Adolf Wach Explained

Adolf Wach
Birth Date:11 September 1843
Birth Place:Kulm, West Prussia, Kingdom of Prussia (Chełmno, Poland)
Death Place:Leipzig, Weimar Germany
Nationality:German
Discipline:Jurisprudence
Occupation:Jurist
Spouse:Elisabeth Mendelssohn
Children:6
Hugo Wach
Felix Wach

Eduard Gustav Ludwig Adolph Wach, known as Adolf Wach (11 September 1843 – 4 April 1926) was a German jurist, a professor in Königsberg, Rostock, Tübingen, Bonn and Leipzig.

Biography

Wach was born in Kulm, West Prussia, Kingdom of Prussia (Chełmno, Poland) to Adolph Leopold Wach (1804–1852), the town treasurer of Kulm, and Gustava Wach, née Suchland (?–1870). Wach passed his Abitur in 1861 at the gymnasium in Kulm and studied law at the Universities of Berlin, Heidelberg, Königsberg and Göttingen.[1] [2]

He received his doctorate in October 1865 and habilitated in Königsberg in 1868. From 1868 to 1869 he worked as Privatdozent of religious and Civil procedure law at the University of Königsberg. In 1869 Wach became an ordinary Professor for Civil procedure and penal law at the University of Rostock, in 1871 he transferred to the University of Tübingen and in 1872 to Bonn. From 1875 to 1920 Wach was ordinary professor for penal law, penal and civil procedure law at the University of Leipzig. Here he was also elected Decan of the juridical faculty in 1878/79, 1885/86, 1890/91, 1894/95, 1900/01, 1908/09 and 1918/19. From 1902 to 1903 he was Rektor of the University of Leipzig.[2]

Wach retired in 1920 and died in Leipzig on 4 April 1926. He was buried next to his wife in Gsteig, Switzerland, where he had owned a holiday chalet.[1] [3]

Family

Wach was married to Elisabeth (Lili) Mendelssohn (1845–1910), youngest daughter of Felix Mendelssohn. They had six children,[4] their son Hugo Wach became Professor for architecture and ornamentation at the Technische Hochschule in Charlottenburg (now Technische Universität Berlin).[1] Felix Wach, father of Joachim Wach, became a jurist and Saxon public official.[4] [5] The Wach family preserved the heritage of Felix Mendelssohn in a collection of letters, furniture and objects of art.[3] [5]

Publications

Awards

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Catalogus professorum Rostochiensium. University of Rostock. German.
  2. Web site: Professorenkatalog der Universität Leipzig. University of Leipzig. German.
  3. Web site: Das Ried seit 1881. Thomas . Wach. Mendelssohn Gesellschaft Schweiz. 2009 . German.
  4. Book: Kitagawa, Joseph . Joseph Kitagawa

    . Joachim Wach - Vorlesungen . Joseph Kitagawa . Ernst Benz. 1963. 1. 3-86583-106-0 . German.

  5. Book: Graul, Johannes. Bausteine einer jüdischen Geschichte der Universität Leipzig . Simon Dubnow Institut für jüdische Geschichte an der Universität Leipzig. 2006. 288. 3-86583-106-0 . German.