Erasmus Ungebaur

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Erasmus Ungebaur

Erasmus Ungebaur (also: Ungebauer, Ungepauer, Ungepaur ; * February 2, 1582 in Naumburg (Saale) , † April 23, 1659 in Jena ) was a German legal scholar.

Life

The son of the butcher Matthäus Ungebaur and his wife Walburga Zimmermann had already lost his father at the age of half a year. Above all, his mother struggled so that he could attend school. So he was able to move into the University of Jena at the age of 16 . He continued his studies in 1603 at the University of Wittenberg . 1606 he returned to Jena back his doctorate at the 17 February 1612 to the doctor of the rights and was in October 1614 Associate Professor of Lehnsrechts at the University of Altdorf appointed.

Here he was promoted to full professor of the Pandects on December 17, 1616 , became an advisory lawyer and consultant for the city of Nuremberg, and in 1621 was rector of the University of Altdorf. After the death of Andreas Dinner (1579–1633), he took over the Codex's first professorship in 1634. Since there was inflation in Nuremberg in 1635 and the state authorities were considering a change in religious questions, he tried to achieve a change of position. Because Valentin Riemer (1582–1635) died at the University of Jena , he moved to the University of Jena, where he was also an assessor at the royal Saxon court and at the Schöppenstuhl.

In 1636 he was promoted to third assessor at the court, in 1637 a senior at the law faculty and in 1641 first professor at the Jena University. In Jena, too, he took part in the organizational tasks of the university and was rector of the Alma Mater in the summer semesters of 1640 and 1652. He died of old age and was buried on April 27, 1659 in the college church in Jena.

family

Ungebaur was married twice. His first marriage was on February 17, 1612 in Jena with Gertraud († 1640), the daughter of the actuary at the Jena Schöppenstuhl Adam Listemann. This marriage resulted in four sons and ten daughters, four of whom outlived their father. He concluded his second marriage on November 2, 1646 with Anna Sophia Mylius, the widow of the secretary of the University of Jena and actuary at the Schöppenstuhl Johann Christoph Kummer († July 25, 1641), the daughter of the notary and city counsel in Herzberg Georg Mylius and his wife Catharina Mylius, daughter of Georg Mylius (theologian, 1548) . The marriage resulted in two sons. From the children we know:

  • Helena Blandina Ungebaur married August 26, 1645 in Jena with the lawyer Ernst Friedrich Schröter
  • Clara Ungebaur married 1655 with the lawyer and professor in Jena Johann Strauch II.
  • Magaretha Catharina Ungebaur married with the town clerk in Stollberg Johann Lucas Gruber
  • Ursula Ungebaur married with the court clerk in Jena Philipp Hirsch
  • Susanna Ungebaur
  • Daughter NN. married to the actuary of the Jena council court Philipp Hirsch
  • Christoph Erasmus Ungebaur
  • Christian Ungebaur (born September 30, 1652 in Jena; † November 17, 1652 ibid.)

Works (selection)

  • Commentarius super decretales. Jena 1662, 1672
  • Exercitia justianianea. Nuremberg 1625, Jena 1660, 1672
  • Collegium Feudale.
  • Decisiones juris controversi.

literature

Web link

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Matriculation of the University of Wittenberg
  2. ^ Thomas Pester: The Rectors / Vice Rectors of the University of Jena 1548 / 49-2008. PDF ( Memento from November 5, 2012 in the Internet Archive )