Otto von Gierke


Otto Friedrich von Gierke was a German legal scholar and historian. In his four volume magnum opus entitled Das deutsche Genossenschaftsrecht, he pioneered the study of social groups, and the importance of associations in German life, which stood between the divide of private and public law. During his career at the Berlin University's law department, Gierke was a leading critic of the newly drafted German Civil Code, arguing that it had been moulded in an individualistic frame that was inconsistent with German social traditions. He helped to advance the concept of social law, over the classical division of public law and private law.

Biography

Otto von Gierke was born in Stettin, Pomerania, and died in Berlin. He specialised in the study of the German antecedents of German law. His view of the Rechtsstaat, and his emphasis on the federal nature of medieval states, became important and debated. In fact, he said the society grows up because people form groups and groups of groups, from families to the State. He stood as an opponent of the trend of civil law interpretation and theorising. His theory took up some older ideas from Thomas Aquinas and Dante Alighieri.
Abroad he was a major influence on the British historian of law F. W. Maitland, who translated as Political Theories of the Middle Ages some of Gierke's major works, and on John Neville Figgis.

Personal life

His son Edgar von Gierke was a highly respected pathologist who discovered glycogen storage disease type I in 1929.

Publications