Everything about Francis Lieber totally explained
Dr.
Francis Lieber (
March 18,
1798 –
October 2,
1872), originally known as Franz Lieber, was a
German-American jurist and
political philosopher. Aside from being the first American to take the title of
political scientist, he's most widely known as the author of the
Lieber Code during the
American Civil War, also known as
Code for the Government of Armies in the Field (
1863), which laid the foundation for
conventions governing the conduct of troops during wartime.
Lieber was born in
Berlin, the capital of the
Kingdom of Prussia. While still in Germany, Lieber fought in the
Prussian Army during the
Napoleonic Wars, and was wounded during the
Battle of Waterloo. Upon return to Germany after the war, he was persecuted by the authorities and not permitted to attend any university in Prussia. Disillusioned, he obtained a degree at
Jena and later fled to England. After fighting briefly in the
Greek War of Independence, he moved to
Boston in 1827, where he became a founder and editor of the
Encyclopaedia Americana. A decade later he became a professor of history and political economics at South Carolina College (now the
University of South Carolina), where he remained until 1856. From 1856 until 1865 he taught at
Columbia University.
Lieber sided with the North during the
American Civil War, even though he'd been a resident of South Carolina, and one of his sons joined the Confederate army and died at the
Battle of Williamsburg. During the conflict he served as the head of the
Loyal Publication Society of New York, compiling news articles for dissemination among Union troops and Northern newspapers. He also assisted the Union
War Department and President
Abraham Lincoln in drafting legal guidelines for the Union army, the most famous being General Orders Number 100, or the "Lieber Code" as it's commonly known. The Lieber Code would be adopted by other militaries and go on to form the basis of the first
laws of war.
After the Civil War Lieber was given the task of accumulating and preserving the records of the former government of the
Confederate States of America. While working in this capacity, Lieber was one of the last known people to possess the infamous
Dahlgren Affair papers. Shortly after obtaining them, Lieber was ordered to Secretary of War
Edwin M. Stanton, who likely disposed of them as they've not been seen since.
From 1870 until his death in
New York City Lieber served as a diplomatic negotiator between the United States and
Mexico.
Works
- Notes on the Fallacies of American Protectionists
- Encyclopaedia Americana (Editor, 1829-1851)
- The Stranger in America in 2 volumes (1833-35)
- Reminiscences of Niebuhr (1835)
- A Manual of Political Ethics (1838)
- Legal and Political Hermeneuties, or Principles of Interpretation and Construction in Law and Politics (1838)
- Translation of Dictionary of Latin Synonymes by Lewis Ramshorn (1839)
- Laws of Property: Essays on Property and Labor (1841)
- Great Events described by Great Historians (1847)
- Translation of Penitentiary System in the United States by Alexis de Tocqueville (1848)
- The West and Other Poems (1848)
- On Civil Liberty and Self-Government (1853).
- General Orders No. 100 aka the Lieber Code (1863)
- Reflections on the Changes Necessary in the Present Constitution of the State of New York (1867)
- Memorial relative to the Verdict of Jurors (1867)
- The Unanimity of Juries (1867)
- International Copyright and Fragments of Political Science, or Nationalism and Internationalism (1868)
Further Information
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