Gottlieb Hufeland

Gottlieb hoof (* October 29, 1760 in Gdansk, † February 25, 1817 in Halle / Saale ) was a German legal scholar.

Hoof was a professor in Jena, Würzburg and Landshut. He was the son of Daniel and Anna hoof Constancia, born Granzow. He married Wilhelmine Wiedemann in 1793, with whom he had three children ( Mathilde, Therese, Siegmund ). Hoof was one of the first to have used the term economics. From 1806 to 1812 he was mayor of Gdansk.

In Jena, he bought a large part of the work of the general business literature newspaper, which was published by Friedrich Justin Bertuch together with Christian Gottfried Schutz and Christoph Martin Wieland. Here he met Friedrich Schiller, the hoof described as " a silent thinking mind full of salt and deeper research."

Works

  • Essay on the Principle of Natural Law ( 1785 )
  • Doctrines of natural law and the related sciences (1790). Glassworks in the Taunus: Auvermann, 1973 [ unveränd. Neudr d ed Jena 1790 ]
  • Institutions in the positive law (1798 )
  • Textbook of history and old Encyclopadie applicable in Germany positive rights (1790)
  • New foundation of the political economy of art ( 2 volumes, 1807 and 1813; title of the second band theory of money and money Umlaufe )
  • About the peculiar spirit of Roman law in general and in detail with comparisons of new legislation: a series of treatises, which can serve as explanatory handbook on the unusual representations in the textbook of the common Civil law at the same time (1815 )
  • Memories from my stay in Gdansk in the years 1808-1812 Königsberg. Nicolovius, 1815
274381
de