic imagination of Renaissance France in a new historical light, revealing how Claude Paradin's sixteenth-century emblem book shaped not only the intellectual climate of his era but continued to inform revolutionary and counter-revolutionary symbolism alike. Translator and editor Christopher Templesage revisits this foundational compendium with precision, updating its orthography and annotations for contemporary readers while preserving the full rhetorical and visual impact of the original 1557 Lyon folio. Each emblem-composed of a motto, woodcut, and explanatory commentary-offers a compact expression of political allegory, moral philosophy, and sacred alchemical typology. Paradin's devices, long used in statecraft, publishing, and heraldic display, document the convergence of Christian, Alchemical and classical traditions during the height of religious and dynastic conflict. Their reissue in the modern era reanimates questions of legitimacy, virtue, and civic order-issues central to the ideological upheavals of revolutionary France. This edition serves scholars of political iconography, Renaissance rhetoric, and emblem studies as a reference work and pedagogical tool. With facsimiles from the Bibliothèque nationale de France and contextual notes rooted in classical sources and early modern historiography, Hermetic Emblems of the French Revolution offers a window into how symbols shape-and are shaped by-power.