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KARL SALOMO ZACHARIAE VON LINGENTHAL ...

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 950 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KARL SALOMO ZACHARIAE VON LINGENTHAL (1769-1843)  ,

German jurist, was born on the 14th of September 1769 at
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Meissen in Saxony, the son of a lawyer, and received his early
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education at the famous public school of St Afra in that
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town . He afterwards studied philosophy,
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history, mathematics and law at the university of
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Leipzig . In 1792 he went to
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Wittenberg University as tutor to one of the
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counts of
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Lippe, and continued his legal studies . In 1794 he became privatdozent, lecturing on
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canon law, in 1798 extraordinary professor, and 1802 ordinary professor of feudal law . From that time to his
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death in 1843, with the exception of a short period in which public affairs occupied him, he poured out a succession of
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works covering the whole field of jurisprudence, and was a copious contributor to
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periodicals . In 1807 he received a call to
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Heidelberg, then beginning its period of splendour as a school of law . There; resisting many calls to
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Gottingen, Berlin and other
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universities, he remained until his death . In 182o he took his seat, as representative of his university, in the upper house of the newly constituted parliament of Baden . Thoughhe himself prepared many reforms—notably in the harsh criminal code—he was, by
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instinct and conviction, conservative and totally opposed to the violent democratic spirit which dominated the second chamber,. and brought it into conflict with the
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grand-duke and the German federal government . After the remodelling of the constitution in a " reactionary " sense, he was returned, in 1825, by the
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district of Heidelberg to the second chamber, of which he became the first
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vice-president, and in which he proved himself more " loyal " than the government itself . With the growth of
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parliamentary Liberalism, however, he grew disgusted with politics, from which he retired altogether in 1829 . He now devoted himself wholly to juridical
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work and to the last days of his
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life toiled with the ardour of a young student .

His fame extended beyond

Germany . The German universities then enjoyed, in regard to legal questions of international importance, a jurisdiction dating from the
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middle ages; and Zachariae, was often cones suited as to questions arising in Germany, France and England . Elaborate " opinions," some of them forming veritable
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treatises —e.g. on
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Sir Augustus d'Este's claim to the dukedom of Sussex, Baron de Bode's claim as an
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English subject to a share in the French indemnity, the dispute as to the debts due to the elector of Hesse-Cassel, confiscated by
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Napoleon, and the constitutional position of the
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Mecklenburg landowners—were composed by Zachariae . Large fees which he received for these opinions and the
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great popularity of his lectures made him rich, and he was able to buy several estates; from one of which, Lingenthal, he took his title when, in 1842, he was ennobled by the grand-duke . He died on the 27th of March 1843 . He had married in 1811, but his wife died four years later, leaving him a son, Karl Eduard . Zachariae's true history is in his writings, which are extremely numerous and multifarious . They
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deal with almost every branch of jurisprudence; they are philosophical,
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historical and
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practical, and relate to
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Roman, Canon, German, French and English law . The first
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book of much consequence which he published was Die Einheit
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des Staats and der Kirche mit Riicksicht auf die Deutsche Reichsverfassung (1797), a work on the relations of church and state, with
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special reference to the constitution of the
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empire, which displayed the writer's power of analysis and his skill in making a complicated set of facts appear to be deductions from a few principles . In 1805 appeared Versuch einer allgemeinen Hermeneutik des Rechts; and in 18o6 Die Wissenschaft der Gesetzgebung, an attempt to find a new theoretical basis for society in place of the opportunist politics which had led to the cataclysm of the French Revolution . This basis he seemed to discover in something resembling Bentham's utilitarianism . Zachariae's last work of importance was Vierzig Bucher vom Staate (1839-42), to which his admirers point as his enduring monument .

It has been compared to

Montesquieu's L'Esprit des leis, and covers no small
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part of the field of Buckle's first
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volume of the History of
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Civilization . But though it contains proof of vast erudition and many
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original ideas as to the future of the state and of law, it lacks logical sequence, and is, consequently, full of contradictions . Its fundamental theory is, that the state had its origin, not in a contract (Rousseau-Kant), but in the consciousness of a legal duty . What Machiavelli was to the Italians and Montesquieu to the French, Zachariae aspired to become to the Germans; but he lacked their patriotic inspiration, and so failed to exercise any permanent influence on the constitutional law of his country . Among other important works of Zachariae are his Staatsrecht, and his
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treatise on the Code Napoleon, of which several French
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editions were published, and which was translated into
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Italian . Zachariae edited with Karl Joseph Mittermaier the Kritische Zeitschrift fiir Rechtswissenschaft and Gesetzgebung des Auslandes, and the introduction which he wrote illustrates his wide
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reading and his constant
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desire for new
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light upon old problems . Though Zachariae's works have been superseded, they were in their day epoch-making, and they have been superseded by books which, without them, could not have been written . For an account of Zachariae and his works, see Robert von Mohl, Geschichte u . Literatur der Staatswissenschaften (1855-58), and Charles Brocher, K . S . Zachariae, sa
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vie et ses oeuvres (187o); cf. also his biography in Allgem . Deutsche Biographie (vol .

44) by Wilhelm

Fischer, and Holtzendorff, Rechts-
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Lexicon, Zachariae von Lingenthal . His son, KARL EDUARD ZACHARIAE (18i2-1894), also an eminent jurist, was born on the 24th of December 1812, and studied philosophy, history, mathematics and
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languages, as well as jurisprudence, at Leipzig, Berlin and Heidelberg . Having made Roman and
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Byzantine law his special study, he visited Paris in 1832 to examine Byzantine
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MSS., went in 1834 to St
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Petersburg and Copenhagen for the same purpose, and in 1835 worked in the
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libraries of Brussels,
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London, Oxford,
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Dublin,
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Edinburgh and Cambridge . After a few months as a practising lawyer and privatdozent at Heidelberg, he went in 1837, in search of materials, to Italy and the East, visiting Athens, Constantinople and the monasteries of Mount Athos . Having a taste for a country life, and none for teaching, he gave up his position as extraordinary professor at Heidelberg, and in 1845 bought an estate in the Prussian province of Saxony . Here he lived, engaged in scientific agriculture and interested in Prussian politics, until his death on the 3rd of
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June 1894 . He produced an enormous mass of works of great importance for students of Byzantine law . The task to which he devoted his life was, to discover and classify the
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sources of Byzantine law hidden away in the libraries of the East and West; to re-edit, in the light of
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modern criticism, those sources which had already been published; to write the history of Byzantine law on the basis of this hitherto undiscovered material; and finally, to apply the results to the scientific elucidation of the Justinian law . His
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Jus Graeco-Romanum, of which the first part was published in 1856, the last in 1891, is the best and most
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complete collection of the sources of Byzantine law and of the Novels from the time of Justin I. to 1453 . On the general history of the subject he wrote two epoch-making works, the Historiae Graeco-Romani
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juris delineatio, cum appendice ineditorum (Heidelberg, 1839), and Innere Geschichte des grieschisch-romischen Rechts . I . Personalrecht; II .

Erbrecht; III . Die Geschichte des Sachenrechts and Obligationsrecht (Leipzig, 1856), the third edition of which appeared under the title Geschichte des griechisch-romischen Rechts (1892) . In this last work, which covered ground hitherto unexplored, Byzantine is treated as a development of Justinian law, and incidentally many obscure points in the economic and agrarian conditions of the Eastern empire are elucidated . For a

list of Zachariae's other works, see Allgem . Deutsche Biogr.,
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art. by Wilhelm Fischer .

End of Article: KARL SALOMO ZACHARIAE VON LINGENTHAL (1769-1843)
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