Johannes Platschek

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Johannes Platschek (born October 3, 1973 in Munich ) is a German legal scholar .

Life

Platschek studied law from 1993 at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich , where he passed the first and second state examinations in 1998 and 2000 respectively. After his doctorate as Dr. jur. (2003, summa cum laude) he worked as an assistant at the Leopold Wenger Institute for Legal History from 2004 and qualified as a professor in 2009 in Roman law, civil law, ancient legal history and modern private law history.

In September 2009, he moved to the University of Göttingen as a full professor of Roman law , civil law and modern history of private law . After a short-term lectureship at the Sino-German Law Institute of the University of Nanjing in September 2011, he was accepted as a lecturer at the Scuola di Dottorato in Scienze giuridiche at the University of Milan-Bicocca in December 2011 . In February 2012 he was appointed university professor for Roman law, Romanistic foundations of modern law and ancient legal history at the University of Vienna . In March 2015 he switched to the chair for Roman law, ancient legal history and civil law at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich . There he is also a member of the board of directors at the Munich Center for Ancient Worlds .

Platschek's main research interests include Hellenistic legal history, Roman civil litigation, ancient private law in non-legal sources and the textual criticism of Roman legal writings ( Gaius , Digest ).

Fonts (selection)

  • The ius Verrinum in the case of Heraclius of Syracuse . In: Journal of the Savigny Foundation for Legal History. Romance Department . Volume 118 (2001), pp. 234-263
  • Studies on Cicero's speech to P. Quinctius . Munich 2005 (dissertation)
  • Augsburg inscriptions and Roman economic organization. Roman law (and other) associations in the Roman Museum Augsburg . In: Christoph Becker, Hans G. Herrmann (Hrsg.): Economy and Law - Historical Developments in Bavaria . Münster 2009, pp. 1-19
  • The edict De pecunia constituta . The Roman promise of performance and its embedding in the Hellenistic credit traffic . Munich 2013 (habilitation thesis)

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