Richard Adolf Strigl

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Richard Adolf Strigl (born January 1, 1926 in Münchsmünster ; † March 27, 1985 in Munich ) was professor of canon law at several German-speaking universities.

Life

Richard A. Strigl was born on January 1, 1926 in Münchsmünster as the first and only son of the post office clerk Adolf Strigl and his wife Anna. Just six months later, the young family moved to Geisenfeld . Here he attended elementary school from 1932 to 1936. 1936 Entry into the humanistic high school of the Benedictine Abbey of Scheyern . In 1940 he moved to the Domgymnasium Freising and in 1943 to the Ludwigsgymnasium in Munich. A short time later he was called up as an anti-aircraft helper. This was followed by a prisoner of war in the USA, which lasted until March 1946. From 1946 to 1951 Strigl studied at the Philosophical-Theological University in Freising.

In the High Cathedral in Freising, Strigl was born on June 29, 1951 by Michael Cardinal von Faulhaber , together with Joseph Ratzinger, who later became Pope Benedict XVI. and his brother Georg Ratzinger ordained a priest.

  • Primiz in his home parish Geisenfeld on July 1, 1951. Then he was deployed in the parish of St. Ursula in Munich-Schwabing.
  • In 1955 he began studying canon law at the Canon Institute of the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich . From 1960 he received the teaching assignment for canon law at the Phil.-Theol. Freising University.
  • 1962 Habilitation for canon law at the University of Munich.
  • On July 1, 1963 he was appointed associate professor for church and state church law at Phil.-Theol. Freising University
  • On August 1, 1968, he was appointed full professor in Freising, and in 1970 professor of canon law at the University of Salzburg . From 1979 Strigl is co-editor in the archive for Catholic canon law.
  • Richard A. Strigl died on March 27, 1985 at the age of 59.

Works

  • Basic questions of the ecclesiastical organization of offices 1960 ISBN 3-88096-313-4
  • The Vicaria perpetua as a substitute for the canonical parish in 1964
  • The functional relationship between the ecclesiastical criminal authority and the public in 1965
  • Marginalia for the draft of a Lex Fundamentalis Ecclesiae 1972

literature