Agathon Wunderlich

Gottlob Friedrich Walter Agathon Wunderlich (* 1810 in Göttingen, † November 21, 1878 ) was a German jurist and Oberappellationsgerichtsrat of the 19th century.

Life

Wunderlich 's son who died in Göttingen professor and philologist Ernst Karl Friedrich Wunderlich was ( 1783-1816 ). Although not a Prussian citizen, he received from 1824 to 1828 a free place at the prestigious National School Pforta. He then studied at the University of Göttingen philology and law, received his doctorate in 1832, Dr. iur. utr .. In 1833 he habilitated and entered the Hanoverian civil service.

The repeal of the Basic Law in the Kingdom of Hanover and the protests against this led to the dismissal of the Göttingen Seven. Wunderlich took this development as well as an opportunity to go to Berlin, where he habilitated again in Prussia. In 1838 he received through the mediation of Johann Jakob Bachofen a call to the chair of Roman Law at the University of Basel. Time in Basel until 1842 he used for publications on medieval Verfahrensrechtler.

In 1842 he was appointed professor at the University of Rostock, where he served as professor became a member of the College motto of this university soon and could be forensically. In 1847 he was followed by a further call to Halle in 1850 before he took out his final position as a judge at the Court of Appeal of the four free cities in Lübeck, whose decision collections he also gave out.

Writings

  • De antiquarian litterarum obligatione. Dissertation. Göttingen 1832.
  • Joannis Andreae Summula de PROcessu iudicii / ex cod. Basil. restituit in integrum. Schweighauser, Basel 1840.
  • Tancredi Summa de Matrimonio. Cambridge University Press, Göttingen 1841.
  • Right sayings and opinions of the Jurists faculty of Rostock. Reimer, Berlin 1846 (Google Books).
  • ( Eds): Heise commercial law. Frankfurt am Main, 1858.
  • Bibliotheca Wunderl. Altera editio. Halle / Saale 1858.
  • The jurisprudence of the top appellate court, the four free cities of Germany in civil cases from Luebeck 1848-64. 2 vols. Gesenius, Bremen 1866 ( Volume I on Google Books).
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