Martin Gottlieb Pauli

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Martin Gottlieb Pauli (born January 11, 1721 in Lauban ; † March 12, 1796 in Wittenberg ) was a German legal scholar.

Life

Born as the son of Mayor Christoph Pauli, he attended the Lyceum in his hometown, had enrolled at the University of Leipzig on May 9, 1740 , and received the degree of Master of Philosophy there on February 25, 1745 . He concentrated on following a course of study in law, was posted on July 8, 1747 Bakkalaurus of Rights and doctorate on 31 August of the same year for licentiate and doctorate in law.

The young doctor soon became an electoral notary, but found little pleasure in legal practice and therefore went to Gdansk in 1753 as inspector general and high school professor of law and history . In the summer semester of 1763 he was appointed to the University of Wittenberg , where he was first a full professor of the institutions and finally rose to a professorship under the Code in 1782. In addition, he was an assessor at the Wittenberg consistory, held the rectorate of the Wittenberg Academy in the summer semesters of 1767, 1775, and 1781, and remained in his chair until the end of his life.

Selection of works

  • De theoriae et praxis juridicae discordia, Leipzig 1747
  • philosophical investigations of the being and essence of animals, Leipzig 1741–44

literature

  • Johann August Ritter von EisenhartPauli, Martin Gottlieb . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 25, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1887, p. 267 f.
  • Christian Siegmund Georgi : Annales Academiae Vitebergensis 1655-1755, p. 368 (printed for 468)
  • Wittenberger Wochenblatt 1782 pp. 28, 368,
  • New Wittenberger Wochenblatt 1796 p. 87
  • Walter Friedensburg "History of the University of Wittenberg" Verlag Max Niemeyer Halle (Saale) 1917
  • Nikolaus Müller: The finds in the tower knobs of the town church in Wittenberg, Magdeburg Evangelische Buchhandlung Ernst Holtermann, 1912
  • Johann Georg Meusel : Lexicon of the German writers who died from 1750 to 1800. Gerhard Fleischer the Younger, Leipzig, 1810, vol. 10 p. 300
  • Friedrich August Weiz : The learned Saxony or directory of those in the Churfürstl. Saxon. and incorporated countries of contemporary writers and their writings. Verlag Carl Friederich Schneider, Leipzig, 1780, p. 181