Alfred Lüntzel

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Alfred Adalbert Lüntzel (born August 30, 1833 in Hildesheim ; † December 13, 1910 in Hanover ) was a German lawyer and attorney at the Imperial Court .

Life

Alfred Lüntzel came from a patrician family in Hildesheim; his father was the Hildesheim municipal syndicus and mayor Carl Christoph Lüntzel . From 1850 he studied law at the University of Göttingen , where he became a member of the Corps Hannovera in 1851 . After the first training phase with the First State Exam in 1853, he took up his first practical position as an auditor in Lamspringe . In 1857 Lüntzel was admitted to the bar in Celle and later moved to Hanover. After the annexation of the Kingdom of Hanover by Prussia , he became a lawyer at the newly established Higher Appeal Court in Berlin in 1867 and later at the Prussian Higher Tribunal . In 1879 Lüntzel was appointed to the judiciary and admitted to the bar at the Imperial Court in Leipzig . Here he worked until 1887 and then retired, which he spent first in Dresden Weißer Hirsch , then in Göttingen and finally in Hanover. Lüntzel died unmarried.

Fonts

  • Unitary State or Federal State? , Cruse, 1867
  • The Prussian Higher Tribunal and its position as the future German court of cassation , in: Journal for Legislation and Justice in Prussia , Volume 2, 1868, p. 76 ff.

Procedure

literature

  • Anton J. Knott: Street, paths, squares and alleys in Hildesheim. Gerstenberg, Hildesheim 1984, ISBN 3-8067-8082-X , p. 73 (also on Lüntzel-Haus and Lüntzelstraße in Hildesheim)
  • Heinrich F. Curschmann: Blue Book of the Corps Hannovera zu Göttingen , Volume 1 1809-1899 , Göttingen 2002, No. 541

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Kösener corps lists 1910 , 70 , 248.