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Topic: Francis Lieber


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 Democrats in America - de Tocqueville and Lieber
Francis Lieber was born into a merchant family in 1798 in Berlin, Germany.
Francis Lieber, Letters to a Gentleman in Germany, Written After a Trip from Philadelphia to Niagara, Philadelphia 1834.
Francis Lieber, On Civil Liberties and Self-Government, 3rd ed., (Philadelphia: 1877).
xroads.virginia.edu /~HYPER/DETOC/democrats/print.html

  
 Scott Michaelsen and Scott Cutler: THE LAW OF WAR AND SOVEREIGN EXCEPTION@Arts & Opinion
Lieber is primarily concerned to distinguish between legal combatants entitled "to the full benefits of the laws of war" and "guerrillas" who are not.
Lieber also suggests, for example, that "the rising of the people to repel invasion entitles them to the full benefits of the law of war" and that a conquering power is "obliged to treat the captured citizens in arms as prisoners of war."
Lieber's letter on the guerrilla operates via a kind of double logic of the exception.
www.artsandopinion.com /2004_v3_n1/lieber.htm

  
 BookFinder.com: The Life and Letters of Francis Lieber
BookFinder.com: The Life and Letters of Francis Lieber
www.bookfinder.com /dir/i/The_Life_and_Letters_of_Francis_Lieber/0781287391

  
 Cazoo Library, Germans in America and German-Americans:Francis Lieber
"Francis Lieber was the first German Political scientist who was to gain a lasting influence on intellectual life in America.
Lieber continued to receive honorary assignments from the government until his death in New York on October 2, 1872.
Lieber was born in Berlin on March 18, 1800 as the tenth of 13 children.
cazoo.org /library/FrancisLieber.html

  
 Like a Sponge Thrown into Water: Francis Lieber's European Travel Journal of 1844-1845: Current Amazon U.S.A. One-Edition Data
Edited with an introduction and commentary by Charles R. Mack and Ilona S. Mack, Like A Sponge Thrown Into Water: Francis Lieber's European Travel Journal Of 1844-1845 is a remarkable and personal look into European culture in the mid-nineteenth century, as written in the diary of the intellectual Francis Lieber (1798-1872).
Lieber';s entries also reveal his connoisseur';s eye for the appreciation of art, music, and the theater, as well as his abiding interest in judicial penal reform and belief in the concept of nationhood.
Lieber';s previously unpublished account of these months, including passages translated from their original German, offers a fast-paced and exciting picture of the European culture and political milieu of the 1840s.
ritzville-museums.org /books-reviewed/1570034478.html

  
 Francis Lieber on the Sources of Civil Liberty
Francis Lieber also has much to teach us about the moral requisites of a healthy political community.
Francis Lieber on the Sources of Civil Liberty
Lieber was careful to distinguish nationalization, which he likened to the "diffusion of the same life-blood through a system of arteries," from centralization, which in the absence of "national and public liberty" leads to despotism.
www.nhinet.org /samson.htm

  
 FRANCIS LIEBER - LoveToKnow Article on FRANCIS LIEBER
LIEBER, FRANCIS (1800-1872), German-American publicist, was born at Berlin on the 18th of March 1800.
FRANCIS LIEBER - LoveToKnow Article on FRANCIS LIEBER
During the Civil War Lieber rendered services of great value to the government.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /L/LI/LIEBER_FRANCIS.htm

  
 §5. Southern Writers Opposed to Secession; Francis Lieber. XXI. Political Writing Since 1850. Vol. 17. Later National Literature, Part II. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21
Its author was Francis Lieber, a German liberal who, persecuted in his native land, sought refuge in America and became Professor of Political Economy in South Carolina College—a position he held from 1835 to 1857, when he went to New York to join the faculty of Columbia College.
That Lieber, holding such views and also having no sympathy for slavery, could live so long in the very heart of the cotton kingdom, is remarkable.
Such was the elemental thought in Lieber’s Political Ethics (1838) and Civil Liberty and Self Government (1853), books which in time profoundly influenced political science in the United States.
www.bartleby.com /227/1405.html

  
 University Events Calendar - Event Page
The Lieber Symposium Committee has designed a two-day international symposium involving scholars of Francis Lieber and his times.
Lieber's far-ranging interests and publications offer us a forum in which to involve most of the disciplines of this campus, from Art to Athletics, from Philosophy to Philology, Political Science to Criminology, Physical Science to Pedagogy and more.
The Lieber Symposium will provide an ideal atmosphere in which to display the nature of the interdisciplinary approach, and the multifaceted offering of a great university.
events.sc.edu /queries/EventDetail.asp?EventID=4223&Mode=Search&Userid=guest&Password=

  
 Lieber's Code and the Law of War
P. 34, from "Guerrilla Parties Considered with Reference to the Laws and Usages of War" by Francis Lieber.
Source: Lieber's Code and the Law of War, by Richard Shelly Hartigan, from a facsimile of the 1983 edition published by Precedent Publishing, Inc., Chicago, as produced in 1995 by The Legal Classics Library, Division of Gryphon Editions, New York.
The essay entitled "Guerilla Parties Considered with Reference to the Laws and Usages of War" was written in 1862.
www.commonlaw.com /Lieber.html

  
 Three German Pioneers
Francis Lieber, the third of the German pioneers in the field of physical training, was secured to fill this vacancy.
Francis Lieber, the third of the Turner pioneers, was born in Berlin, March 18, 1800.
Lieber returned to Berlin after he had spent a year in Rome.
www.liturners.org /three_german_pioneers.htm

  
 INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE GOVERNMENT OF ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES IN THE FIELD
Field, prepared by Francis Lieber, LL.D., Originally Issued as General
Lieber’s rules of conduct for war became General Order 100, accepted by President Lincoln and issued by the Adjutant General on April 24, 1863.
Lieber, I will leave you to debate and contemplate how generals, on both sides, adhered to, ignored or interpreted them.
suvcw.org /education/liebercode.htm

  
 Schools and Crime FAQ (Learn in Freedom!)
Lieber went on to address the actual policy point, which is "whether universal instruction is conducive to a decrease in crime." In other words, Lieber recognized that the policy issue is what a statistician might call an issue of longitudinal treatment of a national population, and what effect that treatment might have.
Lieber inferred, invalidly, that if the population of persons convicted of crimes consists mostly of persons with little schooling, then an increase in the schooling of the whole population would reduce crime.
Lieber began his book by deploring "vagueness of expression" on the issue of the relationship between education and crime, and he defined several terms before presenting his argument.
learninfreedom.org /School_makes_crime.html

  
 Francis Lieber
LIEBER, Francis, publicist, born in Berlin, Get-many, 18 March, 1800; died in New York city, 2 October, 1872.
He was then transferred to the judge-advocate-general's office in Washington, and subsequently appointed assistant to his father, Dr. Francis Lieber, in the bureau of Confederate archives.
See "Life and Letters of Francis Lieber," edited by Thomas S. Perry (Boston, 1882).--His son, Oscar Montgomery, geologist, born in Boston, Massachusetts, 8 September, 1830; died in Richmond, Virginia, 27 June, 1862, was educated at Berlin, Gottingen, and Freiburg.
www.famousamericans.net /francislieber

  
 Article 100 - The Lieber Code
General Order 100, also known as the "Lieber Code" was Francis Lieber, then a professor of Columbia College in New York, revised by a board of officers and promulgated by President Lincoln.
The following "Instructions for the Government of Armies of the United States in the Field," prepared by Francis Lieber, LL.D., and revised by a board of officers, of which Maj. Gen.
The "Lieber Code" strongly influenced the further codification of the laws of war and the adoption of similar regulations by other nations.
www.usregulars.com /Lieber.html

  
 Lieber, Francis on Encyclopedia.com
Like a Sponge Thrown into Water: Francis Lieber's European Travel Journal of 1844-1845.(Book Review)
Lieber was professor of history and political economy (1835-56) at South Carolina College (now Univ. of South Carolina).
In the suppression of student organizations in 1819, Lieber became suspect for his liberal ideas and was harried by the police for the remainder of his life in Germany; he was twice imprisoned.
www.encyclopedia.com /html/L/Lieber-F1.asp

  
 Francis Lieber Biography / Profile of Francis Lieber Biographies
Francis Lieber was born in Berlin on March 18, 1798.
The American political scientist Francis Lieber (1798-1872) is regarded as the first practitioner of political science as a separate academic discipline in the United States and as America's first academic political philosopher.
Francis Lieber Biography / Profile of Francis Lieber Biographies
www.bookrags.com /biography/francis-lieber

  
 New Gatherings
Francis Lieber (1798-1872) is an important but little remembered 19th century political philosopher and scholar of civil society, law, and morality.
Lieber recognized another example of the Christian dehumanization of non-Christians while reading an account of a Portuguese slaving expedition to the western coast of Africa in 1444.
An extremely important figure in American thought, Lieber was also the founder of the Institut de Droit International ("Institute of International Law"), which was started in 1873 in Ghent, as a permanent alliance of leading international jurists.
www.newgatherings.com /index.cfm?i=1155&mid=12&id=2033&h=1

  
 Francis Lieber: Nineteenth Century Liberal Rep. of 1947 ed. - FREIDEL, FRANK
Francis Lieber: Nineteenth Century Liberal Rep. of 1947 ed.
* Francis Lieber [1798-1872] was a prominent political philosopher and political scientist who helped lay the foundation for the study of political science in the United States.
Renowned for his theory of civil liberty which combined an appreciation for the English concept of decentralized political institutions that protected the rights of the individual with the German idea of an overall national purpose, he bridged the intellectual gap between Europe and America.
www.antiqbook.com /boox/law/36520.shtml

  
 Francis Lieber
For the time being, this page should act as a placeholder until an editor is able to contribute to the Francis Lieber information.
The content for articel Francis Lieber is not yet here.
There are hundreds of editors constantly working on articles and we're hoping to get this one up as soon as possible.
www.bambooweb.com /articles/f/r/Francis_Lieber.html

  
 USC: Horseshoe Tour: Lieber College
Now the Office of Admissions, it was named for Francis Lieber (1800-1872), illustrious faculty member and editor of the Encyclopedia Americana.
The Rose Garden at Lieber was made possible by contributions from the Columbia Garden Club in honor to deceased members.
While its architectural style is labeled "Georgian" by some, this building reflects the qualities of the federal style.
www.sc.edu /horseshoe/lieber.html

  
 About ESRI-USC
Its faculty included Francis Lieber, editor of the Encyclopedia Americana and author of Civil Liberty and Self Government, the nationally known scientists John and Joseph LeConte, and chemist William Eller, who produced the first daguerreotype in the United States.
In the years before the Civil War, it rapidly achieved a reputation as one of the best colleges--private or public--in America.
www.esri.sc.edu /about/default.asp

  
 Recent Faculty Scholarship
Francis Lieber, in Dictionary of American Legal History (K. Newmyer ed., forthcoming).
www.law.duke.edu /fac/facpub.html

  
 David Icke - Tell the Truth!
Instructions for the Government of Armies of the United States in the Field, prepared by Francis Lieber, LL.D., Originally Issued as General Orders No. 100, Adjutant General's Office, 1863, Washington 1898: Government Printing Office.
Prepared by Francis Lieber, promulgated as General Orders No. 100 by President Lincoln, 24 April 1863.
If what these studied patriots are saying is true, then what is printed below is the Military Law of the Land, as ordered by Lincoln under 'Executive Order' and as "Commander in Chief." I can find no place where the order has been rescinded.
users2.50megs.com /mysite/facts/lieber1.html

  
 Francis Lieber (b.1800, d.1872) - Curriculum vitae (CV)
Francis Lieber (b.1800, d.1872) - Curriculum vitae (CV)
www.getcited.org /mbrz/10146088

  
 Hartigan: LIEBER'S CODE AND THE LAW OF WAR
Francis Lieber changed that with his 157-article code of war, which puts down the rights and obligations of warring factions.
Richard Shelly Hartigan provides with keen insight the history of Lieber's work.
For one of mankind's most constant occupations, much speculation but little formal arrangement had been devoted to the laws of war.
www.gryphoneditions.com /item443.ctlg

  
 Crown Rights Book Company: Imperatorial Sovereignty (Francis Lieber)
Crown Rights Book Company: Imperatorial Sovereignty (Francis Lieber)
The Caesars of the first centuries claimed their power as bestowed upon them by the people, and went so far as to assume the praetorians, with an accommodating and intimidated senate, as the representatives, for the time, of the people.
We have a parallel in the criminal trial, in which the question how we arrive at the truth is of equal importance with the object of arriving at truth.
www.crownrights.com /books/imperatorial_sovereignty.htm

  
 Proofing
Francis Lieber on the Sources of Civil Liberty, by Steven Alan Samson.
A short biographical sketch without any other reference material.
A very good but long (20 pages) article about his work - included is a short biographical sketch.
www.andrews.edu /german-americans/addres.asp?PersonID=23

  
 doc
Charles Sumner to Francis Lieber [May 2, 1868]
Lieber replied that he agreed with Sumner that "the Senators have no business to argue the case among themselves" before voting, but he feared that, given the American "craving for oratorical display," Sumner’s proposal would fail (Lieber to Sumner, May 4, 1868, Palmer, Papers of Sumner, 81:585).
With his letter of April 30,1868, Lieber enclosed a clipping from the New York Sun (April 30, 1868) speculating that if Wade became president, Horace Greeley, as "head man of Mr.
hip.cgu.edu /mcconnell/1143t.html

  
 International Law
From Francis Lieber, whose work formed the basis of the modern laws of war, to Professor Hans Smit, one of today’s leading experts on international arbitration and litigation, Columbia’s faculty have long been on the cutting edge of international legal scholarship.
Columbia was among the first law schools to offer courses in foreign law and comparative legislation, to create joint-degree programs with law schools overseas, and to encourage the enrollment of foreign students.
For questions or comments, please contact the webmaster.
www.law.columbia.edu /focusareas/intlaw_portal

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