David Daube

http://dbpedia.org/resource/David_Daube an entity of type: Thing

David Daube (geboren 8. Februar 1909 in Freiburg im Breisgau; gestorben 24. Februar 1999 in Berkeley, Vereinigte Staaten) lehrte Rechtswissenschaft als Regius Professor of Civil Law an der University of Oxford und später als Professor-in-Residence an der University of California, Berkeley. rdf:langString
David Daube FBA (8 February 1909, in Freiburg, Germany – 24 February 1999, in Berkeley, California) was the twentieth century's preeminent scholar of ancient law. He combined a familiarity with many legal systems, particularly Roman law and biblical law, with an expertise in Greek, Roman, Jewish, and Christian literature, and used literary, religious, and legal texts to illuminate each other and, among other things, to "transform the position of Roman law" and to launch a "revolution" or "near revolution" in New Testament studies. rdf:langString
rdf:langString David Daube
rdf:langString David Daube
rdf:langString David Daube
rdf:langString David Daube
xsd:date 1909-02-08
xsd:integer 6796115
xsd:integer 1121706872
xsd:integer 1935
rdf:langString UC-Berkeley
xsd:date 1909-02-08
rdf:langString Three
xsd:date 1999-02-24
rdf:langString Ancient and Biblical Law
rdf:langString University of Cambridge
rdf:langString Berthold-Gymnasium, Freiburg
rdf:langString Universities of Freiburg and Göttingen
rdf:langString David
rdf:langString Helen Smelser
rdf:langString Herta Babette
rdf:langString Daube
rdf:langString Professor-in-Residence at UC-Berkeley's law school
rdf:langString David Daube (geboren 8. Februar 1909 in Freiburg im Breisgau; gestorben 24. Februar 1999 in Berkeley, Vereinigte Staaten) lehrte Rechtswissenschaft als Regius Professor of Civil Law an der University of Oxford und später als Professor-in-Residence an der University of California, Berkeley.
rdf:langString David Daube FBA (8 February 1909, in Freiburg, Germany – 24 February 1999, in Berkeley, California) was the twentieth century's preeminent scholar of ancient law. He combined a familiarity with many legal systems, particularly Roman law and biblical law, with an expertise in Greek, Roman, Jewish, and Christian literature, and used literary, religious, and legal texts to illuminate each other and, among other things, to "transform the position of Roman law" and to launch a "revolution" or "near revolution" in New Testament studies.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 27818

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