Georg Tobias Schwendendörffer

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Georg Tobias Schwendendörffer (born November 13, 1597 in Nuremberg , † April 16, 1681 in Leipzig ) was a German legal scholar .

Georg Tobias Schwendendörffer
Epitaph in the Paulinerkirche

Life

The son of the Nuremberg merchant Bartholomäus Schwendendörffer and his wife Justina Neumar came from a well-to-do family who gave him extensive basic training in his hometown. So he visited the Aegidianum in his hometown, began a philosophical course at the University of Leipzig , where he obtained the academic degree of a master's degree in 1616 . He then decided to study law. In 1617 he continued his studies at the University of Altdorf and went from there to the University of Leiden .

From there, Schwendendörffer completed a scholarly journey that took him to universities and cities in Holland , England , France and Italy . He returned to Leipzig, where he was accepted into the law faculty in 1621 as a bachelor of law. There he was promoted on 16 November 1626 for licentiate of Rights and doctorate on July 12, 1627 Franz Romanus the doctor 's rights. In 1629 he became a collegiate at the great prince's college , was raised to the baron status by Emperor Ferdinand II in 1631 , and on September 21, 1636 he became the fifth professor at the Leipzig Faculty of Law with the title of Verborum Significatione et de Regulis Juris .

In the same year Schwendendörffer received the professorship of the Pandects . After he had become assessor of the law faculty in 1638 , he rose to the second legal professorship of the code , with which he was canon in Merseburg . In 1653 he finally became the first professor of the law faculty as a full professor, teaching related to the decretals . Eventually he became assessor of the Leipzig Higher Court , Councilor of Electoral Saxony, Senior of the Bavarian Nation, Decemvir of the Academy, was Dean of the Faculty of Law and in the summer semesters 1632, 1636, 1640, 1644, 1646, 1650, 1656, 1672 Rector of the Alma Mater .

He was buried in the Paulinerkirche in Leipzig .

From his marriage to Concordia Gölnitz (* 1606; † October 27, 1678 in Leipzig), the daughter of the professor of the Leipzig Faculty of Law Bartholomäus Gölnitz († 1635), the son Bartholomäus Leonhard von Schwendendörffer (1631-1705) and the daughter Anna Justina Schwendendörffer (1627–1680, married November 10, 1646 in Leipzig with Hieronymus Kromayer ) known. Another daughter, Anna Maria Schwendendörffer († 1673), was valued for her religious poetry.

Works

  • De mutationibus rerum publicarum
  • De crimine laesae Majestatis
  • De transactione
  • De mandata Jurisdictione.
  • De medicorum anatome, jure divino et humano licita. Leipzig 1663, 1690
  • De adultertio dicortii causa.
  • De consusione obligationum. Leipzig 1668
  • De mortis causa donatione.
  • De facto about processum.
  • De cura. Leipzig 1665
  • De transmissionibus.
  • De tutoris partibus.
  • De jure occidendi deprehensum in adulterio filiae

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. “His daughter Anna Maria was with a Mr. Wolframsdorf engaged, but died as a bride in 1673. She was valued for her religious poetry and her devout sighs of spirit left the press in Leipzig in 1667. "( ADB )