Max Oelschlaeger
Max Ferdinand Rudolf Oelschlaeger (born August 18, 1861 in Stettin , † after 1929) was a German judge .
Life
Oelschlaeger studied law in Leipzig, among other places, entered the Prussian civil service in 1884. In 1896 he became a public prosecutor. In 1904 he was promoted to the Public Prosecutor's Office. In 1907 he became a member of the chamber judge . In 1916 he came to the Reichsgericht as advice . He was in the IV. And III. Criminal Senate active. In 1929 he was awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of Leipzig . He retired before 1932.
family
Oelschlaeger was the son of Rudolf Oelschlaeger, the director and president of the Berlin-Stettiner Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft . The surgeon and writer Carl Ludwig Schleich married his sister Hedwig. According to Schleich, he was an excellent musician. Oelschlager was an evangelical reformist, but after 1933 was considered a "Jewish lawyer".
literature
- Adolf Lobe : Fifty Years of the Reich Court on October 1, 1929, Berlin 1929, p. 380.
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Jens Blecher, Gerald Wiemers (ed.): The register of the University of Leipzig. Volume IV: The years 1876 to 1884 , Weimar 2009, p. 201
- ↑ University of Leipzig website: University history / people / doctoral books / Leipzig honorary title ( memento from February 26, 2012 in the Internet Archive ), accessed on December 23, 2012.
- ^ Sunny past, memoirs of a doctor, Ernst Rowohlt Verlag, Berlin 1930, Chapter X: Studying with my father and the Physikum in Greifswald cited. according to the Gutenberg project [1]
- ↑ Thomas Henne: “Jüdische Juristen” at the Reichsgericht and their connections to the Leipzig Faculty of Law 1870-1945, in: Stephan Wendehorst (Ed.): Building blocks of a Jewish history of the University of Leipzig, Leipzig 2006, p. 204, fn. 95.
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Oelschlaeger, Max |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Oelschlaeger, Max Ferdinand Rudolf (full name) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German Imperial Judge |
DATE OF BIRTH | August 18, 1861 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Szczecin |
DATE OF DEATH | after 1929 |