Anton Arnold von Linck

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Anton Arnold Linck , from 1813 Ritter von Linck , (born May 21, 1799 in Mannheim , † April 10, 1858 at Guttenburg Castle near Mühldorf am Inn ) was a German landowner , ministerial official and constitutional lawyer . He was a professor at the universities in Würzburg, Erlangen and Munich. In 1841/42 he was rector of the University of Würzburg .

Life

Link was born in Mannheim in 1799 as the son of Franz Arnold Linck , General Commissioner and District President of the Upper Danube District. From the winter semester 1817/18 he studied law and camera science at the University of Heidelberg , later he was awarded a Dr. jur. utr. PhD .

He initially worked as a secretary in the Bavarian State Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Munich. In 1832/33 he was appointed professor of constitutional and criminal law at the University of Würzburg as the successor to constitutional lawyer Wilhelm Joseph Behr - he was followed by the legal historian and canonist Ernst Freiherr von Moy de Sons - and from 1833 to 1837 for German federal law and constitutional law at the university Munich . In 1834 he came to the Bavarian State Ministry of the Interior as a ministerial assistant from the professors' class ; in the same year he became court advisor (according to the Würzburg faculty historiography, he was named Privy Councilor ). In 1837 he became a full professor for constitutional and international law at the University of Erlangen and again in 1839, this time as the successor to Johann Joseph von Kiliani , at the University of Würzburg, where he was responsible for international law and public administration law in addition to constitutional law. In 1841/42 he was still rector of the Würzburg University. For health reasons he was on leave in 1842/43, in 1843 he was dismissed on application; his successor to the chair was Hermann Müller .

From 1849 to 1855 he was part of the vocal circle Haag in Upper Bavaria the Chamber of Deputies on. He was a member of the committee responsible for dealing with the German question, the committee responsible for examining and reporting on the issues raised by Mr Abg. Prince v. Oettingen-Wallerstein in relation to the Hessian question, the IV. Committee for the investigation of complaints about violation of the state constitution and the reinforced I Committee for the subjects of legislation.

Linck was baptized a Catholic and married to Maria Magdalena von Linck (1819 - 1898). He was the landowner of Guttenburg Castle near Mühldorf am Inn, where he died. He had at least three children (Arnold, 1841-1895, single), Maria Magdalena (1845-1907, single) and Karl Friedrich (1851-1911, married), who were buried in the family crypt in Frauendorf near Guttenburg.

Awards

Fonts (selection)

  • On the natural law of our time as the basis of criminal law theories , 1829.
  • The German Empire , 1848.

literature

  • Ursula Huber: University and ministerial administration. The university-political situation of the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München during the ministries Oettingen-Wallerstein and Abel (1832–1847) (= Ludovico Maximilianea: Forschungsungen . Vol. 12). Duncker and Humblot, Berlin 1987, ISBN 3-428-06183-7 , pp. 463-464.
  • Andreas Röpke: The Würzburg Faculty of Law from 1815 to 1914. Legal studies and teaching in Würzburg between the Restoration and the First World War (= Würzburg juristic writings . Vol. 27). Ergon Verlag, Würzburg 2001, ISBN 3-935556-77-2 , p. 214.
  • Eva Wedel-Schaper, Christoph Hafner, Astrid Ley (arr.): The professors and lecturers at the Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg 1743–1960 . Part 1: Faculty of Theology, Faculty of Law (= Erlangen Research: Special Series . Vol. 5). On behalf of the rector, ed. by Renate Wittern , University Library, Erlangen 1993, ISBN 3-922135-92-7 , pp. 141-142.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c d e f Eva Wedel-Schaper, Christoph Hafner, Astrid Ley (arr.): The professors and lecturers at the Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg 1743–1960 . Part 1: Faculty of Theology, Faculty of Law (= Erlangen Research: Special Series . Vol. 5). On behalf of the rector, ed. by Renate Wittern , University Library, Erlangen 1993, ISBN 3-922135-92-7 , pp. 141–142, here: 142.
  2. ^ Ursula Huber: University and ministerial administration. The university-political situation of the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München during the ministries Oettingen-Wallerstein and Abel (1832–1847) (= Ludovico Maximilianea: Forschungsungen . Vol. 12). Duncker and Humblot, Berlin 1987, ISBN 3-428-06183-7 , p. 463; Deviating from this, Röpke (2001), who states Munich.
  3. a b c Andreas Röpke: The Würzburg Faculty of Law from 1815 to 1914. Legal studies and teaching in Würzburg between the Restoration and the First World War (= Würzburg juristic writings . Vol. 27). Ergon Verlag, Würzburg 2001, ISBN 3-935556-77-2 , p. 214.
  4. a b Andreas Röpke: The Würzburg Faculty of Law from 1815 to 1914. Legal studies and legal teaching in Würzburg between the Restoration and the First World War (= Würzburg juristic writings . Vol. 27). Ergon Verlag, Würzburg 2001, ISBN 3-935556-77-2 , p. 281.
  5. ^ Rectors during the Kingdom of Bavaria (1828 - 1918) , University of Würzburg, accessed on August 19, 2015.