Carl Müller (lawyer)

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Johann Carl Heinrich Müller (born June 30, 1794 in Penzlin ; † September 8, 1857 in Neubrandenburg ) was a German lawyer and judge.

Life

Carl Müller was the son of the Penzlin pastor Ludwig Müller (1754–1816) and his wife Anna Regina, b. Pfuhl (* 1767). The lawyer and Neubrandenburg mayor Friedrich Andreas Müller , Luise Mühlbach's father , was his brother. One sister married the lawyer Hofrat Bernhard Funk, another the Neustrelitz court doctor Theodor Kortüm .

Carl Müller began studying law at the University of Jena in 1812 , where he became a member of the Vandalia Jena Corpsland team . He was a participant in the Wars of Liberation from 1813 to 1815 , first as a volunteer with the Lützow Jäger , then as a lieutenant in Infantry Regiment No. 25 . In 1815 he became a member of the original fraternity in Jena and was one of its leaders in 1817/1818. Together with Gottlieb Nagel , he kept a promise made to Gottlieb Schnelle and in 1816 nailed his sword (later referred to as a sword) to the oak at Theodor Körner's grave in Wöbbelin . Müller took part in the Wartburg Festival in October 1817 . Together with Heinrich Arminius Riemann , he wrote the liberal program Principles and Resolutions of October 18 . Carl Müller received his PhD from the University of Jena in 1818. PhD in both rights.

When he returned to Mecklenburg in 1820, he was interrogated several times by the security authorities in the course of the demagogue persecution . He was first a lawyer, then in 1824 court administrator in Woldegk and judicial officer in the Feldberg office . From 1832 he was city judge in Neubrandenburg and was appointed Mecklenburg-Strelitz Hofrat .

Fonts

  • De praescriptione criminali principiis processus inquisitorii repugnante , Frommann and Wesselhoeft, Ienae 1818 (dissertation)
  • Contribution to the matrimonial property community applicable in the Stargard district of the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Strelitz , 1852

literature

  • Grete Grewolls: Who was who in Mecklenburg and Western Pomerania. The dictionary of persons . Hinstorff Verlag, Rostock 2011, ISBN 978-3-356-01301-6 , p. 6843 .
  • Peter Kaupp (edit.): Stamm-Buch of the Jenaische Burschenschaft. The members of the original fraternity 1815-1819 (= treatises on student and higher education. Vol. 14). SH-Verlag, Cologne 2005, ISBN 3-89498-156-3 , p. 88.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Friedrich Walter: Our regional clergy from 1810 to 1888: biographical sketches of all Mecklenburg-Schwerin clergy. Self-published, Penzlin 1889, p. 216
  2. Grete Grewolls: Who was who in Mecklenburg and Western Pomerania. The dictionary of persons . Hinstorff Verlag, Rostock 2011, ISBN 978-3-356-01301-6 , p. 3070 .
  3. Grete Grewolls: Who was who in Mecklenburg and Western Pomerania. The dictionary of persons . Hinstorff Verlag, Rostock 2011, ISBN 978-3-356-01301-6 , p. 5312 .
  4. ^ Kösener corps lists 1910 , 130 , 42.