Otto Bähr

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Otto Bähr
Born 2 June 1817
Fulda, Electorate of Hesse (German Confederation)
Died 17 February 1895
Kassel, Hesse-Nassau, Germany
Occupation Author on Jurisprudence
Politician

Otto Bähr (2 June 1817 – 17 February 1895) was a German legal scholar and liberal parliamentarian.[1]

He supported the view, not always well accepted by governments, that since the State was part of society, it must be judged in the same courts as individual citizens.[2]

Life

Early years

Bähr was born in Fulda, then as now a small historic town slightly more than 100 km (65 miles) north-east of Frankfurt in a region of the former Holy Roman Empire, at the time still with a somewhat ambiguous constitutional status, known as the Electorate of Hesse. His father was an army doctor.[3] He devoted his own student studies to Jurisprudence and Cameralism (Kameralwissenschaften) at Göttingen and Marburg.[1]

Legal career

In 1848 Otto Bähr was a member of a commission established to codify the administration of civil justice in the Electorate of Hesse. In 1844 he had obtained a post as a junior Hugh Court judge (Obergerichts-Assessor), and in 1849 he became a more senior Hugh Court judicial official (Obergerichts-Rath) in the Kurfürstentum 's capital, Kassel.[4] In terms of the serious political ructions that affected politics and constitutional law in the Electorate of Hesse at the time, Otto Bähr was an opponent of the arbitrary traditionalism represented by Ludwig Hassenpflug, as a result of which he was sent back to his home town, Fulda, in 1851. However, Hassenpflug fell from power during the early 1850s and in 1856 Bähr was permitted to return to Kassel.[4] In 1857 he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Marburg. He nevertheless rejected offers of academic posts from Marburg and from two other universities.[3]

In 1863 or 1864 he was appointed a senior appeal court judge ("Oberappellationsgerichtsrat") based in Kassel.[4] After the events of 1866, whereby the Electorate of Hesse lost its independence, in September 1867 Bähr was accepted as a high court judge in the Prussian justice service, headquartered in Berlin.[5] Later, following unification, in 1879, he was appointed as a high court judge at the new state's High Court, which had its seat in Leipzig, but he resigned the post with nervous exhaustion in 1881.[3]

Authorships

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Otto Bähr: publications (not a complete list)
  • Der Rechtsstaat. Eine publicistische Skizze (1864)[6]
  • Die Anerkennung als Verpflichtungsgrund. Civilistische Abhandlung (1st edition:1855, 2nd edition 1867)[7]
  • Die preußischen Gesetzentwürfe über die Rechte an Grundvermögen (1870)[8]

Bähr wrote a number of influential legal works. He was critical of various contemporary developments in Jurisprudence. Of particular importance is his 1864 publication "Der Rechtsstaat. Eine publicistische Skizze", which provides a basis for modern concepts of the rule of law.

Politics

In 1867 he became a member of the short-lived North German Reichstag,[9] where he remained till the body was dissolved at the end of 1870.[10] Following unification, he was listed as a member of the German Reichstag between 1871 and 1880.[11] He also sat as a member of the Prussian House of Representatives between 1867[5] and 1879.[12] In the parliaments he represented a Kassel electoral district, sitting as a member of the National Liberal party.

References

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  11. Specht, Fritz / Schwabe, Paul : Die Reichstagswahlen von 1867 bis 1903. Eine Statistik der Reichstagswahlen nebst den Programmen der Parteien und einem Verzeichnis der gewählten Abgeordneten. 2. Aufl. Berlin : Verlag Carl Heymann, 1904, p. 148
  12. Mann, Bernhard (Ed.) : Biographisches Handbuch für das Preußische Abgeordnetenhaus. Mitarbeit von Martin Doerry, Cornelia Rauh und Thomas Kühne. Düsseldorf : Droste Verlag, 1988, p. 52 (Handbücher zur Geschichte des Parlamentarismus und der politischen Parteien : Vol. 3)

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