Christian Wollschläger

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Christian Wollschläger (born October 19, 1936 in Reichenbach im Eulengebirge , † December 20, 1998 in Bielefeld ) was a German legal scholar , legal historian and university professor.

Life

After graduating from high school in Braunschweig, Wollschläger studied law at the universities of Berlin , Freiburg and Göttingen . In 1960 he passed his first state examination in law in Celle. He then went on to study for a year at the University of California, Berkeley , where he earned the title Master of Laws in 1962 . After the second state examination in 1965, he began working as a research assistant for Franz Wieacker at the University of Göttingen. Wollschläger received his doctorate there in 1969 with a thesis on Roman law to become Dr. iur. In 1975 he also completed his habilitation and received the venia legendi for the subjects of Roman law, recent private law history and private law doctrine.

This was followed by professorships at the universities of Hamburg and Marburg . In February 1979, he took up the professorship for Roman law, civil law and history of private law at Bielefeld University , which he held until his early death caused by illness. Christian Wollschläger was married and the father of three sons.

Wollschläger researched above all in accordance with his Venia on Roman law, the history of private law and the doctrine of private law. In his doctoral thesis he already explored the dogmatic and moral principles of impossibility . In other writings, similar work followed on the contributory negligence of the injured party and on the prohibition of enrichment. In addition, basic works for management without commission come from him. However, he is also considered the founder of historical civil justice statistics as his own research subject and leading author of his time in this field.

Works (selection)

  • The emergence of the impossibility of teaching: To Dogmengeschichte the right of service disruptions . Böhlau, Cologne 1970 (dissertation).
  • The management without a mandate: theory and case law . Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1976, ISBN 978-3-428-03782-7 (habilitation thesis).
  • Management without mandate under public law and entitlement to reimbursement . Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1977, ISBN 978-3-428-03956-2 .

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Behrends, ZRG 2000, pp. 824f.