Joseph Ulbrich

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Joseph Ulbrich (born October 23, 1843 in Eger , Bohemia , † August 20, 1910 in Prague ) was an Austrian legal scholar in the field of public law .

Life

Born the son of a chief finance officer, Ulbrich studied law in Prague after attending the state high school in New Town . During his studies in 1861 he became a member of the Carolina Prague fraternity . After completing his studies, he was initially employed in the judicial and administrative service of Austria-Hungary and completed his habilitation in 1875 at the still undivided Charles University . Since 1879 associate professor , in 1884 he became a professor at the outsourced German Karl Ferdinands University . From 1897 to 1899 he was her rector twice . The first speech of the rectorate on November 10, 1897 dealt with administrative law in the constitutional and cultural state of the present . He wrote about constitutional law:

“A scientific representation of constitutional law must not be a cloudy mixture of philosophical, historical, statistical notes; Rather, it must treat its material legally in a strict system. "

- Joseph Ulrich

From 1905 Ulbrich was also a member of the Austrian manor house . He died at the age of 67.

Fonts

  • On public rights and administrative jurisdiction with regard to the establishment of an administrative court in Austria , 1875. GoogleBooks
  • The draft of the new trade regulations , 1878. GoogleBooks
  • Textbook of Austrian constitutional law for academic use and practical needs . Berlin 1883. GoogleBooks
  • About Credit and Banking , 1884.
  • Animal cruelty and protection , 1892.
  • The constitutional law of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy , in: Manual of the public law of the present. Tübingen 1884, 3rd edition 1904
  • Textbook of Austrian administrative law . Vienna 1904
  • with Ernst Mischler (lawyer) : Austrian State Dictionary , 3 vols. Vienna 1894–1897; 2nd edition 1904
  • Handbook of Austrian Public Law , Vol. 1, 1895. GoogleBooks
  • Handbook of the Austrian political administration for the kingdoms and countries represented in the Reichsrathe , Bd. 2, 1890. GoogleBooks
  • Austrian constitutional law , 1904.

literature

  • Helge Dvorak: Biographical Lexicon of the German Burschenschaft. Volume I: Politicians. Volume 6: T-Z. Winter, Heidelberg 2005, ISBN 3-8253-5063-0 , pp. 86-87.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Ulbrich . In: Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon . 6th edition. Volume 19, Bibliographisches Institut, Leipzig / Vienna 1909, p.  878 .
  2. Rector's speeches (HKM)
  3. ^ Google Books
  4. Erich Voegelin: The authoritarian state (1936/1997)