Julius Friedrich Heinrich Abegg

Julius Friedrich Heinrich Abegg ( born March 27, 1796 in Erlangen, † May 29, 1869 in Breslau) was a German criminologist and professor.

Life

Julius Abegg was the son of the pastor of the German Reformed Church in Erlangen Johann Wilhelm Abegg ( 1768-1806 ). The chemist Richard Abegg was his grandson.

Abegg studied at the Friedrich -Alexander- University of Erlangen, the Ruprecht -Karls- University of Heidelberg and the University of Landshut. In Landshut, he became in 1818 a member of the Corps Suevia. After a year of legal practice in the District Judge Wolfgang Puchta (1769-1845) and Anselm Feuerbach the District Court of Erlangen, he continued his studies at the Friedrich- Wilhelms- University of Berlin. There he heard lectures by Friedrich August Biener, Johann Friedrich Ludwig Goschen, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel and Friedrich Karl von Savigny.

As habilitated lecturer he went to the winter semester 1820/21 at the Albertus University of Königsberg. They named him 1821 A.O. Professor and in 1824 to Full Professor. In 1826 he was appointed the Silesian Friedrich Wilhelm University in Breslau. For the academic years 1837/38 and 1853/54, he was elected rector.

1833 awarded him the University of Erlangen Dr. iur. h c. ; the call to Erlangen in it, but he did not accept. Abegg remained until his death at the age of 73 years at the University of Breslau.

Due to its extraordinary accuracy in the critical essays and his historical and philosophical education Abegg influenced the emerging during this period penal codes of the individual German states. In the years from 1826, he represented one of the first Hegel's philosophy in jurisprudence. Here he developed a principle of justice, the absolute and conceptual criminal law theories on a base brought together. The criminal law conception of modernity can still shine through Abegg's ideas.

Works

  • System of Criminal law - science. Neustadt an der Orla 1826 ( Reprint Keip, Goldbach 1996, ISBN 3-8051-0290-9 )
  • Research from the field of criminology. Breslau 1830 (Reprint Detlev Auvermann, glassworks i Ts 1971)
  • The various theories of criminal law in their relations to each other and to the positive criminalistische Rights and its Geschichte.Eine treatise. Neustadt A.D. Orla 1835 (Reprint Sauer & Auvermann, Frankfurt / M. 1969)
  • Textbook of ordinary criminal trial. Neustadt an der Orla 1833 (Reprint Keip, Goldbach 1996, ISBN 3-8051-0358-1 )
  • Textbook of Criminal Science. Neustadt an der Orla 1836 (Reprint Keip, Goldbach 1996, ISBN 3-8051-0322-0 )
  • Contributions to the Criminal Process legislation. Neustadt an der Orla 1841 (Reprint Keip, Goldbach 1996, ISBN 3-8051-0373-5 )
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