Christopher of Paris (also known as Christophe de Paris, Cristoforo Parigino, Christophorus Parisiensis) was an Italian alchemist active at the end of the fifteenth century and author of a number of treatises influenced by pseudo-Lull. He lived in Venice and is supposed to have had contacts among local glassmakers like Angelo Barovier.
He was cited in the Theatrum Chemicum and had a good reputation among alchemists of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, because he was supposed to have know the secrets of the philosopher's stone.
Works
The works of Christopher of Paris survive in a number of manuscript and printed copies:
References
Christopher of Paris Wikipedia(Text) CC BY-SA