Heinrich Rogge (legal scholar)

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Heinrich Rogge (born November 19, 1886 in Fürstenwalde / Spree ; † March 15, 1966 ) was a German international lawyer .

Life

Rogge grew up in Neustettin in Pomerania , where his father was a high school director. He studied at the Universities of Grenoble , Munich and Berlin . Rogge was a co-founder of the International Peace Academy , which was set up by the Stresemann Foundation at the Berlin School of Politics . It was also a member of the German People's Party (DVP). As a liberal, Rogge had problems with the National Socialists. In 1933 he lost his teaching post for international law and legal philosophy , but received it again in 1936. Rogge tried to cover up his bad reputation with the National Socialists through particular research. Immediately after the reintroduction of compulsory military service in 1935, he published a propagandistic article in the German legal newspaper , in which he marked the prohibition of Germany in the Treaty of Versailles from having a conscript army as contrary to international law. A whole series of works between 1933 and 1945 stand for this oversized adaptation. In 1940 he became professor in Freiburg , in 1942 in Graz .

Works (selection)

  • Symbol and fate. Goethe's Faust and his wisdom as a philosophy of development, Prien am Chiemsee, 1921
  • The legendary wreath of Neustettin, Neustettin, 1927
  • National peace policy. Handbook of the peace problem and its science on the basis of systematic international law policy . With Franz von Papen, Junker and Dünnhaupt Verlag, 1934, Berlin
  • Hitler's Peace Policy and International Law , Julius Abel Publishing House, Berlin 1935
  • The revision problem. Theory of revision as a prerequisite for an international scientific debate on "Peaceful change of status quo" . Junker and Dünnhaupt, Berlin 1937
  • Collective security, alliance policy, League of Nations. Theory of national and international security , Verlag W. Stolle, Berlin 1937
  • Hitler's attempts to come to terms with England . Junker and Dünnhaupt, Berlin 1940. This font is classified as Nazi propaganda literature by the Yivo Institute for Jewish research .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Heinrich Rogge: Wehrmacht, Peace and World Law - To restore the German military sovereignty on March 16, 1935 . In Deutsche Juristenteitung 40th year, 1935, issue 7, columns 387 to 391
  2. ^ Michael Stolleis: History of Public Law in Germany: Weimar Republic and National Socialism . CH Beck, 2002, ISBN 3-406-48960-5 , pp. 258 (439 p., Limited preview in Google Book search).
  3. ^ Verlag Norddeutsche Presse
  4. Google book search
  5. http://www.idc.nl/pdf/356_titlelist.pdf