Gottfried Boldt

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Gottfried Boldt (born July 14, 1906 in Potsdam , † August 30, 1957 in Wyk auf Föhr ) was a German legal scholar .

Life

Gottfried Boldt was the son of the senior physician Arnold Boldt and his wife Hanna, née Ramm. He finished his school career in March 1924 at the Joachimthalschen Gymnasium in Templin . Boldt then completed a degree in law and political science at the universities in Jena , Lausanne and Munich . In March 1928 he passed the first state examination in law at the Jena Higher Regional Court . He received his doctorate in 1932 from the University of Bonn . After the National Socialist " seizure of power " in 1933, Boldt joined the NSDAP .

During the time of National Socialism he taught from 1935 as a private lecturer at the University of Bonn. In 1937 he received an associate's post at the Albertus University in Königsberg . In 1940 he followed the call of the Christian Albrechts University in Kiel to its chair for criminal law and criminal procedure law .

In the same year drafted into the Wehrmacht , he took part in the Second World War. He was taken prisoner by the Soviets , from which he only came to West Germany in 1955 with the “Return of the Ten Thousand” . The Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen immediately appointed him full professor for criminal law, criminal procedure law and youth law .

Johann Samuel Friedrich von Böhmer was the focus of Boldt's work.

Works

Individual evidence

  1. Gottfried Boldt: The requirements for the applicability of the poena ordinaria in JSF Böhmer 1704–1772 , Hoffmann 1933, p. 59 (curriculum vitae in the dissertation).
  2. Ulrike Jureit : Education, Punishment, Destruction: Juvenile Delinquency and Juvenile Criminal Law under National Socialism , Wxmann, Münster / New York 1995, p. 16.
  3. U. Hoßfeld, J. John, O. Lemuth, R. Stutz: Combative Science
  4. a b Obituary in Journal for the Entire Criminal Law Science (1957)