Friedrich Gottlob Schulze

Friedrich Gottlob Schulze ( born January 28, 1795 in Obergävernitz at Meissen; † July 3, 1860 in Jena ) was a German professor, economist and farmer.

Life

He was the only son of the Saxon landowner Johann Gottlob Schulze. His father owned the goods Obergävernitz and Görisch and had actually intended his son for a career in government service.

Schulze visited Schulpforte, studied in Leipzig and Jena, 1817 Upper administrator of Kammerguts Oberweimar 1819 habilitated in Jena, and was then appointed in 1821 professor. In 1826 he founded an institution for the training of future farmers and camera lists. In 1832 he was appointed professor at the University of Greifswald founded and from there in 1834 in a Eldena cameralistic -economic establishment. But in 1839 he returned as professor of political economy to Jena, where he again opened an agricultural institute. After his death, the Weimar government took over the institute under the name Grand Ducal Saxon School of farmers and ordered it the University of Jena, in 1901 it became the Agricultural Institute of the University of Jena.

He married in 1823 Bertha Storm ( 1799-1857 ), daughter of the town physician of Eisenach Benjamin Christian Gottlieb storm († 1813), and adopted daughter of the professor Johann Jakob Griesbach ( 1745-1812 ) and the Friedrike Juliane Schütz ( 1758-1836 ). His son was the professor of constitutional law of Hermann Schulze- Gavernitz. The Professor Karl Christian Gottlob storm was his wife's uncle.

Works (selection)

  • About nature and studying economics, Jena 1826
  • German Sheets for Agriculture and Economics, Jena and Leipzig, 1843-1859, 2 vols
  • Economics or economics, primarily for agriculture, forestry and public hosts, Leipzig 1856, digitized
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