Ephraim Oskar Taube

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Ephraim Oskar Taube (born June 10, 1829 in Dippoldiswalde , † April 9, 1888 in Leipzig ) was a German judge .

Life

Ephraim Oskar Taube was the son of a district tax collector and attended the Royal State School in Grimma from 1842 to 1848 . He then completed a law degree at the University of Leipzig . The Saxon Taube was sworn in to the sovereign in 1852 and worked as an actuary in Leipzig in 1854. In 1859 the actuary 2nd class Taube was appointed public prosecutor in Borna .

In 1861 he was transferred to Mittweida . As a public prosecutor in Mittweida in 1869, he was responsible for the renewed manhunt and arrest of Karl May because of his relapse after serving his first prison sentence. In 1870 the public prosecutor in Mittweida Ephraim Oskar Taube was transferred to Zwickau as a public prosecutor . In 1874 he became a legal advisor in the Saxon Ministry of Justice. In 1875 he was appointed a secret judicial councilor and was associated with a lecturing council in the Saxon Ministry of Justice. On December 1, 1880, he came to the Imperial Court. As a judge in the III. Civil Senate active. One month later, on December 31, 1880, he was dismissed from service in the Reich on application.

Works

  • Criminal Code for the German Empire of January 1, 1872. Text edition with extensive word and subject index, Leipzig 1870.
  • "Glossary on some provisions of the Str.-G.-B. und der Str.-P.-O. " , General Court Newspaper for the Kingdom of Saxony and the Grand Duke of Saxony, Volume 3, Leipzig 1869, p. 263 .
  • "Glossary on some provisions of the Criminal Code and the Criminal Procedure Code" , General Court Newspaper for the Kingdom of Saxony and the Grand Duke of Saxony, Volume 4, Leipzig 1860, p. 58.
  • "Glossaries on some provisions of the Criminal Code and the Criminal Procedure Code" , General Court Newspaper for the Kingdom of Saxony and the Grand Duke of Saxony, Volume 7, Leipzig 1863, p. 113 .
  • Legal propositions of science: The provisions of the Reich Criminal Code on relapse ”, The Court Room Volume 24 (1872), p. 288.

source

  • Adolf Lobe : “Fifty Years of the Reich Court on October 1, 1929”, Berlin 1929, p. 355.

Trivia

To celebrate the 300th anniversary of the foundation of the Princely and State School Grimma in 1850, Ephraim Oskar Taube, who had attended the school from 1842 to 1848, spoke on behalf of the youngest graduates at the festive assembly. The then law student in Leipzig ended his celebratory speech with the following words, which were also intended as indirect consolation for the countless less well-known and less famous graduates of the Grimma State School at the time and the following: “But you, o alma Mater, mother of this happy one but hungry flocks, I still call out to you: "Since you cannot give birth to lots of great men despite your good will, then hail if you raise your sons in such a way that they know how to be small with honor."

Individual evidence

  1. Christian Gottlob Lorenz : Grimmenser-Album, directory of all pupils of the Royal State School in Grimma from its opening to the third jubilee, Grimma 1850, p. 437
  2. ^ Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung: Supplement of July 5, 1859, " Personalnachrichten ", p. 1360 .
  3. Weekly newspaper for strange legal cases in acts-like representations from the field of justice and administration initially for the Kingdom of Saxony, Leipzig 1861, Volume 9 No. 56, p. 448 .
  4. ^ Hermann Wohlgschaft: Große Karl May biography. Paderborn 1994. pp. 109, 112 ( online version of the book ).
  5. weekly for strange legal cases in actenmäßigen representations from the field of administration of justice and administration, first for the kingdom of Saxony, Leipzig 1870, vol 18 no. 54, p 424 .
  6. ^ Albert Fraustadt: Grimmenser Stammbuch 1900. Life news about pupils of the Princely School in Grimma from the year of foundation 1550 until today. Association of Former Princely Students, Meißen, 1900, p. 242
  7. Christian Gottlob Lorenz : Report on the founding and opening of the Landesschule zu Grimma in 1550, its external circumstances and fate during its existence and the celebrations of the same in 1650, 1750 and 1850 (1850), pp. 114–116