Meijers, E. M., 1880-1954
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Identifies LC/NAF RWO
Identifies RWO
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Sources
found: Caroli, J. P. A. N. Het kort geding, 1906-
found: Erfrecht, 1984:t.p. (Prof. Mr. E.M. Meijers)
found: Inleidinge tot de Hollandsche rechts-geleerdheid, 1952:title page (E.M. Meijers)
found: OCLC database, November 21, 2012(usage: E.M. Meijers; Eduard Maurits Meijers)
found: Koninklijke Bibliotheek online catalog, November 21, 2012(heading: Meijers, E. M. (Eduard Maurits), 1880-1954)
found: Leiden University, November 26, 2012 :research portal, famous researchers (Eduard Maurits Meijers (1880-1954); born: Den Helder, The Netherlands; famous for: his immense contribution to the New Civil Code for which he is often referred to as the "father of the Dutch Civil Code." During the German occupation, his Jewish heritage made him a leading example of the protest of Leiden University against the dismissal of Jewish lecturers; researcher in Leiden, 1910-1954) - http://www.research.leiden.edu/famous/meijers.html
found: Wikipedia, viewed May 16, 2024(Eduard Meijers; Eduard Maurits Meijers; born January 10, 1880 in Den Helder; died June 25, 1954 in Leiden; Dutch jurist of Jewish background; founding father of the current Dutch civil code, the Nieuw Burgerlijk Wetboek; chair in private law and private international law at Leiden University since 1910; honorary degrees from the universities of Aberdeen, Brussels, Glasgow, Leuven, Lille and Paris; from 1918 to 1922 Meijers dean of the law faculty in Leiden; in 1926 and 1927 rector of the university) - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eduard_Meijers
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Change Notes
1981-01-21: new
2024-05-17: revised
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