Friedrich Kitzinger

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Friedrich Kitzinger (also Friederich Fritz Kitzinger ; born November 8, 1872 in Fürth ; † July 15, 1943 in Tel Aviv , League of Nations mandate for Palestine ) was a German university professor, criminal lawyer at the University of Munich (1921) and Halle (1926). His scientific work, like that of Erwein Höpler von Hermingen, was "often named and used" by the Imperial Court .

Life

His parents were Samuel Lev Kitzinger (1842-1903) and his wife Ida Kitzinger, née Dinkelsbühler (1849-1910). From their joint marriage came three brothers, including the later lawyer and father of Ernst Kitzinger Wilhelm Nathan Kitzinger (1870-1945), who was banned from practicing in 1938 , and one sister. The son Hans Kitzinger (1911–2009), who later gave himself the surname Gad, came from his marriage to Frieda Friedel Geiger.

After emigrating to England and maintaining his residence in Germany, he was transferred to the Dachau concentration camp in 1939 during his temporary stay in Munich , from which he was released and moved to Palestine via England in the same year . Another source indicates a stay in the concentration camp from 1938 and the subsequent departure in 1939.

Fanny Countess zu Reventlow was in 1911 and 1914 in correspondence with the couple Friedel and Friedrich Kitzinger

Professional background

After studying law and completing his doctorate, Kitzinger worked from 1895 to 1898 as a trainee lawyer at the Munich justice system. After his habilitation thesis in 1902, he mainly taught criminal law and criminal procedure law; In 1908 he became a professor.

From 1921 he worked as a regular associate professor. He was appointed in 1926 to Halle in September 1933 in the additional teaching content "criminal auxiliary sciences" and after his work as a professor from 1931 Retirement added .

Publications

  • 1898: On the doctrine of illegality in criminal law (from legal practitioner Dr. jur.) Friedrich Kitzinger
  • 1901: The outpatient jurisdiction of the press with the title addition: and the related tasks of the legislature.
  • 1902: Place and time of the action in criminal law: at the same time a consideration of the manifestations of the offense - habilitation thesis
  • 1905 Die Internationale Kriminalistische Vereinigung Title addition: reflections on their nature and their previous effectiveness
  • 1913: The prevention of criminal acts through police violence. Basic features of the legal police and contributions to the construction of criminal law. 1st ed. 261 p.
  • 1920: The Reich Law on the Press
  • 1924: The Fechenbach case , in: Journal for the entire criminal law science 44,
  • 1925: The position of society on crime and punishment. 36 pp.

literature

  • Kitzinger, Friedrich , in: Joseph Walk (ed.): Short biographies on the history of the Jews 1918–1945 . Munich: Saur, 1988, ISBN 3-598-10477-4 , p. 194

Web links

Footnotes

  1. ^ Leonie Breunung and Manfred Walther: The emigration of German-speaking jurists from 1933. Verlag Walter de Gruyter , 2012, p. 293 online ; ISBN 978-3-11-025857-8
  2. ^ The professional ban for Jewish lawyers in Bavaria in December 1938 , accessed on December 23, 2013
  3. Biographical information  ( 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. , accessed December 24, 2013@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / gw.geneanet.org  
  4. Arthur Kaufmann (ed.): Gustav Radbruch . Complete edition volume 17. Letters I., CF Müller Juristischer Verlag., Heidelberg 1991 p. 365 and 366, note 130 , ISBN 3-8114-0690-6
  5. ^ Gustav Radbruch: State and Constitution. Complete edition Volume 14. State and Constitution., CF Müller Juristischer Verlag, Heidelberg 2002 p. 245 , ISBN 3-8114-2148-4
  6. [[Horst Baier (sociologist) |]], M. Rainer Lepsius , Wolfgang Schluchter and Johannes Winckelman : Max Weber Complete Edition . Department II: Letters. Volume 8. JCB Mohr (Paul Siebeck), Tübingen 2013, background information - digitized , pp. 154 and 438, ISBN 3-16-147920-3
  7. Friedemann Stengel (Ed.): Excluded. In memory of the professors from Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg who were dismissed from 1933–1945, University Publishing House Halle-Wittenberg, Halle an der Saale 2013, p. XX ( Memento of December 24, 2013 in the Internet Archive ), ISBN 978-3 -86977-080-2 , accessed December 24, 2013
  8. ^ Felix Fechenbach in the Lexicon of Westphalian Authors , accessed on December 24, 2013