Gabriel Peter von Haselberg

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Gabriel Peter Haselberg , from 1810 from Haselberg , (born August 4, 1763 in Greifswald ; † October 28, 1838 ibid) was a German lawyer and president of the Greifswald Higher Appeal Court .

Life

Gabriel Peter Haselberg was the son of the Land Syndikus Peter Matthias Haselberg (1712–1780) and his wife Amalia, daughter of the theologian Laurentius Stenzler . After attending the Greifswald city school , he began studying at Greifswald University in 1778 . His teachers there included Hermann Becker , Thomas Heinrich Gadebusch and Schlichtekrull. From 1781 to 1785 he studied at the University of Göttingen with Georg Ludwig Böhmer , Johann Stephan Pütter , Justus Friedrich Runde and Johann Peter Waldeck, among others . InGöttingen , where he taught as a private lecturer from 1785 to 1788, he received his doctorate in law in 1787 . In 1788 he became an associate professor at the University of Helmstedt . From 1791 to 1797 he held a chair at the University of Erlangen , where he received his master's degree from the philological faculty .

He became known and recognized in specialist circles through publications on legal and legal historical topics as well as through the publication of the “Legal Library” (Göttingen 1789–1790) and the “New Legal Library” (1791–1794). After Haselberg had completed his six years of compulsory service in Erlangen, he followed in 1797 the appointment by the government of Swedish Pomerania to the Higher Appeal Council at the Wismar Tribunal . In 1803 he moved with the tribunal to Greifswald. A professorship at the law faculty was associated with the office. In 1810 he and his brother Lorenz Wilhelm von Haselberg were raised to the Swedish nobility. In 1814 he was made a Knight of the North Star Order . The court - since 1810 it was named Oberappellationsgericht Greifswald - retained its position after the transfer of Swedish-Pomerania to Prussia in 1815. Haselberg, now in Prussian service, remained a judge at the Oberappellationsgericht and was promoted to President of the Oberappellationsgericht in 1831.

Gabriel Peter von Haselberg died in 1838, shortly after he had celebrated his 50th service anniversary, on the occasion of which he had received the Order of the Red Eagle, 2nd Class with Oak Leaves.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b New year books for philology and pedagogy . Verlag BG Teubner, 1838, p. 425. ( digitized version )
  2. Agneta Schönrock: The project "Greifswald University Teachers' Lexicon of the 19th and 20th Centuries". In: Werner Buchholz (Ed.): The University of Greifswald and the German university landscape in the 19th and 20th centuries . Franz Steiner, 2004, ISBN 978-3-515-08475-8 , p. 81.
  3. ^ Robert Schneider: Critical year books for German jurisprudence . 3rd year, vol. 5, Bernhard Tauchnitz junior, Leipzig 1839, p. 181. ( digitized version )