Michael Teuber

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Michel Teuber

Michael Teuber, also: Teuffel, Teubner, Theuber (born August 15, 1524 in Eisleben , † September 15, 1586 in Wittenberg ) was a German legal scholar.

Life

Teuber enrolled at the University of Wittenberg in the summer semester of 1537 , after moving to the University of Ingolstadt , he returned to the Wittenberg University, where he obtained the academic degree of a master's degree from the philosophical faculty in 1544. He then took up studies at the law faculty with Hieronymus Schurff and Konrad Mauser and received his doctorate on January 13, 1550 as a doctor of law.

Thereupon he was admitted to the law faculty as professor of the code and on July 28th, 1550, he became assessor at the Wittenberg court. He is soon to be found as Chancellor of the Bishop of Cammin . He was also active as an advisor and envoy in Braunschweig, Mecklenburg, Pomerania and Aschersleben, where he worked as a privy councilor.

In 1565 he returned to Wittenberg, took over the second professorship at the law faculty and read about the decretals . He wrote legal writings on the procedural rules and based the teaching method on Schurff. In his memorial address he spoke out sharply against those who wanted to show a new form of the doctrine of law.

Teuber also took part in the organizational tasks of the university. In the winter semester 1553/54 and in the summer semester 1554 he was dean of the law faculty and took over the rectorate of the alma mater in the winter semester 1565 and in the summer semester 1576 and 1583 . From his marriage to Euphrosyne († July 6, 1586), a daughter of Benedikt Pauli , the sons Benedikt, Michael and Andreas († June 23, 1584 23 years old) are known. For his services he was awarded the Hemsendorf manor in the office of Schweinitz by the Elector August von Sachsen . In 1589, the court councilor Dr. jur. Andreas Rauchbar was enfeoffed with this property by Elector Christian I of Saxony. Rauchbar had married Teuber's daughter Euphrosina on February 15, 1585 in Wittenberg, who had inherited the Hemsendorf estate after the death of her father. A second daughter Katharina had married Franz Zülsdorff and died on August 10, 1581 in Wittenberg. The daughter Anna (* 1563; † February 28, 1579) is also known.

Works

  • De modo docendi, discendi & exercendi jura . 1605
  • Resolutio qvinqvaginta qvaestionum . Frankfurt 1599
  • Explanation of what to watch out for when setting up and carrying out the processes, especially at the Cammer courts . In an anthology, Leipzig 1598
  • Orationes de Arcadio & Honorio . Wittenberg 1572

literature

Web links