[3] During that time, he published Esprit des cours de l"Europe which was suppressed in 1701 after complaints from the French ambassador, the Comte d'Avaux, but it continued under a new name.
[4] He operated a rival secret information bureau to that of Etienne Caillaud and Pierre Jurieu and is known to have corresponded with a number of key individuals.
[5] Other officials, included Hendrik Willem Rumpf [pl], the Dutch Ambassador to Sweden in Stockholm[6] He became so widely known that William Harrison, the Secretary at the British Embassy in The Hague, jokingly referred to publicists and newsletter writers as "our Lambertines".
[7] After 1718, he lived at Nyon and Bern, Switzerland, where he worked for the remainder of his life on his Mémoires pour servir à l’histoire du XVIII siècle.
Geronimo died at Nyon on 9 January 1733 and the will was proven there, while a certified translation by Philip Crespigny, his wife's nephew, Notary Public, was lodged in England.