Konrad Beyerle

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Konrad Beyerle (born September 14, 1872 in Waldshut ; † April 26, 1933 in Munich ) was a German legal scholar and politician ( center , BVP ).

Life and work

Konrad Beyerle came from a strictly Catholic family of lawyers; his father was active in various Catholic parties. His brother was the legal historian Franz Beyerle , his sister the educator and politician Maria Beyerle . The engineer of the same name, Konrad Beyerle, was his son.

After graduating from high school in Konstanz , Beyerle studied law and history at the universities of Munich and Heidelberg between 1891 and 1895 . In 1895 he was in Heidelberg with Richard Schröder without dissertation to Dr. iur. PhD . After the second state examination in the summer of 1898 , he completed his habilitation in 1899 with a thesis on the Salmannenrecht of the city of Constance with Ulrich Stutz at the University of Freiburg . On February 22, 1899, he was appointed private lecturer for German law, civil law and French-Baden civil law, on December 13, 1900, he was appointed as a non-official associate professor and in July 1902 he was appointed to the newly established, scheduled extraordinary professorship for civil law Law, commercial law and Baden law. In the winter semester of 1902/03 he accepted a chair for legal history at the Silesian Friedrich Wilhelm University in Breslau and thus succeeded Felix Dahn . In the summer semester of 1906 he moved to the Georg-August University of Göttingen as Ferdinand Frensdorff's successor . During the First World War , Beyerle was a member of the political department of the Governor General in Belgium and an advisor to the head of the Flemish administration . In 1917 he succeeded his teacher Ulrich Stutz at the University of Bonn .

After the war, in 1918 he accepted a position at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich and followed Karl von Gareis . The Wittelsbach were able to show his support in 1921 that they had only brought against a pension entitlement her family possessions in the Bavarian state assets and must be in the first completed in Bavaria separation of state and home assets. This formed the basis for the creation of the Wittelsbach Compensation Fund .

At the University of Munich in 1927 he founded the "Institute for Bavarian and German Legal History".

He was part of the board of the Görres Society and was its vice-president. Beyerle was also a member of the advisory board of the Catholic Academic Association, the Commission for Bavarian State History and, since 1930, a corresponding member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences . He was awarded an honorary doctorate from Dr. phil. hc from the University of Milan . He was also a member of the Catholic student association KDStV Aenania Munich since 1891 , as well as a member of the Catholic student associations KDStV Winfridia (Breslau) Münster , KDStV Arminia Heidelberg and KDStV Hercynia Freiburg im Breisgau , all in CV .

Konrad Beyerle died unexpectedly on April 26, 1933 as a result of an operation.

MP

In 1919/20 Beyerle was a member of the Weimar National Assembly . He was a member of the committee for the preparation of the draft constitution for the German Reich . In doing so, he drafted the section of fundamental rights that was decisive for the Weimar constitution , for which he consulted older constitutions such as the Paulskirche .

He was then a member of the Reichstag until the May elections in 1924 .

From 1920 he was also a member of the State Court.

Fonts

  • The Constance Council Lists of the Middle Ages. Published by the Baden Historical Commission. Winter, Heidelberg 1898, digitized .
  • Constance in the Thirty Years War. Fate of the city up to the lifting of the siege by the Swedes. 1628–1633 (= New Year's Sheets of the Baden Historical Commission. NF 3, ZDB -ID 516270-1 ). Winter, Heidelberg 1900, digitized .
  • Real estate relationships and civil rights in medieval Constance. 2 volumes. Winter, Heidelberg 1900–1902;
    • Volume 1: The Salmannenrecht. Part 1. 1900, digitized ;
    • Volume 2: The Konstanz real estate deeds of the years 1152–1371. 1902, digitized .
  • The history of the choir monastery and the parish of St. Johann zu Konstanz. Herder, Freiburg (Breisgau) 1908, digitized .
  • with Anton Maurer: Historical description of the place (= Konstanzer Häuserbuch. Festschrift for the centenary of the unification of the city of Constance with the House of Baden. Vol. 2). Winter, Heidelberg 1908, (new edition. (= Konstanz Library. 15). PHV - Phaleristischer Verlag Autengruber & Hrdina, Offenbach am Main 2001, ISBN 3-934743-44-7 ).
  • The constitution of the German Empire. Reichsgesetzblatt Jg. 1919 No. 152, pp. 1383 ff. With introduction, marginal notes and subject index. Verlag der "Politische Zeitfragen", Munich 1919.
  • The House of Wittelsbach and the Free State of Bavaria. Legal basis for the dispute between state and dynasty. Volume 1. J. Schweitzer, Munich et al. 1921.
  • The legal claims of the House of Wittelsbach. J. Schweitzer, Munich et al. 1922.
  • Lex Baiuvariorum. Collotype reproduction of the Ingolstadt manuscript of the Bavarian People's Law with transcription, text notes, translation, introduction, literature overview and glossary. M. Hueber, Munich 1926.
  • as editor and contributor: The culture of Reichenau Abbey. Commemorative pamphlet for the twelve hundredth anniversary of the founding year of the island monastery 724–1924. 2 half volumes. Verlag der Münchner Drucke, Munich 1925, (Neudruck. Scientia-Verlag, Aalen 1970, ISBN 3-511-02491-9 (half volume 1), ISBN 3-511-02492-7 (half volume 2)).

Articles (selection):

  • On the history of Roman Constance. In: Writings of the Association for the History of Lake Constance and its Surroundings. 19th vol., 1890, ISSN  0342-2070 , pp. 130-133, ( digitized version ).
  • On the constitutional history of the city of Constance in the 12th and 13th centuries. In: Writings of the Association for the History of Lake Constance and its Surroundings. 26. Vol., 1897, pp. 33-50, ( digitized version ).
  • The Radolfzell market law from 1100 and its significance for the origin of German cities. In: Writings of the Association for the History of Lake Constance and its Surroundings. 30. Vol., 1901, pp. 3-21, ( digitized version ).
  • Manorial rule and sovereign rights of the Bishop of Constance in Arbon. At the same time a contribution to the history of the German city constitution. In: Writings of the Association for the History of Lake Constance and its Surroundings. 32nd vol., 1903, pp. 31-116, ( digitized version ) and 34. Jg., 1905, pp. 25-146, ( digitized version ).
  • Constance in the change of its sovereign territories. In: Writings of the Association for the History of Lake Constance and its Surroundings. 36th vol., 1907, pp. 92-101, ( digitized version ).
  • The oldest name of the city of Konstanz. In: Writings of the Association for the History of Lake Constance and its Surroundings. Volume 45, 1916, pp. 7-10, ( digitized version ).
  • Nature and origin of the basic rights in the imperial constitution of Weimar. In: German Unity - German Freedom, Memorial Book of the Reich Government for the 10th Constitutional Day, August 11, 1929. Zentralverlag GmbH, Berlin 1929.

literature

Web links

Commons : Konrad Beyerle  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Frank Zeiler: Statics and Change. The Freiburg Faculty of Law in the university expansion process of the German Empire. Freiburg / Munich 2009, p. 282 f.
  2. ^ Frank Zeiler: Statics and Change. The Freiburg Faculty of Law in the university expansion process of the German Empire. Freiburg / Munich 2009, p. 244 f.
  3. With its proposal, however, the President of the Reichstag to avoid foreign words future Worthalter to call, he could not prevail in the constitutional deliberations.