dbo:abstract
- Max Kaser (* 21. April 1906 in Wien; † 13. Januar 1997 in Ainring) war Rechtswissenschaftler, Professor an den Universitäten Münster, Hamburg und Salzburg, Mitglied mehrerer wissenschaftlicher Akademien und zehnfacher Ehrendoktor. (de)
- Max Kaser (21 April 1906 - 13 January 1997) was a German professor of Jurisprudence who taught successively at the universities of Münster, Hamburg and Salzburg. The principal focus of his scholarship and teaching was on Roman law. He became a member of a number of learned societies. In addition, between 1958 and 1992 he was awarded honorary doctorates by no fewer than ten different universities on three different continents. An eleventh honorary doctorate, from the Jurisprudence faculty at the University of Regensburg, was awarded only posthumously, however, in 1999). Max Kaser is respected as the author of pioneering writings on the step by step progression from classical legal concepts to modern European civil law. His text books on Roman civil law and modern civil procedure (for many purposes outside Anglo-American common law precepts) break new ground in presenting the historical evolution of legal concepts and principals, incorporating analyses and commentaries on written sources, and using research techniques that he himself (with others) developed. (en)
- Max Kaser, född 21 april 1906 i Wien, död 13 januari 1997, var en österrikisk-tysk rättsvetenskapsman och professor vid universiteten i Münster, Hamburg, och hedersdoktor vid flera universitet. (sv)
rdfs:comment
- Max Kaser (* 21. April 1906 in Wien; † 13. Januar 1997 in Ainring) war Rechtswissenschaftler, Professor an den Universitäten Münster, Hamburg und Salzburg, Mitglied mehrerer wissenschaftlicher Akademien und zehnfacher Ehrendoktor. (de)
- Max Kaser, född 21 april 1906 i Wien, död 13 januari 1997, var en österrikisk-tysk rättsvetenskapsman och professor vid universiteten i Münster, Hamburg, och hedersdoktor vid flera universitet. (sv)
- Max Kaser (21 April 1906 - 13 January 1997) was a German professor of Jurisprudence who taught successively at the universities of Münster, Hamburg and Salzburg. The principal focus of his scholarship and teaching was on Roman law. He became a member of a number of learned societies. In addition, between 1958 and 1992 he was awarded honorary doctorates by no fewer than ten different universities on three different continents. An eleventh honorary doctorate, from the Jurisprudence faculty at the University of Regensburg, was awarded only posthumously, however, in 1999). (en)