Leo Rosenberg


Leo Rosenberg was a German jurist, a professor in Göttingen, Giessen, Leipzig and Munich. He was a leading expert in Civil procedure law.

Biography

Rosenberg was born in Fraustadt, Province of Posen, German Empire to Michael Rosenberg, a cigar manufacturer, and Emma née Lichtenstein.

Rosenberg passed his Abitur in Fraustadt aged 17 after skipping one grade, he studied law at the Universities of Freiburg, Munich and Breslau. He passed his first legal exam in 1899 and received his doctorate in 1900: his dissertation concerned the burden of proof in civil law. The work was subsequently reprinted in five editions and strongly influenced the modern German Civil procedure law. Rosenberg served his Referendary in Posen and passed his second legal exam in 1904, he habilitated in Göttingen in 1906.
In 1912 Rosenberg became an extraordinary professor at the University of Giessen and rector of the University in 1927/28. In 1932 Rosenberg moved to the University of Leipzig, but was dismissed in 1934 according to the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service for being Jewish. He managed to work for a lawyer at the Reichsgericht in Leipzig for another two years. Until the end of World War II Rosenberg lived in Stiefenhofen, Allgäu.
From 1946 to 1956 Rosenberg lectured at the University of Munich. He died in Munich on 18 December 1963.

Family

Rosenberg was married to Hedwig Peter, daughter of Gustav Albert Peter, they had two sons and two daughters. One daughter died aged 19 in 1944. Two sisters of Rosenberg died in the Theresienstadt concentration camp.

Publications