Heinrich Triepel Explained

Heinrich Triepel (12 February 1868, Leipzig – 23 November 1946 in Untergrainau) was a German jurist and legal philosopher.[1]

Life

Triepel was born the son of Gustav Adolf Triepel, an authorized signatory and partner in an export business in Paris, and his Swiss wife Mathilde Marie Henriette, née Kurz. His brother was the future anatomist Hermann Triepel. In 1894, he married Maria Sophia Ebers, a daughter of the Egyptologist and writer Georg Ebers. Triepel attended Teichmann's private school and graduated from the humanistic Thomasschule in Leipzig in 1886.[2]

From 1913, he was professor of law in Berlin. He took critical aim at legal positivism, which at the time was the dominant legal conception in the German-speaking world. He was member of Free Conservative Party.

Main works:

Notes and References

  1. Kruszewski. Charles. 1941. Hegemony and International Law. American Political Science Review. en. 35. 6. 1127–1144. 10.2307/1950551. 1950551 . 147474072 . 0003-0554.
  2. Book: 200 Jahre Wirtschafts- und Staatswissenschaften an der Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen: Leben und Werk der Professoren: die Wirtschaftswissenschaftliche Fakultät der Universität Tübingen und ihre Vorgänger (1817-2002): in zwei Bänden . 2004 . F. Steiner . 978-3-515-06657-0 . Marcon . Helmut . Stuttgart . ocm55860517 . Strecker . Heinrich . Randecker . Günter . Universität Tübingen.