- PII
- S1026-94520000616-5-1
- DOI
- 10.31857/S20000616-5-1
- Publication type
- Article
- Status
- Published
- Authors
- Volume/ Edition
- Volume / Issue 5
- Pages
- 62-72
- Abstract
- The article is devoted the study of the German doctrine of private international law - the "German realism” XVII century., which is a separate direction in the theory of the statutes. The names of the representatives of the "German realism” of the XVII century: Matthias Berlich, Benedikt Carpzov, Davidis Mevius, Wolfgang Adam Lauterbach, Caspar Ziegler - are little known in the Russian doctrine of PIL. All these scholars considered to conflict of laws only from the standpoint of law enforcement and did not try to create any coherent theory of conflict of law. They uphold the principle of absolute territoriality of all laws, but at the same time they made it possible to apply a foreign law on issues of the form of legal acts and contractual obligations. Representatives of "German realism” of the XVII century can be qualified as scholars of the "transitional period”. They are linked to the "German style” Italian and Dutch theories of statutes and prepared the ground for the perception of the doctrine of international comity in Germany.
- Keywords
- private international law, Germany, the XVII century, “German realism”, theory of statutes, Matthias Berlich, Benedikt Carpzov, Davidis Mevius, Wolfgang Adam Lauterbach, Caspar Ziegler
- Date of publication
- 01.05.2016
- Number of purchasers
- 1
- Views
- 1252