tudományos főmunkatárs MTA TK JTI habilitált egyetemi docens NKE ÁKK A "mezítlábas" ügyvéd Márkus Dezső és az izraelita felekezet törvényesen bevetté nyilvánítása The "Barefooted" Lawyer. Dezső Márkus and the Declaration of the Jewish Confession to Established ChurchThe emancipation of the Hungarian Jewry was achieved in two major steps during the second half of the 19th century in Hungary. The Hungarian Parliament granted equal civil and political rights for Jewish individuals in 1867. Almost three decades later, in 1895, the Law of Reception made Judaism equal to other received religions in Hungary. Recalling the era of Jewish emancipation in Hungary, the study aims to present the role of Dezső Márkus in achieving the legalisation of the Israelite denomination. As a young lawyer, Dezső Márkus was one of those Jewish intellectuals who spearheaded the emancipation of the Jewish religion in the first half of the 1890s in his articles and essays.
Abstract. The literature dealing with the life of Bódog Somló (1873Somló ( -1920, one of the most outstanding authors of jurisprudence in Hungary in the last century, does not pay special attention to his study-tour in Germany. Somló spent the fall semester of academic year 1896/97 at the faculty of humanities of the Leipzig University, while the spring semester int the law school at the Heidelberg University. Somló's peregrinatio academica, which is equally remarkable for both historical and cultural aspects, can be reconstructed on the basis of his correspodence. He was infl uenced by the lectures and seminars of K. G. Lamprecht and W. Wundt in Leipzig, and later by O. Karlowa and E. E. Bekker in Heidelberg. Because of the preparations of his acceptance as a lecturer in 1899 at the University of Cluj, the grand tour in Germany had a great importance in Somló's life.
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