Carl Otto Graebe

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Carl Otto Graebe (born June 5, 1751 in Rinteln ; † December 13, 1821 there ) was a German lawyer.

family

His parents were the government councilor Carl Graebe and Catharine Christine, a daughter of Philipp Otto Vietor with his first wife.

On January 15, 1788 he married Frederike Henriette Sophie Dangers (1776–1794), the daughter of the administrator Friedrich Adam Dangers (1739–1791) and sister of the later Rinteln professor of medicine Christian Wilhelm Dangers (1770–1806). Her son, Philipp Wilhelm Leopold Graebe, became an official actuary in Kassel.

Life

Carlotto was Graebe from Pageninformator taught Eskuchen, attended the town school and studied at the University of Rinteln languages, philosophy , mathematics and history , to then the jurisprudence turn. After the legal examination in October 1772, he continued his studies here until in 1774 he accompanied Hofrat Feder from Exten for a year at the University of Göttingen . Under the chairmanship of Karl Wilhelm Wippermann , he received his doctorate in law in Rinteln in December 1775 .

As the successor to Hermann Nikolaus Funck , he was appointed first professor of law at the Steinfurter Illustre Arnoldinum grammar school in June 1776 . A year later he became Vice Rector . Several publications on German constitutional law were published here .

In October 1783, as the successor to Friedrich Adolf van der Marck , he accepted the appointment at the Academic Gymnasium in Lingen . After traveling to the United Netherlands in August 1784, he took up his post as Professor of Law at the University of Rinteln in September. There he published a number of other works. Part-time he also worked in state administration. So in 1805 he was judge at the government of the county of Schaumburg in Rinteln and in 1808 judge at the tribunal of the first instance in Rinteln in the Weser department . After the University of Rinteln was closed, he worked as a government councilor in Rinteln.

Works (selection)

  • De origine torturae in Germania. 1785
  • About the reformation of the embarrassing laws. 1784
  • Brief description of unequal marriages. 1788
  • Message from the self-authority and the Meyerrechte. 1803

Web links

  • Heinrich Wilhelm Rotermund: The learned Hanover. Volume 2, p. 159 ( online )
  • Ingeborg Höting: The professors of the Steinfurter high school. 1991, p. 88 ( web publication )

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.online-ofb.de/famreport.php?ofb=NLF&ID=I149886&nachname=DANGERS&lang=dk