Joseph Adam Ayblinger

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Joseph Adam Ayblinger (born March 18, 1664 in Augsburg , † December 21, 1722 in Salzburg ) was a lawyer and university professor in Salzburg.

Life

Joseph Adam Ayblinger (on the grave inscription: Aybling; modernized spelling: Aiblinger) was born in Augsburg in 1664, where his father Marquard Jakob Ayblinger was the administrator of the so-called Fuggerei . In 1683 he began to study both rights at the Jesuit University in Dillingen , which he continued in 1684 at the Benedictine University in Salzburg . Probably for reasons of cost he did not get a doctorate at first, but practiced as a lawyer for a few years until he was appointed to the chair of the institutions in Dillingen in 1697 . In the same year he still did his doctorate in Salzburg. The keynote address at the graduation ceremony was held by the University's Pro-Chancellor, Father Paul Mezger . It also appeared in print.

After the surprising death of the 37-year-old Salzburg law professor Johann Anton Lindner in 1698, Ayblinger applied for his successor to the chair for the institutions, which he finally received on May 10, 1700 after Johann Caspar von Böcken, who was initially selected as attorney at court in Munich had taken over the office of Salzburg city counsel for a few months. Prince Archbishop Johann Ernst Graf Thun awarded Ayblinger the council title in 1702, which his successor Franz Anton Prince of Harrach confirmed in 1709. In 1717 Ayblinger was promoted to the higher-ranking chair of the Pandects .

As a professor, Ayblinger published several legal works and represented clients as a lawyer. Since he incurred the displeasure of the court court because of alleged formal errors in 1710, the rector of the university issued him a "serious reprimand" at the request of the court chancellor. The lawyers also complained to the court against his legal advice. Ayblinger appealed to the defense on the "free practice" granted to him in the service contract.

Ayblinger was elected dean of the law faculty six times, but on November 16, 1722 he resigned the dean's office for health reasons. He died on December 21, 1722 and was buried in the last empty sitting room in the crypt of the Sacellum . His widow Maria Ludovika Schmid tried in vain to influence the appointment process of the successor. In order to be able to provide for herself and her five surviving children, she asked the principal to employ only one candidate who would marry her eldest daughter. She later took on aristocratic students who were tutored by their eldest son.

Works

  • Commentarius ad quinquaginta libros digestorum, seu pandectarum scientifica methodo concinnatus, ac Iustinianei iuris principia monitis hodierni usus hinc […]. Augustae Vindelicorum: sumptibus Martini Veith
  • Via Ad Altiorem Jurisprudentiam, Seu Commentatio Ad Institutiones Imperiales D. Justiniani. Salzburg

literature

  • Magnus Sattler: Collectaneen sheets on the history of the former Benedictine University of Salzburg. Kempten 1890, p. 264
  • Egidius Kolb: Presidium and professorial committee of the Benedictine University of Salzburg, in: Communications of the Society for Salzburg Regional Studies; 102, pp. 117-166 (1962)
  • Christoph Brandhuber: Gymnasium mortis. The Sacellum of the University of Salzburg and its crypt. Salzburg, Vienna [a. a.] 2014 (University Library 4), p. 198f.