Eduard Hageman

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Eduard Hageman

Eduard Hageman also: Eduardus Hagemann (born November 20, 1749 in Amsterdam , † November 19, 1827 in Leiden ) was a Dutch legal scholar.

Life

Eduard was the son of the physician Cornelis Hageman (* in 1714 in Xanten, † before 1802 near Bocholt) and his wife Alida Maria Swedenrijk (born June 4, 1728 in Amsterdam, † June 20, 1802 near Bocholt). He began his studies on October 12, 1767 at the University of Duisburg and switched to the University of Leiden on September 14, 1770 to study law . Here he received his doctorate on February 19, 1773 with the treatise Specimen politico-iuridicum inaugurale iura sistens, quae, pendente bello, hosti in hostem competunt (Leiden 1773) as a doctor of law. In 1777/78 he became an associate professor at the old University of Duisburg , where he dealt with encyclopedias, natural law, bill of exchange law, embarrassing law and legal history. After he had refused an appointment to the University of Franeker in 1783, he was given the full professorship of law, specializing in legal encyclopedia and methodology, in Duisburg as the successor to Johann Friedrich Gildemeister in 1784. In 1790 he had also become rector of the university in Duisburg.

On October 18, 1796, he took over the chair of law at the University of Harderwijk . However, before he could give his introductory speech there, he had received an appointment as Professor of Law from the curators of the University of Leiden on December 20, 1796. From then on, he was to hold the chair of constitutional law, which included, among other things, instructions on political statistics and history. He took on this task on September 22, 1797 with the introductory speech de Ecclesia a Republica separatas rationes habente . He also took part in the organizational tasks of the Leiden University and was rector of the Alma Mater in 1801/02 and in 1810/11 . At the resignation of the two offices he gave the speeches de Perfecti doctoris academici juris publici officio difficillimo (Leiden 1810) and de FG Pestelio, ejusque meritis in jure publico .

His contemporaries described him as an excellent knowledge of the Latin language, who was particularly concerned with Horace . He has made a name for himself in particular in the field of statistics as its sponsor. He has not written any independent works. The two essays lets over Pruissen voor en na den vrede van Tilsit (freely translated into German: Something about the Prussians after the Peace of Tilsit ) are in the specialist journals of the time in the Vaterländisches Magazin von Wissenschaften, Kunst und Taste Vol. 5, p. 77 –102 and Oostenrijk voor en na den vrede van Presburg (freely translated into German: Austria before and after the Peace of Pressburg ) ibid. Vol. 5, pp. 537–606 known. On July 5, 1809, he had become a corresponding member of the Royal Netherlands Institute of Sciences . After the restoration of the Leiden University, he was confirmed in his office on October 16, 1815 by royal resolution and in 1819 he retired from his professorship.

family

Hageman was married to Johanna Sibilla van Voss van Sinderen (born October 14, 1758 in 's-Heerenberg, † February 25, 1838 in Rijswijk near The Hague), daughter of the Lic. Jur. Luderus Daniel Georg (van) Voss (born March 29, 1729 in Duisburg, † November 14, 1802 in Sinderen) and Maria Elisabeth van der Upwich (born August 28 in Emmerich, † April 8, 1810 in Emmerich). The children from this marriage are:

  • Alida Elisabeth Maria Hageman (born October 1, 1787 in Duisburg, † December 12, 1863 in Alphen am Rhein)
  • Georg Cornelis Hageman (born July 20, 1790 in Duisburg, † August 20, 1855 in Alphen am Rhein)
  • Etienne Hageman (born January 15, 1792 in Duisburg, † July 26, 1860 in Zwolle)
  • Heinrich Hageman (born December 9, 1795 in Duisburg, † June 9, 1813 in Leiden)

literature

Web links