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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: THE-TOO |
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THIBAUT, ANTON FRIEDRICH JUSTUS (1774-1840) , German jurist, was born at Hameln, in Hanover, on the 4th of January 1974, the son of an officer in the Hanoverian army, of French Huguenot descent. After passing his school-days in Hameln and Hanover, young Thibaut entered the university of Gottingen as a student of jurisprudence, went thence to Konigsberg, where he studied under Kant, and afterwards to Kiel, where he was a fellow-student with Niebuhr . Here, after taking his degree of doctor
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Thibaut, a man of strong personality and manly consistent nature, was much more than a jurist: he deserves to be remembered in the history of music. Palestrina and the early composers of church music were his delight; and in 1824 appeared anonymously his work
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Most of Thibaut's works have already been mentioned, but his essay on the necessity of a code for Germany (Uber die Nothwendigkeit eines allegemeinen burgerlichen Beck's fur Deutschland), which was inspired by the enthusiasm of the war of Liberation and written in fourteen days, deserves further notice. Thibaut himself explained in the Archie fur die civilistische Praxis, in 1838, the origin of this memorable essay. He had realized the change denoted by the march of German soldiers to Paris in 1814, and the happy future opened up for Germany. The system of small states he hoped and believed would continue; for the big state he considered crushing to the life of the individual and harmful as concentrating the " warm life " of the nation in one central point. In his judgment the only unity practicable and needful for Germany was that of law; and for this he urged all the German governments to labour. The essay was as much a condemnation of the entire state of jurisprudence as an argument for codification; it was a challenge to civilians to justify their very existence. Savigny took up the challenge thus thrown down; and a long controversy as to points not very clearly defined took place. The glory
The framers of the new German civil code (burgerliches Gesetzbuch) in 1899 were indebted for the arrangement of their matter in no small degree to Thibaut's method and clear classification, but beyond this, the code, based on the common law of the several German states, which was adroitly blended by the usus pandectarum into an harmonious whole, does not reflect his influence. He was one of the earliest to criticize the divisions found in the Institutes, and he carried on with Gustav Hugo a controversy as to these points. In modern German legal literature Thibaut's influence is not very perceptible. Even at Heidelberg it was quickly superseded by that of his successor, Karl Adolf von Vangerow (1805-1870), and in Germany his works are now little used as text-books. But those best able to judge Thibaut have most praised hint. Austin, who owed much to him, describes him as one " who for penetrating acuteness, rectitude of judgment and depth of learning and eloquence of exposition, may be placed by the side of von Savigny, at the head of all living civilians." For further information as to Thibaut's life and work, see Baum-stark, Thibaut, Blotter der Erinnerung (1841); Karl Hagemann, Aus dem Leben H. F. J. Thibaut, mit Correspondenz, in die Preuss. Jahrbucher (188o); Teichmann, in Holtzendorf's Rechtslexikon; and E. Landsberg, in Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie, vol. 37: End of Article: THIBAUT, ANTON FRIEDRICH JUSTUS (1774-1840) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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