118:, and co-signed a programmatic article that appeared in the first number on October 22, 1918. Joining the Romanian National Council, he attended the general congress of Bukovina and, on November 28, voted for union with Romania. Subsequently, within the provisional government, he led the secretariat for commerce and industry. In 1921, on an interim basis, he headed the internal affairs secretariat; a year later, he became general director of the entire department. In September 1919, after being invited by
175:
Romanian law, which had not yet been extended to the province. He advocated for legal unification and liquidating the last vestiges of the
Austrian academic tradition. Privately, however, he lamented the extremely rapid introduction of Romanian law by decree and without accounting for local circumstances.
138:
In 1919, Hacman became a professor at the Cernăuți law faculty, and in this capacity laid the foundations for a commercial studies academy in 1920. He was faculty dean in 1919-1921 and university rector for 1921-1922. A member of the university senate, he was elected to the city's chamber of commerce
96:
and served as its president in 1901. After returning home from Berlin, he continued his involvement with
Romanian organizations, holding conferences on various topics. The first of these came in 1911, when Hacman addressed the subject of the family among early Romanians from a juridical standpoint.
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as law professor, claiming this would "profoundly disparage" the university's "prestige, autonomy and national character". His role in integrating new professors did not account for the university's traditions, and, as his interests dictated, was carried out using both old
Austrian legislation and
226:
In
October 1940, he accompanied Pușcariu to Berlin, where the latter headed the recently founded Romanian Institute. Working there until July 1941, Hacman was responsible for advising Romanian students and maintaining relations with German universities. After Romania regained control of Northern
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and industry in 1925. An admirer of German order, he published numerous articles and studies referencing German law. His interests included public and private international law, commercial and trade law; his writings appeared in several important
Romanian reviews. He was made a commander of the
147:. The vice president of the Bukovina society for Romanian culture and literature, he and took part in numerous activities undertaken by the society at the university. He was involved with the 1922 transformation of the local German theatre into a National Theatre. He authored several books:
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Bukovina in 1941, he returned there and held numerous conferences under the cultural society's auspices. He was society president in 1943-1944, but then had to seek refuge a second time when the
Soviets retook the area. Having found a home in
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expressing the inhabitants' outrage over the occupation. Meanwhile, he took part in the final operations of the Cernăuți law faculty, which had taken refuge at
Bucharest. In autumn, he obtained approval from
231:, he founded and became the first president of the association of refugees from Moldavia, Bukovina and Bessarabia in July 1944. After World War II, he retired from public life and died in Turda in 1961.
170:
Following Nistor's lead, Hacman was involved with the university's
Romanianization, which he considered "a necessity of major national importance". He objected to the nomination of German speaker
81:, studying at the law faculty and becoming a jurist specialized in commercial and trade law. He took his doctorate in 1904 and, esteemed by his professors, was sent to complete his studies at
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431:
213:
207:, and representative for Bukovina, he advocated for a declaration expressing the country's willingness to fight and regain the occupied territories. He addressed a petition to King
126:. During this period, in his personal papers, he expressed discontent with the heavy-handed approach toward administrative standardization being taken by the central authorities in
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386:
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69:, while his father Vasile served as the village priest from 1857 to 1879. After attending primary school in Oprișeni, he went to high school in
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219:, himself a Bukovina refugee, for himself and his former colleagues to transfer to the law faculty of the
199:, he then moved to Bucharest, where he was a member of the inter-university council. As a member of the
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Near the end of World War I, Hacman became involved in efforts to join
Bukovina with the
187:, Hacman fled into unoccupied Romania with his papers, which eventually ended up at the
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171:
336:
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Becoming a political activist on behalf of the region's
Romanians, he entered
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108:. He was one of fourteen founders and five editors of the pro-union organ
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26:
August 13] 1877 – October 11, 1961) was an
195:. Initially staying with his wife's parents in
437:Commanders of the Order of the Crown (Romania)
432:Commanders of the Order of the Star of Romania
165:Tratat de drept internațional public și privat
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343:, vol. XX / 2014, no. 2, pp. 345–358
153:Tratat elementar de drept cambial. Manual
97:During this period, he began writing for
387:Academic staff of Chernivtsi University
372:Members of the Romanian Orthodox Church
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337:"Fond archivistique Maximilian Hacman"
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258:
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7:
157:Drept internațional public și privat
397:Rectors of King Carol I University
43:Early life and Bukovina union role
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392:Members of the Senate of Romania
402:Romanian expatriates in Germany
203:for the sole ruling party, the
179:Soviet occupation and aftermath
1:
367:People from Chernivtsi Oblast
185:Soviet occupation of Bukovina
382:Chernivtsi University alumni
145:Order of the Star of Romania
94:Societatea Academică Junimea
163:(vol. I-II, 1930-1932) and
16:Romanian jurist (1877-1961)
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427:Romanian newspaper editors
377:Romanian Austro-Hungarians
149:Reforma studiului de drept
422:Romanian textbook writers
161:Drept comercial comparat
412:Romanian legal scholars
221:University of Bucharest
77:). He then enrolled in
417:Romanian legal writers
124:Democratic Union Party
79:Czernowitz University
22:(August 25 [
335:Radu Florian Bruja,
183:In 1940, during the
106:Romanian Old Kingdom
99:Călindarul Bucovinei
205:Party of the Nation
134:Interwar activities
89:from 1909 to 1910.
319:Bruja, pp. 352-353
301:Bruja, pp. 351-352
271:Bruja, pp. 349-350
214:Education Minister
141:Order of the Crown
341:Codrul Cosminului
193:National Archives
61:Romanian Orthodox
20:Maximilian Hacman
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407:Romanian jurists
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217:Traian Brăileanu
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111:Glasul Bucovinei
59:, his uncle was
28:Austro-Hungarian
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191:chapter of the
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116:Sextil Pușcariu
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67:Eugenie Hacman
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172:Eugen Ehrlich
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64:metropolitan
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362:1961 deaths
357:1877 births
333:(in French)
143:and of the
351:Categories
327:References
120:Ion Nistor
71:Czernowitz
128:Bucharest
114:, led by
38:Biography
209:Carol II
167:(1935).
159:(1924),
155:(1921),
151:(1921),
75:Cernăuți
57:Bukovina
53:Austrian
49:Oprișeni
47:Born in
34:jurist.
32:Romanian
197:Focșani
55:-ruled
201:Senate
87:Zurich
83:Berlin
30:-born
235:Notes
229:Turda
51:, in
189:Iași
85:and
24:O.S.
353::
339:,
285:^
255:^
243:^
223:.
130:.
101:.
73:(
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