Egbert Mannlicher

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Egbert Mannlicher (born February 21, 1882 in Vienna , † October 5, 1973 in Oberalm ; full name Egbert Friedrich Hermann Clara Mannlicher ) was an Austrian constitutional and administrative lawyer . He is the nephew of Ferdinand Mannlicher .

life and work

Egbert Mannlicher came from a family of Austrian civil servants whose lineage can be traced back to 1525 without interruption. For many generations she lived in Brüx / Böhmen , where for five generations she was the mayor, postmaster, customs collector, military catering administrator and councilor of the city. A connection with the Augsburg trading family Mannlich has been handed down, but not proven.

Family grave in the Hinterbrühl

Born and raised in Vienna, Mannlicher studied at the University of Vienna from 1900 and received his doctorate in 1905. jur. After doing administrative work at various kk institutions, he worked in the State Chancellery after the end of the war in 1918. As a section council of the newly established department for administrative organization and administrative reform, he was instrumental in drafting the administrative procedural laws (1925), which he also commented on until his death. In addition, in collaboration with Hans Kelsen , among others , he was significantly involved in drafting the Federal Constitution in 1920 and in its amendments in 1925 and 1929.

In 1930 Mannlicher was appointed President of the Senate at the Administrative Court. In 1934 he was given early retirement. In the following years he was active in a codification commission in the Federal Chancellery, before he took over the management of the Vienna Administrative Academy in 1938 and, from 1939, the Linz and Salzburg Administrative Academy. From 1939 he was again at the Administrative Court - renamed the Reich Administrative Court (External Senate Vienna) - as President of the Senate; he acted provisionally as President of the Vienna External Senate. In 1945 he was removed from office.

After his internment from 1946 to 1947 and the termination of the preliminary investigation in 1948, Mannlicher worked as a lawyer in Salzburg from 1949 to 1971 .

His daughter Edith Mannlicher (1908–2008) was the first female vice director at the Austrian academic libraries.

Honors (selection)

Fonts (selection)

  • Egbert Mannlicher, Emmerich Coreth (ed.): The laws to simplify the administration. Administrative Procedure Laws and Administrative Discharge Act. Vienna, 1925.
  • Egbert Mannlicher: The Austrian administrative reform of 1925 . Vienna, 1926.
  • Egbert Mannlicher, Emmerich Coreth: The administrative procedure . 2nd edition Vienna, 1927; 3rd edition Vienna, 1934; 4th edition Vienna 1936 and 1941.
  • Egbert Mannlicher: The administrative procedure . 5th edition Vienna 1951; 6th edition Vienna 1953; 7th edition Vienna 1964.

Individual evidence

  1. Egbert Mannlicher, Stamm-Tafel of the Mannlicher family from Brüx in Bohemia, Part I 1525 to 1750
  2. Österreichische Juristenteitung  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. - Between Cassation and Reformation, page 584@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / homepage.univie.ac.at  
  3. Source: http://www.claudiashome.at/pdf/studium/verwaltungsverfahren.pdf
  4. ^ Sources: Olechowski, Between Cassation and Reformation , öJZ 1999, 581, 585; Parliamentary correspondence / 09/7. October 2002 / No. 673 [1]
  5. ^ Mannlicher Edith Librarian , accessed March 5, 2009.

Web links