Hermann Friedmann
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Adolph Hermann Friedmann (11 April 1873, Białystok – 25 May 1957, Heidelberg) was a German philosopher and jurist, Finnish citizen from 1906. In Finland Friedmann became known to the general public as a lawyer. His most famous case was a murder committed in 1927 in Turku. Friedmann defended the head of the University Library of Åbo Akademi and his wife in a murder trial, which was extensively reported in the newspapers around Europe. [1]
Literary works[]
- Die Welt der Formen. System eines morphologischen Idealismus, Gebr. Paetel, Berlin 1925, C. H. Beck, München 1930
- Wissenschaft und Symbol. Aufriss einer symbolnahen Wissenschaft, Biederstein C. H. Beck), München 1949
- Sinnvolle Odysee. Geschichte eines Lebens und einer Zeit (1873–1950), C. H. Beck, München 1950
See also[]
- International PEN
References[]
External links[]
- Hermann Friedmann in the German National Library catalogue
- Hermann Friedmann in the German National Library catalogue
- Biographies. Kulturportal West–Ost (in German)
Categories:
- 19th-century German philosophers
- German jurists
- People from Białystok
- 1873 births
- 1957 deaths
- Riga Technical University alumni
- German male writers
- Finnish lawyers
- German emigrants to Finland
- Naturalized citizens of Finland
- German philosopher stubs
- Polish academic biography stubs
- German law biography stubs