Friedrich Ludwig von Berger

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Friedrich Ludwig Berger , from 1717 knight and noble lord von Berger (born January 23, 1701 in Wittenberg , † 1735 in Wetzlar ) was a German lawyer.

family

He came from a Thuringian family and was the son of Reichshofrat Dr. jur. Johann Heinrich von Berger , professor at the University of Wittenberg , and Maria Sophia Jacobi . The father was on May 31, 1717 Wien in the kingdom knighthood charged with names Mehrung " Knight and Noble Mr. Berger " whose siblings until January 31 1722nd

Berger remained unmarried. His older brother was the lawyer Christoph Heinrich von Berger (1687–1737).

Life

Berger began studying law at the University of Wittenberg . He moved to the University of Vienna , where he primarily dealt with German constitutional law and wrote legal opinions for the imperial court.

In 1724 he was appointed real councilor of the ducal Württemberg and in 1728 as assessor of the Reich Chamber Court. As such he held trial relations in 1729 without obtaining the introduction. In 1730 he was Counselor in princely brunswick-Wolfenbütteler services in Wolfenbüttel .

Berger came out with his writings, the constitutional problems of Charles VI. treated. In it he speaks out against the acceptance of the imperial title by Peter the Great , for the claims of the emperor on Tuscany and the benefit of granting the Italian estates the right to vote in the Reichstag . He advocates that it is important for the emperor's authority to restrict the inquisition of the Italian subjects, and defends the emperor's right to establish the East and West India Company in Ostend .

Works

  • Succinctae animadversiones ad Henr. De Cocceii Juris publici prudentiam . 1724
  • Opuscula miscella quaedam juris pubilici . 1725

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Catalog raisonné see Jugler : Contributions to legal biography , Volume I, Leipzig 1773, pp. 67–76.