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Augustus Van Dievoet

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Nationality
  
Belgian

Occupation
  
Supreme Court Judge


Spouse(s)
  
Marguerite Anspach

Name
  
Augustus Dievoet

Born
  
3 May 1803 (
1803-05-03
)
Brussels

Education
  
Imperial College, Brussels; State University of Louvain

Known for
  
Principal legal historian of the newly formed independent Belgium

Died
  
October 31, 1865, Brussels, Belgium

Augustus Van Dievoet (Latin: Augustus Divutius (3 May 1803 – 31 October 1865) was a Belgian legal historian and Supreme Court Judge. Following a distinguished legal career as a judge at the Belgian Court of First Instance and then the Belgian Supreme Court, Van Dievoet dedicated his final years to the study, collection and composition of numerous volumes on Belgian legal history.. His son, Jules Van Dievoet, married Marguerite Anspach (1852-1934), the daughter of Jules Anspach, who served as burgomaster of Brussels in 1863-1879, and served on the Belgian Supreme Court..

Contents

Biography

Augustus Van Dievoet studied at the Imperial College of Brussels (lycée Imperiale de Bruxelles). Van Dievoet demonstrated an exceptional capacity for academic work, excelling in his study of humanities and winning numerous prizes in Latin and Greek humanities at the College. He went on to study law at the tate University of Louvain, where he received his doctorate in law on 24 March 1827.

Van Dievoet was called to the bar on 7 April 1827 and became a member of the Bar Association between 1838 and 1848. Around this time, Van Dievoet became a judge at the Court of First Instance of Brussels and a member of the Board of Discipline for lawyers at the Court of Cassation. In 1842, he moved a new home at No. 24 Rue Neuve, which he bought from the Hausmann-Hirsch family. Van Dievoet sold the property in 1847. On 3 August 3 1848, after twenty-one years as a lawyer at the Court of Appeal, Augustus Van Dievoet was appointed by Royal Decree an advocate of the Supreme Court.

Van Dievoet and his colleagues Hubert Dolez and Augustus Orts were the most eminent lawyers of the time. Van Dievoet is best known as one of the first historians of the law of independent Belgium. He was a student of Jean-Joseph Raepsaet, Jean-François-Michel Birnbaum, his teacher at the State University of Louvain, and Friedrich Carl von Savigny. He founded the Juridical library in the Palace of Justice of Brussels.

Publications

Van Dievoet devoted his Latin thesis at the State University of Louvain in 1827 to ancient Belgian customs (De origine diversarum consuetudinum localium regni nostri). This work was a great success and was often cited in scholarly works and international works. In 1843, Adolphe Roussel commented on Van Dievoet's work in his Encyclopedia of Law: "In a remarkable thesis published in Leuven in 1827, Van Dievoet tried to find the origin of Belgian customs. Regrettably, he has not taken a position which provides new and ingenious views."

References

Augustus Van Dievoet Wikipedia