Ivar Afzelius
Ivar Afzelius (15 October 1848, Uppsala – 30 October 1921) was a Swedish jurist and politician.
Having studied law at the universities of Uppsala, Leipzig and Göttingen, he was appointed to teach process law at Uppsala in 1879. Bernhard Windscheid was one of his teachers. From 1891 to 1902, he was a justice in the Supreme Court of Sweden, 1898-1903 and 1905-15 a member of the Riksdag, whose first chamber, the Senate, he presided in 1913-15. Since 1905, he was a member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague, and president of the Svea Court of Appeal in 1910-18.
Afzelius is remembered as a precursor of a pan-Scandinavic legislative endeavour, especially the laws of the sea. He has been characterised as the prototype of an idealistic jurist in the liberal state. Still, he sought to link Swedish legal traditions to modern (especially German) dogmatic thought, whose reception in Sweden was strongly furthered by his authority.
He was made a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1905, and of the Swedish Academy in 1907, on seat 4.
References
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Political offices | ||
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Preceded by | Speaker of the Riksdag 1912–1915 |
Succeeded by Hugo Hamilton |
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- 1848 births
- 1921 deaths
- People from Uppsala
- Swedish jurists
- Uppsala University faculty
- Members of the upper house of the Riksdag
- Justices of the Supreme Court of Sweden
- Members of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
- Members of the Swedish Academy
- Members of the Permanent Court of Arbitration
- Speakers of Första kammaren
- Swedish politician stubs
- Swedish people stubs
- European law biography stubs