Philipp Friedrich Schulin

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Philipp Friedrich Schulin (born August 27, 1800 in Frankfurt am Main , † June 10, 1874 in Marburg ) was a German lawyer and politician.

Philipp Friedrich Schulin was the son of the lawyer Dr. jur. Johann Friedrich Gabriel Schulin (1763–1835), who represented Goethe when he was released from civil rights in 1817. He studied law and after graduating from 1821 worked as a lawyer in Frankfurt am Main. From 1822 to 1824 he worked for the Frankfurt City Library and from July 1824 in the City Archives. There he was archivist vicar from 1825 until his election to the Senate of the Free City of Frankfurt in 1833.

In the Senate, Schulin first worked at the city court and then in the accounting office. In 1839 he became chairman of the municipal land administration office. In 1845 he moved up as Schöf. In 1861 he retired.

The two sons Dr. jur. Friedrich Schulin (1843–1898) and Dr. med. Carl Friedrich Ludwig Schulin (* 1850) became professors in Basel.

Works

Schulin is the author of historical and legal writings. In 1824 and 1826 he published papers on the Frankfurt bill of exchange law, and in 1927 on the English and Dutch trade and bill of exchange law. His main work "The Frankfurter Landgemeinden" was published posthumously.

literature

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