Adolf Nicolaus Zacharias

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Adolf Nicolaus Zacharias 1905

Adolf Nicolaus Zacharias (born November 14, 1858 in Hamburg ; † 1931 ) was a German lawyer and Hamburg MP.

Life

Zacharias was born as the son of the businessman Adolf Nicolaus Zacharias sen. and the painter and writer Marie Zacharias geb. Langhans born. Adolf Nicolaus Zacharias sen. (1826-1880), who belonged to the citizenry from 1869 to 1880, was a well-known proponent of the free port in Hamburg.

Zacharias attended as his older brother Eduard Zacharias the Gelehrtenschule the Johanneum . After graduating from high school, he studied law at the Eberhard Karls University in Tübingen . In 1878 he became active in the Corps Suevia Tübingen .

Zacharias became the second secretary of the finance deputation in 1885 before he settled as a lawyer in Hamburg in 1886 . In 1896 at the latest he returned to the civil service as a judge . In 1900 he was appointed judge at the Hanseatic Higher Regional Court. In 1919 he was elected one of the Senate presidents. In 1921 Zacharias was seconded to the German-English Court of Arbitration; for this he was given leave of absence from his previous position. In 1929 he retired.

From 1895 to 1906 Zacharias was a member of the Hamburg parliament . As a member of the citizens' committee, he was involved in the reform of Hamburg's welfare education.

Fonts

  • The finances of the city of Hamburg in 1883 for comparison with the finances of other large cities. Meissner, Hamburg 1886.
  • Thoughts of a practitioner on the question of "legal modernism". Guttentag, Berlin 1910.
  • About personality, tasks and training of the judge Berlin. Guttentag, Berlin 1911.
  • Memorandum on the temporary employment of court assessors in private companies. Guttentag, Berlin 1912.

Individual evidence

  1. There are different information about the date and place of death, the HANS catalog of the Hamburg State and University Library ( memento of April 13, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) speaks of July 31, 1931 in Senftenberg, while Morisse is based on July 8, 1931 in Hamburg
  2. ^ Frank M. Hinz: Planning and financing of the Speicherstadt in Hamburg. Mixed economy company foundings in the 19th century with special consideration of the Hamburg free port warehouse company. 2000, ISBN 3-8258-3632-0 , p. 77
  3. ^ Jan-Peter Frahm , Jens Eggers: Eduard Zacharias. Lexicon of German-speaking bryologists, Vol. 2, p. 574
  4. Kösener Corpslisten 1930, 130 , 301
  5. ^ Forum legal history: Hamburg Lawyers' Day 1929. (after Heiko Morisse: Jewish Lawyers in Hamburg: Exclusion and Persecution in the Nazi State. Christians, Hamburg 2003, ISBN 3-7672-1418-0 .)
  6. ^ Uwe Uhlendorff: History of the youth welfare office. Development lines of public youth welfare 1871–1929. Beltz, Berlin 2003, ISBN 3-407-55890-2 , p. 187