登入選單
返回Google圖書搜尋
註釋Recognized attorney Max Friedlaender (1873-1956) was one of the best-known attorneys in the German Reich before the "seizure of power". He had gained an excellent reputation, especially in professional circles, through his lectures and numerous publications - with a focus on legal law. Some of his considerations are still irritatingly topical today. From expert in legal professional law to life in exile In his memoirs, he takes stock, reports on his family and their relationship to Judaism, describes the school and legal training (completed in the 19th century) and finally describes his successful career as a lawyer in Munich and as a nationally known expert for legal professional law. It lasted more than 30 years and did not end until 1933 with the beginning of state-sanctioned discrimination and social ostracism, the causes and driving forces of which he clearly analyzed. What followed was the flight from Germany at the last second and a life - without the beloved job - in exile in England. Friedlaender never returned to his homeland. Memoirs in a historical context Numerous notes and an extensive biographical appendix, written by the lawyer Tillmann Krach and the historian Reinhard Weber, enable today's reader to classify the story. A book that is not only aimed at lawyers, but also for everyone who wants to experience a phase of German history that is very exciting in many ways