Wilhelm Endemann

Samuel William end (b. April 24, 1825 in Marburg, † June 13, 1899 in Kassel ) was a German legal scholar. He sat in the Reichstag (North German Confederation) and the Reichstag ( German Empire ).

Life

End 's parents were the lawyer and Senate President Konrad end man and his wife Charlotte Wilhelmine born gray. A brother was Carl Friedrich end man, Vice Mayor of Kassel and member of the Reichstag.

End man visited from 1825 to 1843, the Friedrich Gymnasium ( Kassel). After graduation he studied law, economics and history at the University of Marburg. In 1843 he became a member of the Corps Teutonia Marburg. As Inactive he moved to the Ruprecht -Karls- University of Heidelberg. From 1847 to 1851 he completed a legal internship for the Ministry of Justice in the Electorate of Hesse. In 1851, the end of man was a prosecutor in Rinteln. After that, he was from 1852 Office and Assessor from 1856 Supreme Court Assessor in Fulda. He married there in the same year Katinka desk. A son was Friedrich end of man.

For his scientific achievements, he was appointed by the University of Jena to the doctor honoris causa in 1862. In the same year he was appointed to this University o.Professor and summer semesters in 1864 and 1872 as rector. At the same time he was there Oberappellationsgerichtsrat. He taught commercial law and litigation as well as legal and economic history.

1875 changed man at the end of the Rheinische Friedrich- Wilhelms-Universität Bonn. There came to his previous subjects also State law and litigation added. In addition, he has kept in Elberfeld and Cologne several times a week for railway officials lectures in railway law. In 1895/96 he asked to be relieved of his duties in 1898 and moved to Kassel.

Work

A significant achievement in the field of law and economic history were his "Studies in the Romanized table - canonical economic and legal theory. " This work was published in two volumes in 1874 and 1883. His other juridical work has contributed to the development of commercial and civil litigation.

End of man is counted for younger Historical School of Law. In view of the practical and social role of the law imposing the evolutionary progress of the law was particularly important. In contrast to other representatives of the historical school of law, the legal history had the task to pave the way for a progressive transformation of the right, in its opinion. The precipitate his more sociological than historical- dogmatic method can be found, among others, in his textbook of commercial law of 1865. Also in the field of procedural law, he has contributed to the development of the practice. He was a member since 1867 and the North German Federation Commission on Civil Litigation. In 1872 he took part in St. Petersburg on general statistical congress.

Policy

End of man was also active as a parliamentarian. In Bonn he belonged to the initially led by Heinrich von Sybel German club. He was a member of the National Liberal Party and belonged in this the more left wing on. He sat for the constituency of Schwarzburg- Rudolstadt in the Reichstag (North German Confederation) and ( in the first term ) in the Reichstag ( German Empire ). He, representing the constituency of Eisenach. In the Catholic Rhine province he could not prevent the decline of the National Liberals in favor of the Centre Party later. Disappointed by various attacks, he eventually withdrew from political life all the way back.

Works (selection)

  • The proof theory of civil procedure. Heidelberg, 1860, (2 departments. )
  • The German commercial law. Heidelberg, 1865, 4th edition 1887
  • The German civil procedure law. Heidelberg, 1868
  • The legal aid in the North German Confederation. Berlin, 1870
  • The liability of the railways, mines, etc. Berlin 1871, 3rd edition 1885
  • The right of public limited companies. Heidelberg, 1873
  • Studies in the Romano- canonical economic and legal doctrine. Berlin 1874-83, (2 vols )
  • Trademark protection. Berlin, 1875
  • The German civil procedure. Berlin 1878-79, (3 vols )
  • The right of the railways. Leipzig, 1886
  • The German bankruptcy proceedings. Leipzig, 1889
  • The civil trial process of the canonist doctrine. Berlin, 1890
  • The development of the evidentiary proceedings in the German civil procedure since 1495th Bonn, 1895
  • The treatment of work in private law. Jena, 1896
  • Co-editor: Handbook of German commerce, maritime and exchange law. Leipzig, 1881-83, (4 vols )
820606
de