Iranian national I Sadruddin Aga Khan was born in Paris on 17 January 1933. Studied at Harvard (1954), B.A. (Government); High Commissioner of the UN Committee for Refugees (1959-1960). General director of Unesco (1965-1977). Special consultant of the secretary general of the UN since 1978. Vice-president of the International World Wildlife Fund. Works by S. Aga Khan:
Al-Mawardi was born in Basra in 364 A.H./974 A.D. and died in Baghdad in 450 A.H./1058 A.D. at the age of 86. He is considered to be the first jurist in the Islamic world to put down a theory of the Islamic state in its ideal form. After having attracted attention as a professor with a wide knowledge of the shari’a (Islamic law) and the science of the shari’a (the fiqh) he was chosen to be a Qadi (judge) in several cities, and finally in Bagdad. There he was appointed Supreme Judge. He also served as a diplomatic agent for the reigning caliph. In his famous work Kitab al-ahkam as-sultaniyya (Treatise on the Rules of Government) he describes the duties of the caliph both in religious and secular affairs, between which is made no distinction in Islam. Works by Al-Mawardi:
Works by Willy Andreas:
Breton jurist, one of the big names of customary law who interpreted as relting to the various coûtumes that prevailed in France at the time and tried to analyse the problems that might arise for someone travelling through France and coming into conflict with different coûtumes.
Kelly Askin is a legal consultant to the United Nations and other world agencies in the areas of humanitarian and criminal law. She was previously acting executive director of the war crimes research office at the Center for Human Rights and Humanitarian Law, American University. Askin teaches primarily in the areas of international humanitarian law and gender issues. She is the author of "War Crimes Against Women: Prosecution in International War Crimes Tribunals" (Martinus Nijhoff, 1997) and chief editor of the three-volume treatise "Women and International Human Rights Law"(1999-2001). Her current projects include work on justice and accountability in East Timor, Sierra Leone, and Somalia, and writing projects concerning international humanitarian law. Works by Kelly D. Askin:
Tobias Michael Carel Asser was born in 1838 in Amsterdam. He was a Dutch jurist, cowinner (with Alfred Fried) of the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1911 for his role in the formation of the Permanent Court of Arbitration at the First Hague Peace Conference (1899). The award was transferred by Asser to the founders of the Hague Academy. Asser was professor of commercial and private international law at the University of Amsterdam from 1862 to 1893. In 1869 Asser, along with two associates, started the Revue de Droit International et de Législation Comparée (“Review of International Law and of Comparative Legislation”). He was also a founder of the Institute of International Law in 1873. In 1891 Asser prevailed upon the Dutch government to convoke the Hague Conference for the Unification of International Private Law, which first met in 1893 and later became a permanent institution, responsible, among other things, for the Hague treaties of 1902–1905 concerning family law. In 1911–1912 he presided over conferences for the unification of the law relating to international bills of exchange. In 1893 he became a member of the Dutch Council of State. Asser was a Netherlands delegate to the Hague Peace conferences of 1899 and 1907. Works by T.M.C. Asser:
Works by Kostadin Baichinski:
Works by Margaret M. Ball:
Daniel Bardonnet was born 18 May 1931 in Moulins. He studied law in Paris and became doctor in political sciences in 1957. He was professor at the law faculaties of the University of Tanarive, Rabat and Paris XII. He became Director of the Centre of study and research of international law at the Hague Academy in 1974. Works by Daniel Bardonnet:
Suzanne Bastid was born in Rennes in 1906. She studied law at the Faculté de Droit de Paris. Lecturer at the University of Lyon from 1933 to 1946, when she moved to Paris where she lectured on Humanitarian Law. Various posts at various legal and political institutes, member of several French delegatioans at UN assemblees, President of the Administrative Tribunal of the UN since 1950. Member of the Institut de Droit international. Works by Suzanne Bastid:
Henri Battifol was born in Paris. Graduated from the Faculty of Law 1931, professor of civil right from 1931-1950, and of private international law 1938-1950) at the University of Lille. Dean at the same university from 1947-1950. Works by Henri Batiffol:
Works by Kenneth Macdonald Beaumont:
Works by Friedrich Berber:
Short story author Maarten Biesheuvel was born in Schiedam in 1939. He worked for a spell in the Peace palace Library. Works by J.M.A. Biesheuvel:
Polish-born industrialist, author, and peace advocate; wrote The Future of War in Its Technical, Economic, and Political Relations (English translation 1899) which contends that modem war will become too deadly to be risked. "An analysis of the history of mankind shows that from the year 1496 B.C. to the year 1861 of our era, that is, in a cycle of 3357 years, were but 227 years of peace and 3130 years of war: in other words, were thirteen years of war for every year of peace. Considered thus, the history of the lives of peoples presents a picture of uninterrupted struggle. War, it would appear, is a normal attribute to human life." (From The Future of War.) Works by Jean de Bloch:
For a complete biography of Professor Böckstiegel, see his CV at the Institute for Air and Space Law in Cologne. Works by Karl-Heinz Boeckstiegel:
Ted M. de Boer, born in Uithoorn, Netherlands, 11 May 1943. Studied at the Nederlands Opleidings-Instituut voor het Buitenland (N.O.I.B., Nijenrode) (1961-1963). Upon completion of military service, studied law at the University of Utrecht (1965-1969) (J.D. 1969), and New York University (1970-1971) (LL.M. 1972). Joined the University of Amsterdam law faculty in 1972 as assistant professor at the Centre of Foreign Law and Private International Law. Doctor of laws (cum laude), University of Amsterdam, 1987. Appointed director of the Centre of Foreign Law and Private International Law and Professor of private international law and comparative law at the University of Amsterdam in 1987. Since 1985 Deputy Judge at the District Court of Alkmaar, with special assignment for private international law cases. Executive Director of the Leyden-Amsterdam-Columbia Summer Program in American Law; chairman of the Committee of Foreign Relations, Faculty of Law, University of Amsterdam; editor of the Netherlands International Law Review; vice-chairman of the academic council of the T.M.C. Asser Institute, The Hague. Visiting professor University of Aruba, University of Suriname. Member of the founding committee and, from 1994 to 1996, Director of the International Law Institute of the University of Amsterdam. Since 1992 member of the Royal Academy of Sciences of the Netherlands; chairman of the Academy's legal science section since 1996. Works by T.M. de Boer:
Eugene Borel was born in Neuchatel (Switserland) on 20 June 1862. Studied in London, Strasbourg, Berne, Florence et Geneva. District attorney and later lawyer in Neuchatel. Member of the Swiss delegation in the 2nd Peace Conference in The Hague in 1907. Works by E. Borel:
The picture of Le Bourgeois is a charicature published during the 1907 The Hague Peace Conference, to which he was a delegate. Works by Léon Bourgeois:
Caspar Brandt was born in Nieuwkoop 25 June 1653. He worked as Reverend in Schoonhoven, Hoorn, Warmond, Alkmaar, Rotterdam and Amsterdam, where he died 5 October 1696. Works by Caspar Brandt:
Lea Brilmayer was born in 1950 in New York City. She has taught at many of the leading law schools in the United States, including the University of Texas, the University of Chicago, Yale University (for ten years; held an endowed chair). Currently the Benjamin F. Butler Professor of Law at New York University Law School. Has also been visiting professor at the Columbia and Harvard Law Schools, and has taught at summer sessions at the University of Michigan Law School, the University of Amsterdam and the Hague Academy. Graduate of the University of California at Berkeley (1970); graduated from Boalt Hall School of Law (1976); received a Masters in Law from Columbia Law School (1978). Writes primarily in the areas of conflict of laws and the theory of international law and relations. Works by Lea Brilmayer:
James Brown Scott, born in in Canada in 1866, studied international law at Harvard University and later in Berlin, Heidelberg and Paris. He was a member of the America delegation at the 1899 Hague Peace Conference. He became a member of the International Law Institute in 1910nand became its President in 1920. He was a member of many international law institutes and editor and later chief-editor of the American Journal of International Law. Works by James Brown Scott:
Genevieve Burdeau was born in Lyon on 10 April 1946. She was Professor at various institutes including l'Institut d'etudes politiques de Paris. Advisory member of the International Law Association and the Sociéte quebecoise de droit international.
Works by William T. Burke:
Dutch jurist who helped develop international law along positivist lines. Bynkershoek studied law at Franeker and was admitted to the bar at The Hague. In 1703 he was appointed a member of the supreme court of Holland and Zeeland, becoming president of the court in 1724. Although engaged in a demanding judicial career, he found time to produce a large and varied number of works of legal scholarship. Bynkershoek's principal works in international law are De Dominio Maris (1703; “On the Dominion of the Sea”), De Foro Legatorum (1721; “On the Forum of Legates”), and Quaestiones Juris Publici (1737; “Questions of Public Law”). His opinions on such questions as the sovereignty of the seas, the position of ambassadors, private property in wartime, prizes, neutrality, contraband, and blockade have been highly regarded and influential. In ascertaining the law of nations, he placed greater emphasis than did his predecessors on actual usage, rather than on deduced precepts. Works by Cornelius Bynkershoek:
Adriaan van Cattenburgh was born 2 November 1664 in Rotterdam, did his religious studies in Amsterdam and became Reverend in Rotterdam in 1686. In 1712 he was appointed Professor at the 'Remonstrants seminarium' in Amsterdam. He would serve in this position until 1737. Works by A. van Cattenburg:
Just why Cordonnier's design was elected has until today remained a mystery. The decision by the - quite conservative - jury was hotly debated at the time and the unbalanced mixture of neogothic and neobaroque elements was disapproved of by experts and lay people alike. The Carnegie Foundation was taken to court on this issue for over seven years, by opponents like the Dutch architects Berlage and De Bazel. The jury's verdict, that the design blended in quite naturally with the 17-th-century building traditions of The Hague, was rejected as quite ludicrous. On seeing the other, much more attractive and moderns designs one can quite understand the contemporary upheaval.
Works by N.J. Coulson:
Henri Corsier was born in Bourges, studied and took his PhD at the Université de Paris. Entered the International Red Cross in 1946 as member of the legal service. Works by H. Coursier:
Lori Fisler Damrosch, born 4 November 1953 in Santa Monica, California, United States. Professor of Law, Columbia University, New York City. Studied at Yale University (B.A.: 1973, summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa, with departmental honours in Russian and East European studies; J.D.: 1976). Professor of Law (since 1989), Columbia University, New York City. Vice President of American Society of International Law (1996-1998) Member, United States National Group, Permanent Court of Arbitration (since 1993). Member, Advisory Council of Carnegie Commission on Prevention of Deadly Conflict (since 1994). Senior Fellow, United States Institute of Peace, Washington, D.C. (1995- 1996). Works by Laurie Damrosch:
Albert Venn Dicey, Vinerian Professor of English Law at the University of Oxford, published his Treatise on the Rules for the Selection of the Parties to an Action in 1870 and The Law of Domicil in 1879. The latter was expanded and reissued in 1896 as Digest of the Law of England with Reference to the Conflict of Laws; this manual was enlarged and edited several times. Works by A.V. Dicey:
Isabella Henrietta Philepina Verschoor was born at Amersfoort (the Netherlands) in 1915. After studying law at Leyden University Mrs. de Rode-Verschoor practised law in Amsterdam for a period of six years. In 1943 she took her degree as a Doctor of Law at the University of Utrecht. In 1953 she was appointed to lecture at Utrecht University. She was President of the International Institute of Space Law of the International Astronautical Federation; Member of the Legal Committee in the Netherlands of the International Civil Aviation Organization; National Chairman in the Netherlands of the Peace through Law Center; Member of the Board of Editors of Air Law; Supervisory Member of the Netherlands Institute of Transport. Mrs. Diederiks-Verschoor has been lecturing on air and space law in the course of several tours abroad: in 1964, at the University of Paris (Institut des Hautes Etudes Internationales); in 1965, in Australia, at the Universities of Sydney, Canberra and Melbourne; in 1968, in the United States, at the Southern Methodist University in Dallas, and at the Mississippi University; in 1968 and again in 1975, in Canada, at the Institute of Air and Space Law; in 1976 and 1980 in Indonesia; in 1979, in Greece, at the Institute of Public International Law and International Relations of Thessaloniki. Works by I.H.Ph. Diederiks-Verschoor:
P.J.J. Diermanse was born in 1896. For many years he was connected as scientific collaborator with the Peace Palace Library. His wide range of labours, of which he kept a record in a small ruled notebook, included the preparation of the Peace Palace Picture Catalogue. He was closely involved with Ter Meulens work on Grotius. Diermanse and Ter Meulen became co-authors of the Bibliographie de Hugo Grotius (1950). Diermanse died in 1980. Works by P.J.J. Diermanse:
Practising Solicitor of the Supreme Court, 1936-1940. Commissioned in HM's Irish Guards, 1941-1945. served in North Africa and Europe. Seconded to the Office of HM's Judge-Advocate-General, 1945-1949. Senior Military War Crimes Prosecutor in the British Occupied Zone of Germany, 1947-1949. Assistant Director of Army Legal Staff. War Office, 1950-1956. Lecturer and Reader in Public International Law in the University of London, King's College, 1956-1967. Works by G.I.A.D. Draper:
Henry Dunant and the Red Cross Works by Henry Dunant:
One of the world's leading authorities on private international law and comparative law. Works by Albert Ehrenzweig:
Arthur Eyffinger was born in 1947. Het studied classics and humanist studies at Leiden and Amsterdam. For many yeras he has done research at the Grotius Institute of the Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, editing the works of Grotius. He was deputy director of the Peace Palace Library from 1985 to 1988. From 1988 to 2002 he was librarian of the International Court of Justice. Works by Arthur Eyffinger:
Willem van Eysinga of the Netherlands, Member of the PCA from 1926 and of the PCij from 1931 to 1946 and its Vice-President during its final years, was Professor at the Groningen and Leiden University and legal adviser to the Dutch Foreign Ministry. He was a member of the 1929 Committee of Jurists and Dutch delegate at many conferences, including the 1930 Hague Codification conference. He wrote an authoritative work on the history of international law in the Netherlands, Grotian studies, and tracts on international rivers and on chemical warfare. Works by W.J.M. van Eysinga:
Works by Paul Fauchille:
Professor F.J.M Feldbrugge was born 10 May 1933. Studied Law at the University of Utrecht (Netherlands, 1950-1955), where he subsequently received a doctorate in law (cum laude) in 1957. In 1959, he defended his doctoral thesis Schuld in het Sowjet Strafrecht ("Guilt in Soviet Criminal Law"). Since 1959, he is affiliated to the University of Leiden, first as lecturer in law (1959-1967), then as Professor of Dutch Law (1970-1972). From 1970 to 1972, Professor Feldbrugge was the Dean of the Leiden University Faculty of Law. In 1973 he was appointed Professor of East European Law, in which capacity he became director of the Institute and editor of the Law in Eastern Europe series. Since 1975, he has edited the Review of Central and East European Law. Since his retirement, and succession by William B. Simons, in 1998, Feldbrugge is Professor Emeritus. From 1987 to 1989, Professor Feldbrugge — in his capacity as Sovietologist-in-Residence — served as Special Advisor for Soviet and East European Affairs at NATO Headquarters in Brussels. Fellowships included that at Columbia University (1964), Harvard University (1965), and the Netherlands Institute of Advanced Studies (NIAS, 1972-1973). In 1995, he was elected chairman of the International Council for Central and East European Studies (ICCEES). Other activities include his chairmanship of the Dutch Government Advisory Board for Security Questions, as well as his involvement in bilateral co-operation projects with the CIS, Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Belarus concerning legal reform. Works by F.J.M. Feldbrugge:
Works by Jan Helenus Ferguson:
Works by Frank Fox:
Alfred Hermann Fried was born in Vienna in 1864. Pacifist, publicist, cofounder of the German peace movement, he became cowinner (with Tobias Asser) of the Nobel Prizefor Peace in 1911. In 1891 Fried, in Berlin, founded the pacifist periodical Die Waffen nieder! (Lay Down Your Arms!), from 1899 called Friedenswarte (The Peacekeeper). In 1892 he founded the Deutsche Friedensgesellschaft (German Peace Society), which became the focus for the German pacifist movement before World War I. Fried advocated “fundamental pacifism” and believed that “international anarchy” should be met by both legislative measures and spiritual regeneration. With the outbreak of World War I he immigrated to Switzerland in protest against German policy. As editor of Blätter für internationale Verständigung und zwischenstaatliche Organisation (Papers for International Understanding and Inter-State Organization), he worked for an immediate peace. Fried protested against the Treaty of Versailles but warned the Germans against attempting to revise it by force. Fried died in Vienna in 1921. Works by Alfred Hermann Fried:
Robert Jacobus Fruin was born 14 November 1823 in Rotterdam. He began his literary studies at Leiden University where he took his PhD in 1847. Subsequently he became teacher at the Leiden Latin School and, in 1860, Professor of History of the Netherlands. Works by Robert Fruin:
Works by T.W. Fulton:
Assistant Professor of the International Institute at the Péter Pázmány Catholic University of Budapest. Works by Gyula Gal:
Liudmila N. Galenskaya, born 1 October 1932, Witebsk, Bielorussia. Finished secondary school 1949; a student at Leningrad State University, 1949-1954. An arbiter, investigator, director of library, legal adviser. Postgraduate student of the Law Faculty of Leningrad University, 1962-1965; diploma candidate of legal science, 1965; assistant at Law Faculty of Leningrad State University, 1965; docent and scientific title of docent, 1972; doctor of legal science, 1981; professor of Leningrad University, 1982; scientific title of professor, chair of international law, 1983. Member of the Soviet Association of International Law; member of Inspection Committee of this Association; scientific secretary of a Scientific Council on conferment of scientific degree of candidate of legal science; member of Scientific Council on conferment of scientific degree of doctor of legal science; member of Methodical Council of the Ministry of Higher Education of the RSFSR. Works by Liudmila Galenskaya:
Helene Gaudemet-Tallon was born in Paris on 2 June 1939. She studied at the faculty of Law and Economics of the Universty of Paris. She became professor at the Université de Paris X (Nanterre) in 1971 and at the Université de Paris XI (Sceaux) in 1973. Since 1981 she is Professor at the Université Pantheon-Assas (Paris II). Gaudemet-Tallon is vice-president of the Comité français de droit international prive. Works by Helene Gaudemet-Tallon:
Italian writer on international law. Forced to leave Italy because of his Protestantism, he went to England (1580), where he became regius professor of civil law, Oxford, and in 1605 became advocate for the king of Spain in the British admiralty court. His De legationibus (1585) had a great influence in shaping modern diplomatic practice. In De jure belli ["on the law of war"] (1598), one of the earliest works on international law, he developed many ideas on the legal conduct of war to which Hugo Grotius later gave wider circulation. Works by Alberico Gentili:
Gilbert-Charles Gidel was born in Paris on 18 November 1880. He received his bachelor in literature, and his doctorate in law at the Faculté de droit de l'Université de Paris. He succeeded Louis Renault at the Ecole des Sciences politiques in March 1918. Became Secretary of the President of the Curatorium of the Academy of International Law in The Hague. Works by Gilbert Gidel:
Works by Marcel le Goff:
Works by Simon Goodenough:
Wilhelm G. Grewe (1911-2000) came to the fore during the Third Reich as a scholar in Berlin and as a member of Joachim von Ribbentrop's Deutsches Institut für Aussenpolitische Forschung controlled by the Nazis. After the war Grewe became legal advisor to Konrad Adenauer, delegate to the negotiations ending the Allied occupation of Germany, head of the legal department of the West-German Foreign Office, head of the political department of the West-German Foreign Office, ambassador in Washington and Tokyo as well as with NATO, and a member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration in the Peace Palace in The Hague. His seminal work is Epochen der Völkerrechtsgeschichte (1984; first manuscript 1944). This monograph reflects discontinuities in the history of international law and follows Carl Schmitt's periodization (or, by proxy, Wolfgang Windelband's) of the international legal order. Most notably, the period between the beginning of the interbellum and the Second World War is characterized as an 'Übergangszeitalter' or transition period. One option was to see it as the rise of American dominance while the other was to prefer it as the re-establishment of the World Order by Germany, Italy and Japan. The book was severely criticized by Martti Koskenniemi, author of The Gentle Civilizer of Nations (2002). Works by Wilhelm G. Grewe:
Dutch Hugo, or Huigh, or Hugeianus De Groot. Dutch jurist and scholar, whose legal masterpiece, De Jure Belli ac Pacis (1625; ‘On the Law of War and Peace’), was one of the first great contributions to modern international law. Works by Hugo de Groot:
Jacques Haasbeek started to work as a volunteer for the Peace Palace Library in 1992. At that time the "Vredescollectie" (Collection of Dossiers Concerning the Peace Movement) had been a long wanted project of the Library, but due to shortness of staff and lack of funding it could not be realized. Nevertheless, some preliminary work had been done by Drs. Yvonne Witter in the period before 1992. Jacques picked it up from there and in 1993 the book was published. The result is a comprehensive inventory, giving access to the collection by dossier names of the various organizations as well by a list of authors and parties involved. The book covers the period from 1899 tot 1940. A second volume regarding the period 1940 – present is in preparation. Jacques Haasbeek is still a member of the Peace Palace Library staff as principal acquisition librarian. Works by Jacques Haasbeek:
Any of a series of international treaties that issued from international conferences held at The Hague in The Netherlands in 1899 and 1907. The first conference was convened at the invitation of Count Mikhail Nikolayevich Muravyov, the minister of foreign affairs of Tsar Nicholas II of Russia. In his circular of Jan. 11, 1899, Count Muravyov proposed specific topics for consideration: (1) a limitation on the expansion of armed forces and a reduction in the deployment of new armaments; (2) the application of the principles of the Geneva Convention of 1864 to naval warfare; and (3) a revision of the unratified Brussels Declaration of 1874 regarding the laws and customs of land warfare. The conference met from May 18 to July 29, 1899; 26 nations were represented. Only two American states participated, the United States and Mexico.
Drs. J.B. van Hall, who succeeded Bart Landheer, was a librarian in the strictest sense. If, by way of speaking, for Landheer the universe itself at times seemed too tiny a stage, van Hall's entire world was the catalogue room. Consequently, with him all activities and most of the contacts of the library staff in the scholarly world of international law, sociology and polemology broke down abruptly. In their place, however, came the renewed attention to inner structures, the serviCe apparatus, managing efficiency and accessibility of the collection.
Anton Gerardus van Hamel was born 5 July 1885 in Hilversum. Before he became Professor of Germanic and Celtic Languages at the University of Utrecht he served for two years as director-librarian of the Peace Palace Library.
Works by Gerd Hankel:
Karl Haushofer was born 27 August 1869. Served on the Western Front during World War I. Became close friends with his student Rudolph Hess. An instrument in Hitler's 'Lebensraum' politics he became Professor of Geography at the University of Munich in 1933. After the assassination attempt on Hitler in which Haushofer's son was involved he was incarcerated in Dachau. Haushofer took his own life in 1946 after having been accused of responsibility for the national-socialist politics of expansion. Works by Karl Haushofer:
Works by Burton J. Hendrick:
J.H. Herz used the pseudonym Eduard Bristler when he published his critical "Völkerrechtslehre des Nationalsozialismus." Herz's jewish family was in jeopardy in Nazi Germany at the time. Works by J.H. Herz:
Rosalyn Higgins was born 2 June 1937 in London. She studied at Cambridge (undergraduate and Master's degrees in Law) and Yale (doctorate). Staff Specialist in International Law, Royal Institute of International Affairs, 1963- 1974; Visiting Fellow, London School of Economics, 1974-1978; Professor of International Law, University of Kent at Canterbury, 1978-1981; Professor of International Law in the University of London (London School of Economics), 1981-. See also her biography at the ICJ. Works by Rosalyn Higgins:
Isaac Henri Hijmans was born in Arnhem in 1869. He studied law in Leiden, Berlin and Leipzig. He took his PhD in Leiden in 1892. He was appointed as Professor at the University of Amsterdam 1910. He retired in 1935. Works by I. Henri Hijmans:
Adolf Hitler, byname Der Führer (German: 'The Leader') was leader of the National Socialist (Nazi) Party (from 1920/21) and chancellor (Kanzler) and Führer of Germany (1933–45). He was chancellor from January 30, 1933, and, after President Paul von Hindenburg's death, assumed the twin titles of Führer and chancellor (August 2, 1934). Works by Adolf Hitler:
German jurist, born at Vietmannsdorf, in the Mark of Brandenburg, on the 14th of October 1829, was descended from a family of the old nobility. He was educated at Berlin and at Pforta, afterwards studying law at the universities of Bonn, Heidelberg and Berlin. The struggles of 1848 inspired him with youthful enthusiasm, and he remained for the rest of his life a strong advocate of political liberty. In 1852 he graduated LL.D. at Berlin; in 1857 he became a Privatdocent, and in 1860 he was nominated a professor extraordinary. The predominant party in Prussia regarded his political opinions with mistrust, and he was not offered an ordinary professorship until February 1873, after he had decided to accept a chair at the university of Munich. At Munich he passed the last nineteen years of his life. During the thirty years that he was professor he successively taught several branches of jurisprudence, but he was chiefly distinguished as an authority on criminal and international law. He was especially well fitted for organizing collective work, and he has associated his name with a series of publications of the first value. While acting as editor he often reserved for himself, among the independent monographs of which the work was composed, only those on subjects distasteful to his collaborators on account of their obscurity or lack of importance. Works by Franz von Holtzendorff:
Works by Elbert Hubbard:
Ulrick (Ulricus) Huber was University professor at Franeker in the province of Friesland and a major jurist in the field of common law in his time. His statue stands next to that of Hugo Grotius before the highest court in Holland in The Hague. The portrait is published in Theo Johannes Veen, Recht en Nut. Studiën over en naar aanleiding van Ulrick Huber (1636-1694) (Zwolle: Tjeenk Willink, 1976). Works by Ulricus Huber:
Works by Karl Gottfried Hugelmann:
Nandasiri Jasentuliyana is president of the Paris-based International Institute of Space Law. Works by Nandasiri Jasentuliyana:
Works by Philip C. Jessup:
H.U. ('Ulli') Jessurun d'Oliveira was born on 2 July 1933. He co-founded the important Dutch literary jounral Merlyn in 1962. He took a PhD in law in 1971 and eventually became a lawyer and Professor of Private International Law at the University of Amsterdam. Published books on literature, translations and legal-philosophical texts. Works by H.U. Jessurun d'Oliveira:
Daniel Josephus Jitta, jurist. Raised in Belgium. Became docteur en droit at the University of Brussels in 1874. Tooka PhD at Leiden University in 1880. Practices as a lawyer and succeeded Asser as professor of trade law at the University of Amsterdam in 1893. Member of the State Council from 1913, again succeeding Asser. Works by D. Josephus Jitta:
Frits Kalshoven, born 29 January 1924. Doctor of Law, University of Leiden, Netherlands, 1971. Professor of International Humanitarian Law Applicable in Armed Conflicts (special Red Cross Chair) at the University of Leiden since 1975. Reader and subsequently Professor of Public International Law at the University of Leiden, 1970-1985. Professor of the International Institute for Humanitarian Law, San Remo, Italy. Legal adviser for international affairs of the Netherlands Red Cross Society since 1971. Took part as a member of the Dutch delegation in the series of conferences on "reaffirmation and development of international humanitarian law applicable in armed conflicts" and "conventional weapons", 1971-1980; acted as rapporteur in several of these conferences. Member of the Board of Editors of the Netherlands Yearbook of International Law. Officer in the Royal Netherlands Navy, 1945-1969. Recipient of the Royal Shell Award for his work in the domain of humanitarian law,197l. Recipient of the Ciardi Award of the International Society for Military Law and the Law of War, for his thesis on Belligerent Reprisals, 1973. Works by Frits Kalshoven:
Abraham Pieter Cornelis van Karnebeek, esquire, diplomat en foreign secretary, studied law at the University of Utrecht and wrote a dissertation on international law. Secretary of the Dutch diplomatic corps in Washington and Paris. Member of Parliament from 1891-1913 and vice-president of the first Hague Peace Conference of 1899. First President of the Carnegie Foundation (1894-1923).
Erich Kaufmann was born 21 September 1880. In 1906 he became doctor of law at the University of Halle. He served in the German army during the First World War. In 1920 he became visiting professor at the University of Bonn and in 1927 in Berlin. Kaufmann was legal advisor to the German delegations at several international conferences (Beuthen, 1921-1922, Geneva, 1922, Paris, 1929). In 1931 he became a member of the International Law Institute. Works by Erich Kaufmann:
Works by Jacob Klinkhamer:
Karen Knop is Associate Professor at the Faculty of Law, University of Toronto, and Director of the ]D/MA (International Relations) Programme at the University of Toronto. Her book Diversity and Self Determination in International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2002) was awarded a Certificate of Merit by the American Society of International Law. She is editor, with Sylvia Ostry, Richard Simeon, and Katherine Swinton, of Re-Thinking Federalism: Citizens, Markets and Governments in a Changing World (University of British Columbia Press, 1995). As rapporteur for the International Law Association's Committee on Feminism and International Law, she was responsible for the ILA's report on gender and nationality (2000). Works by Karen Knop:
Roeland Duco Kollewijn, professor of international private law. Studied law at the University of Amsterdam from 1912-1915 and took a first PhDin 1917, and a second in 1918. Went to the Netherlands Indies as a state jurist, returned 1936. Became professor international law in Leiden in 1938. Advocate of the autonomy of peoples. Works by R.D. Kollewijn:
Born at Heemstede, Netherlands, on 6 July 1933. Econ. B. (1955), LL.M. (with honours) (1957), Dr. Iuris, Free University, Amsterdam (with honours) (1964).Professor of Public International Law and European Law, Free University, Amsterdam (1965-1973). Professor of Public International Law, University of Leiden (1978-1992, 1995-1997).State Secretary for Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands (1973-1977). Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands (1993-1994). Works by P.H. Kooijmans:
Baron Serge A. Korff was born in 1876. He graduated at the Faculty of Law of the University of St. Petersburg. Het became vice-governor of Finland in 1917. He moved to the United States in 1917 and held several acadeic functions. He taught Russian history at the University of Johns Hopkins at Baltimore; he taught courses for the Carnegie Institute of International Education at more than sixty different colleges and universities. In 1921 he became professor of Political Science at the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service. He was a member of the American Science Association, the American Historical Association, the American Academy of Political and Social Science, the Academy of Political Science and associated member of the Institute of International Law. Works by Serge A. Korff:
Korovin is seen as the father of scientific international space law in the Soviet Union. With surprising clairvoyance he foresaw that aviation in outer space ('stratosphère') would develop along the same lines as in the lower air layers. Works by Evgenij Aleksandrovic Korovin:
Professor of International Law, University of Helsinki. Director, of the Erik Castrén Institute of International Law and Human Rights. Global Professor of Law, New York University. Member of the International Law Commission (United Nations) 2002- . Member of the Institut de droit international. Former Judge, Asian Development Bank, Administrative Tribunal (1997-2003). Former member of the Finnish Diplomatic Service (1978-1996), lastly as director, Division of International Law. Represented Finland in a large number of international institutions and conferences, including the UN General Assembly and the Security Council, Finland's Co-Agent in the International Court of Justice in the Great Belt case (1991-92). Works by Martti Koskenniemi:
Jan Kosters was born in 1843. After graduating as a jurist at Leiden University he defended his dissertation there in 1899. After working at the Department of Justice and as a Professor at Groningen University Kosters was made a member of the Superior Council of the Netherlands. He later became vice-president of the Council. Works by Jan Kosters:
Manfred Lachs was born on 21 April 1914 and studied at the University of Krakow, Vienna, Cambridge and at the London School of Economics. He became Professor of International Law at the University of Warsaw, plenipotentiairy Minister, member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration, and member of the Polish delegation at several sesions of the general assembly of the United Nations. Works by M. Lachs:
The dog Laika, the first living creature to orbit the Earth, did not live nearly as long as Soviet officials led the world to believe. The animal, launched on a one-way trip on board Sputnik 2 in November 1957, was said to have died painlessly in orbit about a week after blast-off. Now, it has been revealed she died from overheating and panic just a few hours after the mission started. The new evidence was presented at the recent World Space Congress in Houston, Texas, US, by Dimitri Malashenkov of the Institute for Biological Problems in Moscow.
Landheer served as Library Director from 1952-1969. Whereas to Ter Meulen, in a way, the very premises were the limit of his horizon, his successor Bart Landheer's province was the world. Had Ter Meulen focussed on internal structures, Landheer was if anything the expansionist. Never was the institution better organized than with Ter Meulen, but never was the name of the library better known abroad than during Landheer's term of office. Meanwhile, in 1952, to those men and women who had worked with Ter Meulen for so many years, it must have been as if a hurricane were visiting the Palace. Works by B. Landheer:
Dr. Robert A. Leflar of the University of Arkansas School of Law was one of the nation's leading scholars in the field of conflict of laws. He taught at the School of Law for more than 60 years, and directed the Appellate Judges Seminars at New York University for 30 years. He served as Associate Justice of the Arkansas Supreme Court and presided over two state constitutional conventions. As Dean, he orchestrated the desegregation, without litigation, of the School of Law in 1948 making the University of Arkansas the first major Southern public university to open its doors to African Americans. Works by Robert A. Leflar:
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Wilhelmus Hubertus van der Linden was born in 1934. After a theological training he studied history at the Universiy of Amsterdam (1961-1968). From 1971 to 1978 he was employed as a research officer at the University of Amsterdam and from 1979 to 1987 by the Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Works by W.H. van der Linden:
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Arnoldus Lysen was born in Middelburg on 19 July 1894. With an interruption due to the Dutch military mobilization Lysen studied law at the University of Leiden from 1913-1920. He took his PhD in 1920 and became curator at the Peace Palace Library in October 1921. Works by A. Lysen:
International jurist and Italian minister of foreign Affairs from 1881-1885. Works by Pasquale Stanislau Mancini:
Since his appointment in 1873 as a professor of international law at the University of Petersburg and his work in the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs Martens was Russia’s most influential specialist in international law. He witnessed the reign of three successive czars and lectured during disturbing revolutionary times. Martens was a member of the examination commission before which Lenin had to appear in Petersburg. Works by Fedor Fedorovich Martens:
Nicolas Mateesco Matte was born in Craiova, Romania, on 3 December 1913. University of Bucharest: Licence en droit in 1937 and Doctor of Laws in 1939; University of Paris: Doctor of International Law (1947) and graduate of the Institut des hautes etudes internationales (1948). Lawyer, member of the Bucharest Bar from 1937 to 1946 (date of departure from Romania); Lawyer, member of the Quebec Bar since 1956. Professor of Air Law at the Faculty of Law of the University of Montreal (1951-1969); Visiting Professor at the Institute of Air and Space Law, McGill University, Montreal, from 1962-1974; Director of Air and Space Law Research at the same Institute (1974-1975). First book in French, published by Editions Pedone, Paris in 1947 (La coutume dans les cercles juridiques internationaux), won the author a prize from The Hague Academy of International Law; Appointed by the International Court of Justice as one of the observers for the plebiscites in the French possessions in the Indies which were to take place in 1950. Founder and Editor-in-Chief of the Annals of Air and Space Law. 1976; Award received from the International Institute of Space Law of the International Astronautical Federation for leadership and distinguished contribution to the law of outer space, in Dubrovnik, 1978. Works by Nicolas Mateesco Matte:
Thomas Hayton Mawson started the Lakeland Nursery in Windermere in the 1880's, and later went on to become a landscape architect of high repute. He was born at Scorton in Lancashire on 5th May 1861, and because of his family's poverty, he was forced to leave school at the age of 12 to make a living. He worked in the building trade with an uncle in Lancaster, who happend to have a strong interest in gardening. When his father died, he was taken by his mother to London, where he was employed by a firm of nurserymen. Eventually he moved back to the North of England, and set up a nursery business in Windermere with his two brothers. Lakeland Nurseries was so successful, that after initially concentrating on the plant trade, Thomas Mawson was able to dedicate himself to garden design work.
A renowned authority on international law, Professor McDougal founded, along with political scientist Harold D. Lasswell, the New Haven School of Jurisprudence, a policy-science approach to the study of law that conceives of law not as a body of rules, but as a process of decision. For more information, see the obituary in the Yale Bulletin and Calendar. Works by Myres S. McDougal:
Arnold Duncan McNair was born in London on 4 March 1885. Graduated at Cambridge University in 1909 and took his PhD there in 1925. Fellow at the Gonville and Caius College since 1913; Barrister-at-Law at Gray's Inn. Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1918; secretary of the Coal Industry Commission in 1919. Works by Arnold D. McNair:
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Eduard Maurits Meijers studied law at the University of Amsterdam and took a PhD there in 1903.Specialist in labour law, sollicitor, legal historian. Professor at Leiden University. Argued that Bartolus of Saxoferrato was not the fatherof private international law, referring to the legal schools of Orléans (13de eeuw) and judicial statements by the high courts in France and the Netherlands. Deported to Thereseinstadt in World War II, survived and returned to Leiden. Works by E.M. Meijers:
Born in Poland, Meron moved to Palestine and received his first legal training at the University of Jerusalem. He later attended Harvard Law School, earning his LL.M. and J.S.D., and Cambridge University, where he held the prestigious Humanitarian Trust Fellowship in International Law, later held by another member of the NYU faculty, Professor Hisashi Owada. After Cambridge, Meron joined the Israeli foreign ministry. He was counselor to the Mission to the United Nations in New York, Legal Advisor to the Ministry, Ambassador to Canada, and Permanent Representative to the United Nations in Geneva. He resigned from the Israeli Foreign Service in 1977 and immediately joined NYU Law. Since then he has become a naturalized U.S. citizen and served as a public member of the U.S. Delegation to the CSCE Conference on Human Dimension in Copenhagen. Since 1991 he has also held a professorship of international law at the Graduate Institute of International Studies in Geneva. Professor Meron is the author of numerous articles and several books, most recently Henry’s Wars and Shakespeare’s Laws, and is editor-in-chief of the American Journal of International Law. As an active member of the Council on Foreign Relations, he has been the academic resource in two recent council studies, one leading to the recommendation to support the war crimes trials in the former Yugoslavia, the other to recommend that the United States ratify Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions. Works by Theodor Meron:
After his legal studies at the University of Amsterdam Jacon ter Meulen went to Zurich to study law with Professor Max Huber, one of the prime movers of the Hague Peace Conference of 1907. Ter Meulen took his PhD in 1914 with a 'Beitrag zur Geschichte der internationalen Organisation 1300-1700', which served as a basis for his major work on the history of the peace movement, Der Gedanke der internationalen Organisation in seiner Entwicklung. Works by Jacob ter Meulen:
Gezina Hermina Johanna van der Molen was born in 1892.- She became the first woman to write a dissertation at the Free University, Amsterdam, entitled Alberico Gentili and the development of international law (1937). After having actively been involved during the Second World War in the dutch undergound movement, she was nominated president of the National Committee for Foster Children in 1945. The committee was dedicated to finding new homes for war orphans. In 1949 she was nominated visiting professor of humanitarian law at the Free University. Works by Gesina, van der Molen:
Philipp Christiaan Molhuysen was born in Almelo in 1870. After studying Classical literature at Leiden University, taking his doctoral degree in 1896, Molhuysen first became keeper of the manuscripts at Leiden University Library. He was asked to become the first librarian of the Peace Palace Library in 1913. With Elsa Oppenheim he produced the first bibliography of the Peace Palace Library, the Catalogue de la bibliothèque du Palais de la paix and laid the foundations for the publication of the letters of Grotius. He became Royal Librarian in 1921. Molhuysen died in 1944, having become through his many official functions a major figure in the modern history of Dutch libraries. Works by P.C. Molhuysen:
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John Humphrey Carlile Morris was an undergraduate at Christ Church, Oxford, took firsts in the Final Honour School of Jurisprudence and was elected Eldon Scholar. He was editor of the 6th to 10th editions of Dicey's The Conflict of Laws and co-author of the 8th. Works by J.H.C Morris:
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A series of trials held in Nürnberg, Ger., in 1945–46, in which former Nazi leaders were indicted and tried as war criminals by the International Military Tribunal. The indictment lodged against them contained four counts: (1) crimes against peace—i.e., the planning, initiating, and waging of wars of aggression in violation of international treaties and agreements; (2) crimes against humanity—i.e., exterminations, deportations, and genocide; (3) war crimes—i.e., violations of the laws of war; and (4) “a common plan or conspiracy to commit” the criminal acts listed in the first three counts.
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D.P. O'Connell was Chichele Professor of Public International Law in the University of Oxford and Fellow of All Sould College, Oxford. Works by D.P. O'Connell:
In 1609 Hugo Grotius, the Dutch 'father of international law', published his famous Mare liberum, and in 1953 the Japanese Judge Shigeru Oda wrote his doctoral thesis at Harvard Law School entitled The Riches of the Sea and International Law. Both men, coming from nations adjacent to the sea, highly influenced the law of the sea. Grotius’ concept of the freedom of the sea, free for all countries, and a limited conception of national jurisdiction, remained for centuries the guiding principle in thinking about the law of the sea.In the middle of the twentieth century, however, the law of the sea underwent significant changes. It developed new aspects hitherto unexplored. As Oda pointed out in his thesis, the element of natural resources would play an important role in the future.As a member of the Japanese delegation to the United Nations Conferences on the Law of the Sea Oda was directly involved in issues he already had signalled in his writings.His 1969 Course for the Hague Academy of International Law, “International Law of the Resources of the Law of the Sea” was a pivotal point in the development of modern international law of the sea. Works by Shigeru Oda:
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Elsa Rachel Oppenheim was born 16 October 1885 in Groningen. She was a daughter of the renowned jurist Jacques Oppenheim (1849-1924). She studied Law at the University of Leiden and took her doctoral degree on Arbitration and Jurisdiction in 1911 when she was only 25 years of age. She joined the staff of the Peace Palace and with Ph. C. Molhuysen published the first catalogue of the library in 1916, the Catalogue de la Bibliotheque du Palais de la Paix. In 1920 she married P.C. Molhuysen. A son, Philipp Christiaan Molhuysen jr., was born in 1921. The couple divorced in 1923. Early 1924 she started working at Leiden University Library. Under the new anti-jewish laws she was fired in November 1940. Without any resources and probably desperate she took her own life on 8 April 1941. She was buried in the Israelite Cemetery in The Hague, opposite the Peace Palace. Works by Elsa Oppenheim:
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Elisa Perez Vera was born in Grenada (Spain) in June 1940. She took her PhD at the University of Grenada in 1965. She became professor at the same university in 1967. She has been a member of the Spanish delegation in the UN committee occupied with the definition of 'agression' (Geneve 1968). Member of several special committees in the Hague International Conference on International Law (1971-1975), member of the International Law Association and of the Society for International Development. Works by Elisa Perez Vera:
Jean S. Pictet was born in Geneva on 2 September 1914. He studied Law in Geneva. Started to work for the International Red Cross in 1937. In this post he drew the outlines for the revisions of the Geneva Conventions. Works by Jean Pictet:
Maurice Polak was born in Ede 8 January 1961. He studied Dutch Law at the University of Leiden (1979-1983) and did a Master of Laws at the Columbia University School of Law (1983-1984). He took his PhD in 1988 and became Professor at Leiden University in October 1990. Works by M.V. Polak:
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When the Belgian Professor Alberic Baron Rolin was appointed as the first director-librarian of the Peace Palace Library in 1913 it was on account of his reputation as scholar in international law. Rolin was Secretary of the Institute of International Law. Rolin was appointed for five years but after some extensions of this initioal term he terminated his services on 30 April 1920. Works by Alberic Rolin:
Natalino Ronzitti was born 9 October 1940. Doctor of Law (1963) and 'libero docente' of international right (1970). Professor at the Ecole superieure d'administration publique (Rome, 1986-1990), director of the Institut de droit international D. Anzilotti of the law faculty of the University of Pisa (1976-1986). Specializes in international maritime law. Works by N. Ronzitti:
Bernard Röling was born in 1906 in ’s-Hertogenbosch and, after having studied in Nijmegen, Marburg and Utrecht, he took his PhD in 1933. He was subsequently appointed as lecturer at the University of Utrecht, where he would found the Institute of Criminology. As Justice in the Tokyo tribunals in 1946 he became acquainted with humanitarian law. As a member of he Dutch delegation at the United Nations he gave himself a reputation for quite often disputing majority views. In 1949 he was appointed Professor of criminal law in Groningen, to be extended with international law in 1957. He founded the Groningen Institute of Polemology in 1962 and would remain its acting professor until his death in 1985. Röling became widely known among the general public for his stand against the American intervention in Vietnam. Works by B.V.A. Röling:
Philipe Sands is Professor of Laws and Director of the Centre for International Courts and Tribunals at University College London. As a practising barrister at Matrix Chambers, he has been involved in some of the leading cases on international criminal law before national and international courts, including the Pinochetcase in the House of Lords and the Croatia v. Federal Republic of Yugoslavia case in the International Court of Justice. He served as legal adviser to the Solomon Islands in the negotiation of the Statute of the International Criminal Court. Works by Philippe Sands:
K.R.R. Sastry was Deputy Inspector of Schools (Madras State) from 1920-1925, Advocate at the High Court, Madras, from 1928-1936, Reader at the Law Department of Allahabad University from 1936-1958, Principal and Dean of Law at Rajasthan University from 1955-1958, Member of the Expert Committee on Legal Terms of the Government of India from 1958-1962 and Jurist from 1962. Works by K.R.R. Sastry:
Jean Georges Sauveplanne was born in The Hague on 13 July 1922. He studied at the University of Leiden, where he became Doctor Juris in February 1949. He then entered the service of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, was head of the Benelux Section and later assistant to the legal adviser. From 1958 till 1961 he was Assistant Secretary-General of the International Institute for the Unification of Private Law in Rome. In 1962 he became Professor of Private International and Comparative Law at the University of Utrecht. During the first half of 1980 he lectured as a guest professor at the Wayne State University Law School, Detroit. He is a member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, an associate member of the International Academy of Comparative Law, member of the Governing Council of the International Institute for the Unification of Private Law, member of the Netherlands Standing Committee on Private International Law, president of the Netherlands Group of the "Association Henri Capitant des Amis de la culture juridique française", member of the committee of the Netherlands Association of International Law (Netherlands Branch of the International Law Association), and member of the Committee of the Netherlands Association of Comparative Law. He was a delegate to the thirteenth and fourteeth sessions of the Hague Conference on Private International Law and a member of the EEC working group on Private International Law. Works by J.G. Sauveplanne:
Friedrich Karl von Savigny was born at Frankfort-on-Main on the 21st of February 1779. He was descended from an ancient family, which figures in the history of Lorraine, and which derived its name from the castle of Savigny near Charmes in the valley of the Moselle. In 1795, he entered the university of Marburg where he studied under Professors Anton Bauer (1772-1843) and Philipp Friedrich Weiss (1766-1808), the former one of the most conspicuous pioneers in the reform of the German criminal law, the latter distinguished for his knowledge of medieval jurisprudence. After the fashion of German students, Savigny visited several universities, notably Jena, Leipzig and Halle; and returning to Marburg, took his doctors degree in 1800. In 1803 he published his famous treatise, Das Recht des Besitzes (on the rights of possession). It was at once hailed by the great jurist Thibaut as a masterpiece; and the old uncritical study of Roman law was at an end. It quickly obtained a European reputation, and still remains a prominent landmark in the history of jurisprudence. In 1815 he founded, with Karl Friedrich Eichhorn, and Johann Friedrich Ludwig Göschen (1778-1837), the Zeitschrift für geschichtliche Rechtswissenschaft, the organ of the new historical school, of which he was the representative. In this periodical Savigny made known to the world the discovery at Verona, by Niebuhr, of the lost text of Gaius, pronouncing it, on the evidence of that portion of the manuscript submitted to him, to be the work of Gaius himself and not, as Niebuhr suggested, of Ulpian. Works by Friedrich Carl von Savigny:
Bartolo da Sassoferrato was a lawyer and law teacher at Perugia, and chief among the postglossators, or commentators, a group of northern Italian jurists who, from the mid-14th century, wrote on the Roman (civil) law. Their predecessors, the glossators, had worked at Bologna from about 1125. He studied law at the universities of Perugia and Bologna and held the chair of law at Perugia from 1343 onward. He and his colleagues used the Corpus juris civilis ('Body of Civil Law'; also known as the Code of Justinian) of the 6th-century Byzantine emperor Justinian I and the work of the glossators thereon, together with Roman civil law, as a foundation from which to derive broad legal principles that could be used to solve contemporary problems in 14th-century Europe. Through this process Bartolus wrote several extremely influential legal doctrines, particularly those on the governmental authority of city-states and the rights of individuals and corporate bodies within them. These and other of his principles became the common law of Italy and were also recognized as law in Spain, Portugal, and Germany. Bartolus's commentaries on the Corpus juris civilis were sometimes accorded an authority equal to that of the code itself. Works by Bartolus da Saxoferrato:
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Drs. J. Schalekamp, with his business and management background, set himself the task of reorganizing the financial and management structures of the organization.
Dietrich Schindler, born in Zurich on 22 December 1924. Doctor of Law, University of Zurich (1950). Graduate studies and research, Harvard Law School and University of Michigan Law School (1952-1954). Lecturer for International and Constitutional Law, University of Zurich (1956). Visiting professor, University of Michigan Law School (1961-1962). Visiting Lecturer at the Universities of Bonn (1957-1958), St. Gallen (1962-1964) and Basel (1966-1970). Professor of International and Constitutional Law, University of Zurich (since 1964). Member of the International Committee of the Red Cross (1961-1973, honorary member since 1973). Member of the Institute of International Law (since 1967). Member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration (since 1977). Works by D. Schindler:
Carl Schmitt belongs to the German legal and political thinkers of the 20th century. Most of his fame stems from his work published during the 1920s, e.g. Political Romanticism (1919), his study of dictatorship (Die Diktatur, 1922), Political Theology (1922) and his critical analysis of the Weimar Constitution (Verfassungslehre, 1928), and writings in which he attempted to save the Weimar Republic, e.g. Der Hitler der Verfassung (1931). His Nazi version of the Monroe doctrine covers topics like Third Reich's superiority. Minorities' rights (reflecting racial prejudice) and the Nazi mission for Europe are leitmotivs in his Kriegsansatz-thoughts and ‘konkretes Ordnungsdenken'. Schmitt's thoughts are expressed in titles like Völkerrechtliche Grossraumordnung mit Interventionsverbot für raumfremde Mächte (1939), Grossraumordnung (1941), 'Raum und Grossraum im Völkerrecht' in the Zeitschrift für Völkerrecht XXIV (1941), and Positionen und Begriffe im Kampf mit Weimar-Genf-Versailles (1941). Works by Carl Schmitt:
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English jurist and scholar. He studied at Oxford, was called to the bar in 1612, and was elected to Parliament in 1623. He had already assisted in preparing the protestation of Commons in 1621, asserting to King James I Parliament's rights in the affairs of state, and he had briefly been held in custody as a result. He continued to support the rights of Parliament in its struggle with the crown, was prominent in the trial of George Villiers, 1st duke of Buckingham, and helped to draw up the Petition of Right in 1628. For his activity in the recalcitrant Parliament of 1629 he was imprisoned and was not released until 1631. He represented Oxford University in the Long Parliament from 1640 to 1649. See his extended biography and links to other sources at Luminarium.org. Works by John Selden:
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William Stead was born in 1848 in Embleton, Northumberland, England. He became a journalist, editor, and publisher who founded the noted periodical Review of Reviews (1890). Stead was educated at home by his father, a clergyman, until he was 12 years old and then attended Silcoates School at Wakefield. He became an apprentice in a merchant's countinghouse and in about 1870 began to contribute to the Liberal daily newspaper Northern Echo at Darlington. The following year he was invited to become the Echo's editor. He and the paper diligently supported Prime Minister W.E. Gladstone. In 1880 he went to London as assistant editor of the Pall Mall Gazette under John Morley, later Viscount Morley. When Morley went into Parliament, Stead succeeded him as editor and made of the Pall Mall Gazette a sprightly and unconventional journal. He introduced such modern journalistic techniques as the use of illustrations. He also developed the interview form in newspaper writing. His press campaigns effected many changes, including the improvement of British naval defenses. Works by William Thomas Stead:
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J.A.G. van der Steur, here at the porter's lodge. Van der Steur was a younger representative of the aristocratic and rather conservative tradition among Dutch architects who turned preferably to look behind them at the glory of the Dutch golden age, rather than draw inspiration from actuality.
L. Strikwerda became Attorney General in 1988 and is vice chairman of the State Committee for International Private Law. He is a board member of the Peace Palace Library Support Foundation, is editor of the Netherlands Internationaal Law Review and has been a board member of the Nederlandse Vereniging voor Internationaal Recht since 1986. Works by Luc Strikwerda:
Karl Strupp was born in 1886, and became doctor of Law and Professor at the University of Frankfurt-on-Mein, with a chair in international and public law. He was co-editor of the Jahrbuch des Völkerrechts and the Zeitschrift für Völkerrecht, and editor of the Wörterbuch des Völkerrechts. Works by Karl Strupp:
Antoon Victor Marie Striuycken was born in 1936 in Breda. He studied Law at the Catholic University of Nijmegen (1954-1959), at the Bologna Center of the Johns Hopkins School for Advanced International Studies (1961-1962), and at the faculty of law and economics of the Université de Paris (1962-1963). He became Professor of private international law at the University of Nijmegen in 1971 and was Dean of the faculty from 1987-1991. Struycken is a member of the Curatorium of the Hague Academy of International Law. Works by A.V.M. Struycken:
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Bertha von Suttner was born in 1843 and popularized her quest for world peace through her many books, essays, and newspaper articles. She was a leader in several early peace societies and is credited with influencing Swedish inventor Alfred Nobel in the establishment of the Nobel prize for peace. Suttner herself was awarded the prize in 1905. Works by Bertha von Suttner:
Symeon C. Symeonides was born in 1949, in Lythrodontas, Cyprus. He studied law at the Aristotelian University of Thessaloniki, Greece, and at the Harvard Law School. Present and previous academic positions: Dean and Professor of Law, Wi11amette University College of Law, Salem, Oregon (1999-present); Judge Albert Tate Professor of Law (1989-1999), Vice Chancellor (1991-1997), Professor (1984-1989), Associate Professor (1981-1984); Assistant Professor (1978- 1981), Louisiana State University Law Center; Assistant Professor, University of Thessa1oniki (1976-1978). Visiting positions: Universite Paris V (2002, 2003); Louvain-1a-Neuve (1997); Tulane (1985); Loyola (1982). Work in law reform: Commissioner, Oregon Law Commission (since 1999); Chairman, Project for Choice-of-Law Codification, Oregon Law Commission (since 2001); Rapporteur and Chairman, Codification of Louisiana Conflicts Law, Louisiana State Law Institute (since 1984); Rapporteur and Chairman, Revision of the Law of Leases, Louisiana State Law Institute (since 1992); Rapporteur, Codification of Puerto Rican Private International Law, Puerto Rican Academy of Legislation and Jurisprudence (1987-1991); Consultant, Joint Permanent Commission for the Revision of the Puerto Rican Civil Code (2002). Works by Symeon C. Symeonides:
Zsolt Zsirmai was the founder, in 1953, of the Leiden based Institute for East European Law and Russian Studies (see F. Feldbrugge, 'The Documentation Office for East European Law: 1953-1958', Review of Socialist Law, 1978 No.3, pp. 197-200). In 1958 he founded the journal Law in Eastern Europe. In 1975 he co-founded the Review of Socialist Law , to be rebaptized after the fall of the iron curtain into the Review of Central and East European Law. Another important publication of the Institute was the Encyclopedia of Soviet Law (1975, 2nd ed. 1985). In 1993 the name of the Institute itself was changed into the Institute for East European Law and Russian Studies. Works by Zsolt Szirmai:
Japanese defendants accused of war crimes were tried by the International Military Tribunal for the Far East, which was established by a charter issued by U.S. Army General Douglas MacArthur. The so-called Tokyo Charter closely followed the Nürnberg Charter. The trials were conducted in English and Japanese and lasted nearly two years. Of the 25 Japanese defendants (all of whom were convicted), 7 were sentenced to hang, 16 were given life imprisonment, and 2 were sentenced to lesser terms. Except for those who died early of natural causes in prison, none of the imprisoned Japanese war criminals served a life sentence. Instead, by 1958 the remaining prisoners had been either pardoned or paroled.
Grigory I. TUNKIN was born 13 October 1906 in the Arkhangelsk region, USSR. Graduate of the Institute of Law, Moscow (1935). Post graduate course at the same Institute (1935-1938). Scientific collaborator at the Institute of Law of the Academy of Science of the USSR (1938-1939). Entered diplomatic service in 1939. Since that time occupied different posts in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the USSR and abroad. Chief of the Legal Department of the Ministry since 1952. Took part in many international conferences as councellor, member or head of Soviet delegations. Head of the USSR delegation at the Geneva Conference on the law of the sea of 1958. Holder of the chair of the theory and history of state and law at the Academy of Law of the USSR (1939-1940). Holder of the chair of international law at the Institute of Law, Moscow (1948- 1954). Professor of international law at Moscow University (since 1954). Member of the International Law Commission. President of the Soviet Association of International Law. Co-editor of the periodical Soviet State and Law. Works by Grigorii Ivanovich Tunkin:
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Born in Briansk, Russian Federation, Vereshchetin graduated (with honours) on 8 January 1932 from the International Law Faculty of the Moscow Institute of International Relations (1954). He became Doctor of Juridical Sciences in 1976 and Professor of International Law in 1982. He was a member of the United Nations International Law Commission from 1992 to 1995 and became Chairman of the Commission in 1994. He was a member of the USSR delegations to the United Nations Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space and its Legal Sub-committee (1979-1990) and a member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration (1984-1995). He has been a member of the International Court of Justice since 26 January 1995, re-elected as from 6 February 1997. He is a member of the editorial and advisory boards of the Russian Law Journal and the Journal of Space Law (United States). Works by V.S. Vereshchetin:
The Treaty of Versailles was the Peace document signed at the end of World War I by the Allied and Associated Powers and by Germany in the Hall of Mirrors in the Palace of Versailles, France, on June 28, 1919; it took force on Jan. 10, 1920.
J.B. Vervliet, a historian and former head of the library of the Department of Law at Leiden University Library, succeeded Schalekamp in 2001. "Tall, athletic, positively exuding energy, his whole appearance belied the classical stuffy image of a librarian, apart perhaps from his subdued grey suit, which definitely betrayed the Leiden scholar. ... He sighed with mock bewilderment, wildly gesticulating his long spare arms. ... He gave a boyish laugh of mischief, his intelligent eyes twinkling behind neat, gold-rimmed spectacles." (From Eyffinger, The Trusteeship of an Ideal.)
Verzijl was born in Utrecht on 31 August 1888. He studied Law at the University of Utrecht and took his PhD in 1917. He was appointed Professor of international law and diplomacy in 1920. In 1938 he became Professor at the University of Amsterdam, a post from which he was fired by the German occupant in 1940. He was incarcerated in Buchenwald but released in 1941. After the Second world War he returned to the University of Utrecht. Works by J.H.W. Verzijl:
The Congress of Vienna was the Assembly in 1814–15 that reorganized Europe after the Napoleonic Wars. Having begun in September 1814, five months after Napoleon's first abdication, it completed its “Final Act” in June 1815, shortly before the Waterloo campaign and the end of the Hundred Days of Napoleon's return to power. The settlement was the most comprehensive treaty that Europe had ever seen.
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Willem van der Vlugt was born in 1853 and studied law at the University of Leiden. He earned his doctorate in 1879 and was subsequently nominated as professor of the philosophy of Law at Leiden. And active Grotian, he was involved in settling a looming conflict between Russia and Finland (1910), earning him a knighthood both in the Netherlands and in Finland. Works by W. van der Vlugt:
Van Vollenhoven studied Law, Semitic languages and Political sciences at Leiden University. He took his PhD in 1898. In 1901 he became Professor of Adat Law in the Dutch Indies at the University of Leiden. He would holp this post until his death. In 1932 the University of Amsterdam awarded Van Vollenhoven an honorary doctorate. Works by Cornelis van Vollenhoven:
The nightmare of every librarian: the loose-leafs! To keep these terrible but important publications up to date is a major ordeal in a library with quite a number of this kind of publications in its collection. The systems of replacing the old pages vary from simple to complicated. It can be a crucial task, that requires high intelligence, combined with knowledge of several languages and flexible acrobatic fingers to unwind and put together ingenious constructions of maps. The Peace Palace Library has subscriptions on roughly 300 loose-leaf publications. The people in charge of this collection are volunteers, who gather every Monday to do their important job. It started about 12 years ago, when one retired Dutch high ranking IMF executive employee ventured into the library asking for work on a voluntary basis, to keep him occupied with a serious task, to keep his wife happy that he was not always around, and to do something useful for the community. Gladly we helped him with all these problems by offering him the position of “supervisor of the loose-leafs”. Soon he asked some friends to join him, and now he is in charge of 5 people. They are absolutely fabulous, helping the library enormously! A yearly dinner in one of The Hague’s finer restaurants is their reward. Honour to these bravehearts!
C.C.A. Voskuil, son of the celebrated editor of the Dutch newspaper Het Vrije Volk K. Voskuil and brother of the author J.J. Voskuil (Het bureau, was awarded a cum laude for his doctorate in 1962. Voskuil became instrumental in the establishment of the Asser institute. Initiated the co-operation between the Aser institute and the University of Louvain concerning the French-language publication of the achievements of the Hague Conference for Private International Law. Received Honorary doctorates from Uppsala and Zagreb. Works by C.C.A. Voskuil:
Soviet statesman, diplomat, and lawyer who was the chief prosecutor during the Great Purge trials in Moscow in the 1930s. Vyshinsky, a member of the Menshevik branch of the Russian Social-Democratic Workers' Party since 1903, became a lawyer in 1913 and joined the Communist Party in 1920. While teaching at Moscow State University and practicing law as a prosecutor, he acquired a reputation as a legal theoretician. In 1928 he was appointed to the collegium of the Commissariat of Education and also was prosecutor at several noted trials of alleged saboteurs and counterrevolutionaries. After becoming prosecutor of the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic (1931), he was promoted to deputy prosecutor (1933) and prosecutor of the Soviet Union (1935). Vyshinsky became widely known in 1933 during the Metro-Vickers trial, in which several British engineers were charged with trying to wreck Soviet hydroelectric constructions. During the Great Purge trials (1934–38), in which he prosecuted many prominent former Soviet leaders for treason, he gained worldwide notoriety as an aggressive and vengeful courtroom lawyer. Becoming a member of the party's Central Committee, as well as deputy commissar of foreign affairs, by 1940, Vyshinsky supervised the incorporation of Latvia into the Soviet Union in 1940 and later arranged for a communist regime to assume control of Romania (1945). In March 1949 he became foreign minister and, representing the Soviet Union at the United Nations, frequently launched bitter verbal attacks on the United States, which was soon engaged in the Korean War. After Joseph Stalin's death in 1953, Vyshinsky was demoted to first deputy foreign minister but remained at the United Nations as the permanent Soviet representative.
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Sarah Wambaugh was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1882. She studied at Radcliffe College and at the Universities of London and Oxford. She was a member of the minorities committee of the League of Nations in 1920 and 1921. Works by Sarah Wambaugh:
Robert Plumer ward was Politician and Novelist. Contributed to the question of Shakespeare's identity with his anonymous novel, De Vere, or the Man of Independence. Ward proposes in fictional form that Edward de Vere was the real mind behind the mask of Shakespeare. The hint is not picked up - except, perhaps, by novelists such as Hermann Melville, who may have used Ward's novel as a source for the choice of the name "Captain Edward Vere" in his Billy Budd (1889). Works by Robert Plumer Ward:
Born 1886; educated Merchant Taylors' School in Crosby and King's College, Cambridge; Professor of Modern History, Liverpool University, 1914-1922; served World War One as a Subaltern in the Royal Army Service Corps, 1915-1917 and on the General Staff of the War Office, 1917-1918; Secretary, Military Section, British Delegation to the Conference of Paris, 1918-1919; Wilson Professor of International Politics, University of Wales, 1922-1932; Ausserordentlich Professor, University of Vienna, 1926; Nobel Lecturer, Oslo, 1926; Reader, University of Calcutta, India, 1927; Professor of History, Harvard University, USA, 1928-1932; Stevenson Professor of International History, London School of Economics and Political Science, 1932-1953; Foreign Research and Press Service, 1939-1941; Director, British School of Information, New York, 1941-1942; Foreign Office, 1943-1946; Member of British Delegation, Dumbarton Oaks and San Francisco Conferences, 1944-1945; Member, Preparatory Commission and General Assembly, United Nations, 1945-1946; Ford Lecturer, Oxford University, 1948; President, 1950-1954, and Foreign Secretary, 1955-1958, British Academy; retired 1953; died 1961. Publications: The European alliance, 1815-1825 (University of Calcutta, 1929); The Congress of Vienna, 1814-1815 (Foreign Office Historical Section, London, 1919); editor of Britain and the independence of Latin America, 1812-1830 (Ibero-American Institute of Great Britain, London, 1938); The art and practice of diplomacy (LSE, London, 1952); British Diplomacy, 1813-1815 (G Bell and Sons, London, 1921); British Foreign Policy since the Second World War; The Congress of Vienna, 1814-15, and the Conference of Paris, 1919 (London, 1923); The foreign policy of Castlereagh, 1815-1822 (G Bell and Sons, London, 1925); The foreign policy of Palmerston, 1830-1841 (G Bell and Sons, London, 1951); The founder of the national home (Weizmann Science Press of Israel, 1955); The League of Nations in theory and practice (Allen and Unwin, London, 1933); The pacification of Europe, 1813-1815 (1922); Palmerston, Metternich and the European system, 1830-1841 (Humphrey Milford, London, 1934); Sanctions: the use of force in an international organisation (London, 1956); Some problems of international organisation (University of Leeds, 1943); What the world owes to President Wilson (League of Nations Union, London, 1930); The strategic air offensive against Germany, 1939-1945 (London, 1961); editor of British diplomatic representatives, 1789-1852 (London, 1934); editor of Some letters of the Duke of Wellington to his brother, William Wellesley-Pole (London, 1948). For more information, see his entry in AIM 25: British Library of Political and Economic Science. Works by Charles Kingsley Webster:
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Hans Wehberg was born in Dusseldorf 15 December 1885. Studied in Bonn, Jena and Göttingen (1904-1908). Took a PhD in 1909. Became editor of the Zeitschrift für Völkerrecht. Served in the trenches from 1915 to 1917. From 1919 to 1921 he was a member of the legal section of the League of Nations. In 1923 became a member of the Institute of International Law. He was, from 1914, with Karl Strupp and Walther Schucking, editor of the series Völkerrechilichen Monographien and from 1924 editor of the periodical Die Friedenswarte. Works by Hans Wehberg:
Welwood was successively professor of mathematics and law at St Andrews University. Works by William Welwood:
American maritime jurist, diplomat, and author of a standard work on international law. After graduation from Rhode Island College (now Brown University) in 1802, Wheaton practiced law at Providence from 1806 to 1812. He moved to New York City in 1812 to become editor of the National Advocate. Two years later he was appointed a division judge advocate of the U.S. Army. In 1815 he published A Digest of the Law of Maritime Captures and Prizes. He served as a justice of the Marine Court (1815–19) and, in 1816, he was also appointed a reporter of the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., where he was distinguished for the learnedness of his annotations. His diplomatic career began in 1827 with an appointment to Denmark, where he served as chargé d'affaires until 1835. He was also chargé d'affaires and then minister to Prussia from 1835 to 1846. Works by H. Wheaton:
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Mary Wollstonecraft was born in Spitalfields, London in 1759. In 1784 she opened a school in Newington Green, a small village close to Hackney, with her sister Eliza and a friend, Fanny Blood. Soon after arriving in Newington Green, Mary made friends with Richard Price, a minister at the local Dissenting Chapel. Works by Mary Wollstonecraft:
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Guennady P. Zhukov was born 30 April 1924 in Moscow. Graduated at the Moscow Law Institute in 1947. Postgraduate student at the USSR Academy of Sciences 1947-1950. Became a lawyer in 1951 and took his PhD in 1956). Director of the legal office of the International Civil Aviation Council since 1978. Works by Gennady Zhukov:
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