Ernst Heinrich Mylius

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Ernst Heinrich Mylius , also noble Ernst Heinrich von Mylius von Ehrengreif (born October 14, 1716 in Leipzig , † January 25, 1781 in Stuttgart ) was a German legal scholar and Württemberg politician.

Life

Ernst Heinrich Mylius was the son of Gustav Heinrich Mylius (1684–1765). In 1730 he was accepted as an alumnus of the Saxon Princely School in Meissen and in 1734 moved to Leipzig University as a legal candidate . In 1737 he continued his studies at the University of Wittenberg , where he lived with Gottfried Ludwig Mencke the Elder and, in addition to his lectures, heard those of Augustin Leyser . Returned to Leipzig, he was accepted as a Baccalaurus at the Faculty of Law at Easter 1738 and received his doctorate in law on April 2, 1739 . After he had participated intensively in the reading business of the Alma Mater, he went to Berlin in 1741 as a teacher of three Württemberg princes, whom he trained in constitutional law.

Since he had made a great impression on his pupil Carl Eugen von Württemberg during his training , he appointed him to the court as a councilor in Stuttgart when he took office in 1744. Gradually he gained the highest offices at the Württemberg court, in 1745 he became a learned assessor at the court court in Tübingen, also a war councilor, government deputy to the court marshal and widow's widow. In 1759 he received the prestigious office of a director's envoy at the Swabian district convents, in 1771 he became a privy councilor and in 1768 was elevated to the hereditary imperial knighthood and nobility by Emperor Joseph II with the nickname Edler "von Ehrengreiff".

Mylius was married to Benedikta Elisabetha, daughter of the Hofkammer expedition council and Stuttgart mayor Egidius Böhm (* February 1, 1685 - December 11, 1758) and his first wife Anna Barbara (1682–1716), the daughter of Wolfgang Ludwig Stytzle he sired an extensive offspring.

Fonts

  • Epistola, an is, qui alimenta viro praestitit, ad huno sepeliendum sit obligatus? Wittenberg 1737
  • Diss. (Praes. Leonh, Lud. Menckenio) de iure protimiseos, domino directo in qua vis feudorum alienatione, secund urn ius Saxonicum, competente. Wittenberg 1738
  • Diss. Inaug. de citatione Vasalli et simultanee investiti Saxonici, eiusque infinuatione. Leipzig 1739
  • Diss. De felonia ante praestitum fidelitatis iuramentum commissa. Leipzig 1739
  • Diss. Specimen primum de remedio L. 2 C. de rescind. vend, in locatione conductione. Leipzig 1740
  • Progr. De sententia, furioso in terrorem dictanda. Leipzig 1740
  • Diss. Specimen fecundum de remissione mercedis propter sterilitatem in praediis urban is. Leipzig 1740
  • Diss. De dispositionis Vasalli inter liberos recte facienda interpretation, potissimum de feud o foeminino. Leipzig 1740
  • Diss. Specimen tertium de remiflione mercedis propter fte-rilitatem in praediis rufticis. Leipzig 1740
  • Diss. De poena indignationis eiusque effectu. Leipzig 1741
  • Diss. De fictione quasi contractuum in iure Germanico otiosa. Leipzig 1741

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Karl Pfaff: History of the City of Stuttgart based on archival documents and other proven sources: History of the City from 1651 to 1845. Volume 2. Sonnewald, Stuttgart 1846, p. 560 ( Google books )
  2. ^ Johann Jacob Moser: Genealogical news, from his own, also many other respected Würtemberg families, partly also foreign families. Johann Heinrich Philipp Schramm, Tübingen 1756