Christian Friedrich von Glück explained

Christian Friedrich von Glück
Birth Date:1 July 1755
Birth Place:Halle, Duchy of Magdeburg, Kingdom of Prussia
Death Place:Erlangen, Kingdom of Bavaria

Christian Friedrich von Glück (1 July 1755 – 20 January 1831) was a German jurist.

Born at Halle in the Duchy of Magdeburg on 1 July 1755,[1] he studied from 1770 to 1776 at the University of Halle and on the 16 April 1777 he received a Doctor of Law for his dissertation .[2] After seven years as a Privatdozent in 1784 he decided to go to Erlangen and became a professor of law at the Friedrich-Alexander-University. In 1785 he married Wilhelmine Elisabeth Geiger. From the marriage he had two sons, Christian Karl von Glück (1791–1867) and Christian Wilhelm von Glück (1810–1866), and a daughter. Christian Friedrich von Glück died on 20 January 1831 in Erlangen.

Works

Among his writings must be especially mentioned (Erlangen 1790–1830, 34 volumes).

Bibliography

References

  1. Hirata. Alessandro. 2006. Die Vollendung des usus modernus pandectarum: Christian Friedrich von Glück (1755-1831). Zeitschrift der Savigny-Stiftung für Rechtsgeschichte. Romanistische Abteilung. 123. 1. 330–343. 10.7767/zrgra.2006.123.1.330. 178227799 . 2304-4934.
  2. Book: Glück, Christian Friedrich. D. Joannis Christiani Woltær, Prof. Iuris Publ. Ordin. Exercitationes Academicae Varii Argumenti De Annis MDCCLXXII-MDCCLXXXIII. Typis Hendelianis. 1783. Woltaer. Johann Christian. Halle (Halae Salicae). [89]–[200]. la. De vita petendae restitutionis in integrum praetoriae secundum doctrinam romanorum praecipue quadriennali hodie vero perpetua.