Friedrich Christian Boock

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Friedrich Christian Boock (born November 1, 1767 in Windeby ; † January 9, 1829 in Schleswig ) was a Schleswig-Holstein lawyer and landowner at the time of the entire Danish state.

Life

Friedrich Christian Boock was born as the eldest son of the dairy farmer Josias Boock (1739–1809) and Christina Magdalena Boock, nee. Petersen, (1744–1787) born. Due to the financial situation of his parents, he was only able to attend the village school in Windeby and, after finishing school, was hired as a clerk by a legal scholar, but was promoted to clerk after a short time.

With a recommendation from his employer, he received from Christian Friedrich Rudolph Freiherrn [Baron] v. Geltingen (1764-1820) at Gut Gelting in the parish of Gelting employed as an observation administrator for his property and was appointed inspector by him shortly afterwards.

In 1795 he decided to study law and took Latin lessons from Pastor Christoph Georg Friederici (1773–1843) in Gelting . He then began studying law at the University of Kiel . Professor Ludwig Albrecht Gottfried Schrader took him into his home and supported him in his studies. In the following year, 1796, he attended lectures by Professor Johann Stephan Pütter at the University of Göttingen and finally passed his legal exam in 1798 at Gottorf Castle in Schleswig. In 1798 he was first appointed lower court advocate and shortly thereafter higher court attorney. In 1799 he published his first and best-known text Systematic Development [Development] of the doctrine of disinheritance .

In 1802 he married the widow Margarethe Oelgaard Dreyer, b. Plöhn (also: Plön) (1764–1820), owner of the noble Hohenlieth estate with the associated Meierhof Hohenholm near Holtsee . From Hohenlieth he was mainly active as an administrator; he only ran his law firm on the side. FC Boock also acted as the court keeper who administered justice for the landlords . From 1807 until his death he gradually brought it to the last 12 jurisdictions on noble estates in the Duchy of Schleswig.

After the invasion of the Northern Army in the Sixth Coalition War in 1813, Friedrich Christian Boock left his estate and headed a commission to set up a store for food and forage in Eckernförde, which was intended to avoid looting. After the Peace of Kiel on January 14, 1814, he finally leased the Hohenlieth estate, which had suffered a great deal near the battlefield of the Battle of Sehestedt between the Danes and Swedes, and moved with his family to Schleswig, where he worked as a legal advisor from 1815. FC Boock was at times also a senior man of the general aristocratic Schleswig-Holstein fire guild and held the office of secretary, i.e. business administrator, of this institution. In this role, too, he was held in high regard.

The only daughter who survived him, Christine Louise Boock, was born in 1805 and married the Danish cavalry officer Frederik or Friedrich / Fritz Emil (v.) Nissen in Schleswig in 1826, with whom she had five children.

Works

  • Systematic development of the doctrine of disinheritance, or discussion of the question of how far is the power of a citizen to change the succession introduced by the law of the state at will? According to Roman Justinian law. An attempt by Friedrich Christian Boock, Advocaten in Schleswig, Schleswig 1799
  • From the term of office of Pastor Georg Ernst Friederici (* 1773, † 1843) in Karby (Schwansen). Reproduction of the writing by Friedrich Christian Boock: History of the assassination murder committed by Jürgen Thies, former Insten zu Damp, in 1814, with the speeches that were made at the time of the execution of the wrongdoers, Schleswig 1817 [Parts I.-IV . Investigation of the case up to conviction and punishment by the criminal court in Damp; V. Spiritual words spoken by Pastor G. Hansen, Sieseby, and VI. Speech from the preacher zu Schwansen, Karby, GE Friederici] For this purpose, thanks appeared to Mr. Boock zu Schleswig, the lawyer at the higher court, for extracting the case history from the files and adding the speeches of both preachers (Pastor Hansen zu Sieseby and Pastor Friederici zu Karby / Schwansen) in: GP Petersen (ed., Preacher zu Lensahn in Holstein), Schleswig-Holstein-Lauenburg Provincial Reports. 1817. The new Schl. Holst. Prov. Ber. Seventh year, Kiel 1817, p. 578.

Case files

  • Deductio of the advocate Friedrich Christian Boock on Hohenlied [Hohenlieth], on the power of attorney. Mrs. v. Rumohr, b. v. Dehn, on Rundhof and Ostergaarde [Östergaard], against the Hafener [Hufner] Henning Henningsen and Christian August Clementsen in Wippendorf, for themselves and under the authority of several former serfs of the Rundhof estate, in pcto [regarding] diversorum passuum, Schleswig 1804
  • Collection of the trial files and negotiations [court pamphlets put to print] from 1817–1826:
    • The common [congregation] Sörup against the reintroduction of the corn tithe attempted by the preacher, Schleswig 1817
    • In the matter of the former servants of the former Chamberlain Rumohr, concerning the payment of the legacy refused by his heiress, Schleswig 1817
    • Polemic pamphlet, which was initiated by the von Ahlefeldtsche Familien-Fideicommiss, in the absence of an executoris between the grandchildren of the founder, the creditor of the fiduciary heir and the owner of the noble estate Damp, Schleswig 1820 (3 booklets.)
    • In the matter of Chamberlain v. Meerheimb and the authorized representative of the late Baron von Geltingen, Schleswig 1821
    • In concourse matters of Chamberlain v. Neergaard, regarding the remuneration of the construction costs proposed by the land tenants of the noble estates Warleberg and Rathmannsdorf, Schleswig 1826 (Revised.) [Revised]

Friedrich Christian Boock's entrance to Lexica

  • Georg Christoph Hamberger and Johann Georg Meusel: The learned Teutschland or lexicon of the German writers living now , Twelfth Volume, Fifth, definitely increased and improved edition, Lemgo 1806. P. 185 names Boock under the heading "Legal writers". According to the entry under V. General register of the whole work (p. 423), a contribution to Boock can be found at IX.120., I.e. in the ninth volume, p. 120.
  • Bernhard Friedrich Voigt: Gelehrtenlexikon Neuer Nekrolog der Deutschen , seventh year 1829, first part, Ilmenau 1831, pp. 73–75.
  • Christian Gottlob Kayser : Index Locupletissimus Librorum qui inde ab anno MCCCL usque aD annum MDCCCXXXII in Germania et in terris confibus prodierunt. Complete lexicon of books - containing all books printed in Germany and neighboring countries from 1750 to the end of 1832, Erste Theil AG, Leipzig 1834 . FC Boocks “Systematic Development of the Doctrine of Disinheritance” (1799) on p. 314.
  • Walther Killy (ed.): Deutsche Biographische Enzyklopädie (DBE), Vol. 2, Bohacz-Ebhardt, licensed edition for the Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft Darmstadt, Munich 1995, p. 23.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ New Nekrolog der Deutschen, 7th year, 1829, pp. 73–75 . Voigt, 1831 ( google.de [accessed on February 25, 2018]).
  2. ^ Köbler Gerhard, Who is who in German law. Retrieved February 25, 2018 .
  3. ^ Topography of the Duchy of Schleswig, p. 229 . Fränckel, 1854 ( google.de [accessed February 25, 2018]).