Julius Hatschek

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Julius Karl Hatschek (* 21st August 1872 in Czernowitz , † 12. June 1926 in Göttingen ) was a state , administrative and international law . From 1909 to 1926 he taught at the Georg-August University in Göttingen .

Julius Hatschek was born as the son of a lawyer in Chernivtsi, which belonged to Austria-Hungary until 1918 . He studied law at the universities of Leipzig , Chernivtsi , Vienna and Heidelberg . He received his doctorate in 1895 in Chernivtsi, his habilitation in 1898 with Georg Jellinek in Heidelberg. There he worked initially as a private lecturer, later as an adjunct professor. In 1905 he was appointed associate professor at the Prussian Administration Academy in Posen . From 1909 he taught as an associate professor and from 1921 as a full professor for constitutional, administrative and international law at the University of Göttingen. Hatschek left behind an extensive body of work that encompasses all areas represented in his teaching. A special focus was on English constitutional and administrative law. Hatschek was an outsider of his faculty in Göttingen, on the one hand as a supporter of the Weimar Republic , on the other hand because of the latent anti-Semitism that was directed against the evangelically baptized Jews. The administrative lawyer Hans Julius Wolff was one of Hatschek's academic students .

Fonts (selection)

  • International law in outline. Deichert, Leipzig 1926.
  • Prussian constitutional law. Stilke, Berlin 1924.
  • The Reichsstaatsrecht. Stilke, Berlin 1923.
  • Textbook of German and Prussian administrative law. Deichert, Leipzig 1922.
  • The constitutional law of the United Kingdom of Great Britain-Ireland (= The Public Law of the Present , Volume 25). Mohr, Tübingen 1914.
  • English constitutional history up to the accession of Queen Victoria. (= Handbook of Medieval and Modern History , Volume 3, 2). Oldenbourg, Munich 1913.

literature

Web links

Footnotes

  1. ^ Michael Stolleis: History of Public Law in Germany. Third volume 1914-1945. Munich 1999, p. 237 with note 217.