Paul Christoph Gottlob Andreä

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Paul Christoph Gottlob Andreä , also Paul Christoph Gottlieb Andreae and Paul Christoph Gottlob Andre (born December 30, 1772 in Leipzig , † August 20, 1824 in Jena ) was a German legal scholar.

Life

Paul Christoph Gottlob was the son of the teacher at the Leipzig Thomasschule Paul Gottlob Andreä and his wife Clara Sophia Topf (* around 1732; † April 8, 1820 in Thalbürgel). During his school education at the Thomas School he acquired a good knowledge of the ancient languages. So prepared, he moved to the University of Leipzig , where he primarily devoted himself to law, which is reflected in the degree of Baccalaureus in law on April 27, 1791. His teachers were Platner, Seydlit, Heydenreich, Eck, Beck, Born, Burscher, Hilscher, Rössig, Zwanziger, Hebenstreit and Haase. In law, Bauer Schott, Biener, Erhard, Haubold, Einert and Sammert. However, he switched to the philosophical course of study, which he completed on March 11, 1797 with the highest degree of a philosophical academic degree.

Prepared in this way, he completed his habilitation as a private lecturer at the philosophical faculty and obtained his doctorate in law in the following year. In 1802 he took over an extraordinary position as an associate assessor at the law faculty of the University of Wittenberg and in 1807 rose to a full position, which was connected with an observer position at the royal Saxon regional court of Niederlausitz . In 1809 he took over an extraordinary professorship in law and remained in this position until the end of the Wittenberg University.

In 1815 he followed a call from Grand Duke Karl August of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach as a grand ducal Saxon court advisor and, associated with this, took on a full professorship at the University of Jena , as well as an advisor at the Schöppen chair there . In Jena he supported the establishment of the Higher Appeal Court, where he was also a councilor and mainly gave his lectures on the institutions that he connected with the history of Roman law after Ferdinand Mackeldey . Here he was rector of the university in the summer semester of 1821 and died after a long illness.

Works

  • Text on the collection of small coppers and vignettes from the publishing house of Voss and Komp. Leipzig 1794–1795
  • Diss. Quendam, de conjuctione inter parentes et liberos ad normam praeceptorum juris naturalis definienda. Leipzig 1798 ( online )
  • Diss. De legato optionis. Leipzig 1798
  • Progr. De Solonis legum erga debitores lenitate. Wittenberg 1812
  • Progr. Ad Titul, D. de arboribus caedendis. Jena 1818 ( online )

literature