Ludwig Friedrich Wilhelm Duncker

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Ludwig Friedrich Wilhelm Duncker (born January 6, 1804 in Rinteln , † August 2, 1847 in Göttingen ) was a German lawyer and professor.

Life

Ludwig Friedrich Wilhelm Duncker was the son of Professor Paul Heinrich Ludwig Duncker (* 1754, † 1830), who worked as a professor in Rinteln and later as a general practitioner.

He attended grammar school in Rinteln and began to study law in Marburg at Easter 1824 , which he later continued in Göttingen , where he attended lectures by Karl Friedrich Eichhorn . After receiving his doctorate and habilitation in Göttingen, he was promoted to Dr. jur. appointed. In 1829 Karl Friedrich Eichhorn retired and Ludwig Friedrich Wilhelm Duncker became a private lecturer and gave lectures on German private law. When Wilhelm Eduard Albrecht became Eichhorn's successor, Ludwig Friedrich Wilhelm asked Duncker to be transferred to the vacant position of actuary at the university.

In 1833 he went to Marburg as in-house counsel , secretary and actuary of the law faculty of the university, and at Easter 1834 he was given permission to hold lectures and lectured on German private law, canon law and civil litigation. On November 3, 1837, his request for appointment as professor of canon law, civil process and legal internship was rejected by the ministry.

In addition to his teaching activities, he was also active as a writer and various of his publications led to the fact that on September 22, 1841 he was offered an extraordinary professorship in addition to his position as in-house counsel . On November 5, 1842, he asked to be released from civil service on March 31, 1843. He was given a full professorship in Göttingen as the successor to Johann Heinrich Thöl , who went to Rostock. Here he presented German law and feudal law, which he presented at the request of the Nassau government with special consideration for Nassau law. His final treatise Can a real burden in today's rights be re-established by contract? appeared in the "Journal for German Law" XI.3. shortly after his death.

Works (selection)

  • The main features of the doctrine of real loads are presented . Marburg, 1837. (books.google.de)
  • About the validity of an insurance contract concluded against the laws of a foreign country. In: Archives for civilist practice. XXI, 8, 1838.
  • Does the possession exercised by the testator pass to the heir through the inheritance? In: Journal of Civil Law and Process. XII, 3, 1839.
  • About dominium utile. In: Journal for German Law. II, 1, 1840.
  • About quasi-ownership. In: Journal for German Law. II, 2, 1840.
  • The common property . Marburg 1843.

literature

  • Wilhelm Ebel: Catalogus professorum Gottingensium 1734–1962. 1962, pp. 51, 67.
  • Franz Gundlach: Catalogus professorum academiae Marburgensis 1, From 1527 to 1910. 1927, No. 239.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Critical yearbooks for German jurisprudence: founded by Aemilius Ludwig Richter, continued by Robert Schneider . Tauchnitz, 1848 ( google.de [accessed October 30, 2017]).
  2. ^ ADB: Duncker, Ludwig Friedrich Wilhelm - Wikisource. Retrieved October 30, 2017 .
  3. aumann: single record - University of Marburg - Archives of the University of Marburg. Retrieved October 31, 2017 .
  4. ^ Adolph Carl Peter Callisen: Medicinisches Writer Lexicon of the now living physicians, surgeons, obstetricians, pharmacists and naturalists of all educated peoples: Dari - Eh . Selbstverl., 1831 ( google.de [accessed October 31, 2017]).
  5. ^ Georg Schwedt: Gesundbrunnen in the Schaumburger Land: Rehburg, Rodenberg, Nenndorf, Eilsen. Excursions into history . BoD - Books on Demand, 2017, ISBN 978-3-7448-5631-7 ( google.de [accessed October 31, 2017]).
  6. MPIER _ magazine server. Retrieved October 31, 2017 .