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Karl Ludwig von Haller

Karl Ludwig von Haller (1 August 1768 – 20 May 1854) was a Swiss jurist, statesman and political philosopher. He was the author of Restauration der Staatswissenschaft (Restoration of Political Science, 1816–1834), a book which gave its namesake to the Restoration period after the Congress of Vienna, and which Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel strongly criticized in §258 of Elements of the Philosophy of Right.

Karl Ludwig von Haller
Born1 August 1768
Died20 May 1854 (1854-05-21) (aged 85)
NationalitySwiss
Era19th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
Schoolconservatism
Notable ideas
Patrimonialism, private law theory of the state, critique of Roman law

Von Haller's work, which was burnt during the Wartburg Festival, was a highly systematic defense both of the principles of dynastic legitimacy and monarchy founded on territorial lordship, as well as of pre-modern republics like those of the Swiss city-states, and the most consistent rejection of modern political ideas of the social contract, public law, and state sovereignty.

Life

Early life

Von Haller was a son of Bern statesman and historian Gottlieb Emanuel von Haller, and grandson of poet and polymath Albrecht von Haller. His lineage descended from Johannes Haller (1487-1531), a Reformed preacher who died alongside Huldrych Zwingli in the Second War of Kappel.[2]

He did not, however, receive an extensive education, but only some private lessons and a few classes at the Gymnasium. As a child Haller studied at a Greek school under Philipp Albert Stapfer, the latter going on to serve as an official in the Helvetic Republic. At the age of sixteen he entered the chancery of the Republic of Bern as a volunteer. The family moved to Nyon due to his father's promotion as a Landvogt (bailiff).[3] He studied by himself and so filled out the gaps in his education. Following the death of his father in 1786, he became the de facto guardian of his estate. He is elected substitute chancellor the next year, and begins attending the lectures of Swiss theologian Johann Samuel Ith. At the age of nineteen, he was appointed to the important office of Kommissionsschreiber, or clerk of a public commission. In this capacity, he obtained an insight into methods of government, practical politics, and criminal procedure. As secretary of the Swiss diet held in Baden and Frauenfeld, he became familiar with the conditions of things in the Swiss Confederation.[citation needed]

In 1789 he began investing in a French annuity plan, which he resold two years later due to his ethical opposition to the French government's confiscation of church estates as biens nationaux. Around this time, he read the works of Emmanuel Joseph Sieyès, and found himself drawn to constitutional liberalism.

Travels

A journey to Paris in 1790 provided him further acquaintance with new revolutionary ideas, and he was present at the Fête de la Fédération. The same year, he was elected to Bern's Kornkammer, responsible for managing the city's granaries. In 1792, he became a member of the Bernese Economic Society, and publishes his first written work, a report arguing against the export ban on butter.[4] As secretary of legation he served several important embassies, for instance, one to Geneva in 1792, about the Swiss troops stationed there; to Ulm in 1795, regarding the import of grain from southern Germany; to Lugano, Milan, and Paris in 1797, regarding the neutral attitude of Switzerland towards the warring powers. These journeys acquainted him with some of the leading personalities of the day, including Napoleon and Talleyrand.

When the Old Swiss Confederacy was threatened[clarification needed] he was dispatched to Rastatt to allay the storm. It was too late, however, and by the time he returned in February 1798 the French army was already on Bernese territory. He tried to conciliate the authorities by penning a constitutional proposal, Projekt einer Constitution für die schweizerische Republik Bern, and attempted one last mediation with Gen. Guillaume Brune on March 1, 1798, but was unable to stay the dissolution of the Old Swiss Confederacy. Bern would fall definitively four days later at the Battle of Grauholz.

Von Haller soon renounced any liberal principles entirely, and became an uncompromising opponent of the Revolution. Thereupon he resigned the government office he had held under the revolutionary authorities and established a paper, the Helvetische Annalen, running for 64 issues from April to November 1798, in which he attacked the excesses and legislative schemes of the Helvetic Republic with such bitter sarcasm that the sheet was suppressed, and he himself had to flee to escape imprisonment. The specific article that led to his being proscribed was Beiträge zum einem revolutionären Gesetzbuch (Contributions to a revolutionary code of law), a political satire. Featuring lines such as “To slander or overturn any authority means patriotism, and to the patriots one should be loyal, but an ‘oligarch,’ or a citizen from a former capital, or an honest magistrate who has done his duty, is not a man, but a wild animal with which one can do what he wants,” the work did not impress the Helvetic authorities.[5] Henceforth, von Haller was a reactionary and a divisive figure. The Swiss physiognomist Johann Kaspar Lavater was his most vocal defender in Switzerland during this time, and Haller would pay tribute to him in an essay after Lavater's death.[6]

Vienna and conversion to Catholicism

After many wanderings, he came to Vienna, where he was court secretary of the council of war, from 1801 until 1806. Public opinion at home resulted in his being recalled by the Bernese Government in 1806, and appointed professor of constitutional law at the newly founded higher school of the academy. When the old aristocratic regime was reinstated in 1814, he became a member of the sovereign Grand Council, and soon after also of the privy council of the Bernese Republic, and he abandoned his professorship in 1817. But in 1821, when his return to Catholicism became known, he was dismissed. This change of religion caused great controversy, and the letter he wrote to his family from Paris, explaining his reasons for the step he had taken, went through about fifty editions in a short time, was translated a number of times, and called forth numerous rejoinders and apologies.[citation needed]

In this document he made known his long-felt inclination to join the Catholic Church and his growing conviction that he must bring his political opinions in harmony with his religious views. Though he had expressed philo-Catholic sympathies for years, the immediate impetus for his conversion was a correspondence he started with Pierre Tobie Yenni, the bishop of Lausanne, in 1819.[7] Haller was soliciting advice on the fourth volume of the Restoration of Political Science dealing with ecclesiastical states, whereupon Yenni began correcting his views on sacramental theology and other doctrinal subjects. After his conversion to Catholicism, his family soon followed him; with them he left Bern permanently and took up residence in Paris in 1822, after his initial requests to Friedrich von Gentz for settling back in Vienna were unsuccessful.[8] In 1824 the Foreign Office invited him to assume the instruction of candidates for the diplomatic service in constitutional and international law, filling a vacancy left by Chateaubriand. After the July Revolution of 1830, he went to Solothurn and, from that time until the day of his death, was a contributor to political journals, including the Neue Preussische Zeitung and the Historisch-Politische Blätter. In 1833 he was elected to the Grand Council of Solothurn and exercised an important influence in ecclesiastical affairs which constituted the burning question of the hour,[clarification needed] and held this post until 1837. In 1844, he was awarded the Order of St. Sylvester by Pope Gregory XVI.[9]

Restauration

Earlier work

In connection with his other work, Haller had propounded and defended his political opinions as early as 1808 in his ‘’Handbuch der allgemeinen Staatenkunde, des darauf begründeten allgemeinen Rechts und der allgemeinen Staatsklugheit nach den Gesetzen der Natur’’. This, considered by some his most important work, impelled Johannes von Müller to offer Haller the chair of constitutional law at the University of Göttingen. In spite of the great honour involved in this offer, he declined it. The Handbuch itself was an extended version of his inaugural lecture Über die Nothwendigkeit einer andern obersten Begründung des allgemeinen Staatsrechtes, published on November 2, 1806 and delivered shortly after his return to Bern. Two other essays would follow in 1807: the Über den wahren Sinn des Naturgesetzes: dass der Mächtigere herrsche, dealing with his doctrine of natural superiority as the basis for political authority; and Über die Domainen und Regalien, covering the jura regalia, sovereign rights of kings deriving from their ownership of the royal domains.[10] By that point, Haller’s political doctrine had been fully formed. Haller published three essays in Friedrich Schlegel’s "Concordia," (1820-1823), and his various writings in journals and periodicals were collected in two volumes and published as Mélanges de droit public et de haute politique (1839).

Magnum opus

Haller's magnum opus, however, was the Restauration der Staats-Wissenschaft oder Theorie des natürlich-geselligen Zustandes, der Chimäre des künstlich-bürgerlichen entgegengesetzt. It was published in Winterthur in six volumes from 1816 to 1834. In this he uncompromisingly rejected the revolutionary conception of the State, and developed a natural and juridical system of government, arguing at the same time that a commonwealth can endure and prosper without being founded on the omnipotence of the state and official bureaucracy. The first volume, which appeared in 1816, contains his history and his rejection of the older political theories, and also sets forth the general principles of his system of government. In the succeeding volumes he shows how these principles apply to different forms of government: in the second to monarchies; in the third (1818) to military powers; in the fourth (1820) and fifth (1834) to ecclesiastical states; and in the sixth (1825) to republics. It was written primarily to counteract Jean-Jacques Rousseau's The Social Contract. Moreover, Haller's "Digression on Slavery" in the third volume made a deep impact on the Scottish historian Thomas Carlyle and surfaced again in his polemical "Occasional Discourse on the Negro Question".[11] The book in its entirety was translated into Italian, part of it into French, and an abridged version into Latin and Spanish. All his later writings are influenced by the ideas here set forth, and oppose vigorously the revolutionary tendencies of the times and the champions of liberalism in Church and State.

Haller's political views were heavily influenced by his long tenure as a Bernese public official, a city-state with dependent territorial possessions that did not officially call itself a "republic" until 1716, and which was governed by a patriciate of 236 families who were eligible for election in the grand council, known as 'regimentsfähigen Geschlechter der Stadt Bern.' Direct taxation, public debt, and military conscription were virtually absent in 18th century Bern.[12]

Repudiating the abstract juridical conceptions of sovereignty and civil society, Haller based political authority instead on a combination of personal power and acquired rights deriving from possession of property. Unlike most theoreticians who posited the formation of a civil state which partially or completely negated the state of nature, Haller posited an uninterrupted state of nature. In the Handbuch of 1808, he defined the state as "nothing more than a natural sociable relationship between free and servant, which differs from other similar relationships only in the independence of its head." He used the term "sovereignty" interchangeably with "independence" and "perfect freedom," defining it as a perfection or elevation of already existing private social relationships among extended households, one that increased the means for these social bonds to exercise their already existing rights, but which did not inherently confer any new ones. Depending on whether the source of personal power was in a natural person or fictive person (corporation), the state would either be a monarchy or a republic. In turn, monarchies were subdivided into three principal ways of exercising personal power: from land ownership (patrimonial states), from authority over a retinue of troops (military states), or from doctrinal and teaching authority over disciples and followers (spiritual states, a.k.a. theocracies).

He was strongly critical of the influence of Roman law on European jurisprudence for what he saw as obscuring the social relationships that had emerged following the dissolution of the Roman Empire by falsely analogizing them to ones that properly pertain to republics only. In his own words, the Roman Empire and the code of law it bequeathed was in a "monstrous state of incomplete usurpation, which one could call neither monarchy nor republic, which seemed to derive from both, but no longer rested on any basis; a state of affairs in which the forms and locutions of the republic had been preserved, but where, in fact, there remained only an absolute despotism, founded solely on military power." (vol. I, ch. VII of the Restauration der Staatswissenschaft).

Commentary on Haller’s work

The Swiss historian Béla Kapossy contextualizes Haller's thought by placing it in his Swiss background, and cites his criticism of Roman law as anticipating the field of conceptual history.[13] Kapossy quotes Haller on the substance of his critique:

Just as the citizens of Rome constituted a community [Gemeinde], a citizenry, a genuine societas civilis: all other forms of human association and relations, too, had to be called societas civilis or civil societies. Soon all forms of states, even principalities had to be called civitates or respublicas (republics, commonwealths), the aggregate of serviceable people was called populum liberum (a free people), individual subjects who amongst themselves did not form any corporation and who were not in any particular way legally bound to one another were now called cives (citizens), the estates, servicemen who were called into council, and vassals were called comitia (popular assemblies) where the majority should carry the vote; princely domains were called patrimonium populi (public or state domains), the treasure of an individual lord became an aerarium publicum, private services owed to powerful and mighty lords were called munera publica (public offices) etc.

The term "patrimonial state" would later make its way into the sociology of Max Weber. Haller also exerted a great influence on modern German jurisprudence and the debates over whether the constitutional form of the Holy Roman Empire could be said to constitute a modern state, as recounted by Austrian medievalist Otto Brunner in his work Land and Lordship (1939).

References

  1. ^ Bonacina, Giovanni, “Anticipazioni della teoria della Restaurazione secondo Carl Ludwig von Haller,” Rivista Storica Italiana 122 (2010): 500–59.
  2. ^ Missionen der Berner Regierung nach Genf (1782), Mailand, Paris und Rastatt (1797—1798). Mittheilungen aus dem Nachlaß des Herrn K. L. von Haller. Berner Taschenbuch. 1868.
  3. ^ ”Aufzeichnungen Karl Ludwig von Hallers über seine Jugendjahre 1768-1792.” Berner Zeitschrift für Geschichte und Heimatkunde, vol. 23 (1961).
  4. ^ Wyss, Regula; Stuber, Martin (2012). Paternalism and Agricultural Reform. The Economic Society of Bern in the Eighteenth-Century.
  5. ^ König, K. G. "Karl Ludwig Von Haller, Zubenannt „der Restaurator“." Kritische Ueberschau Der Deutschen Gesetzgebung Und Rechtswissenschaft 3 (1856): 89-104. Accessed August 29, 2021. http://www.jstor.org/stable/43125190.
  6. ^ Historischer Verein des Kantons Bern (Herausgeber). Band 41 (1951-1952). Heft 1. Haasbauer, Adolphine. Briefwechsel zwischen Johann Kaspar Lavater und Karl Ludwig von Haller aus den Jahren 1798 und 1799.
  7. ^ Bischof Yenni und Karl-Ludwig von Haller. Freiburger Geschichtsblätter. Band 55. 1967.
  8. ^ Gentz; Haller, Karl Ludwig von. An Karl Ludwig von Haller, Wien, 14. Juni 1821, Archives de l'Etat, Fribourg (Schweiz). Fonds Haller, K 92.2 1821
  9. ^ Historischer Verein des Kantons Solothurn (Herausgeber), Band 27 (1954). Reinhard, Ewald. Die Résumés der Tagebücher des "Restaurators" Karl Ludwig von Haller.
  10. ^ Litterarisches Archiv der Akademie zu Bern, vol. 1 (1806).
  11. ^ Hans Fässler: Une Suisse esclavagiste. Voyage dans un pays au-dessus de tout soupçon. (Préface de Doudou Diène). Duboiris, Paris 2007, pp. 142-145
  12. ^ Altorfer-Ong, Stefan (2007) State-building without taxation: The political economy of government finance in the eighteenth-century republic of Bern. PhD thesis, London School of Economics and Political Science (United Kingdom).
  13. ^ Kapossy, Béla, « Karl Ludwig von Haller's critique of liberal peace », in Kapossy, Béla et alii (dir.), Commerce and Peace in the Enlightenment, Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2017, p. 244-271

Sources

  • Liedke, Herbert R. The German Romanticists and Carl Ludwig von Hallers Doctrines of European Restoration, in The Journal of English and Germanic Philology (1958)
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Karl Ludwig von Haller". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

Further reading

  • Guggisberg, Kurt. Carl Ludwig von Haller, Frauenfeld/Leipzig, 1938.
  • Kruska, Alexander. Die Polemik der Restauration: Metapolemische und ideengeschichtliche Betrachtungen zum Initialband der Restaurationsschrift Karl Ludwig von Hallers. Bielefeld, 2019. (transcript-verlag.de PDF).
  • Neumann, Sigmund. Die Stufen des Preussischen Konservatismus, Emil Ebering, 1930.
  • Pfister, Christoph. Die Publizistik Karl Ludwig von Hallers in der Frühzeit. 1791–1815, Bern: Herbert Lang; Frankfurt/M.: Peter Lang 1975.
  • Reinhard, Ewald. Carl Ludwig von Haller – Ein Lebensbild aus der Zeit der Restauration, Köln, 1915.
  • Rommen, Heinrich Albert. The State in Catholic Thought, B. Herder Book Co., 1945.
  • Valjavec, Fritz. Die Entstehung der Politischen Strömungen in Deutschland, 1770-1815, Verlag für Geschichte und Politik, 1951.

External links

  • Works by or about Karl Ludwig von Haller at Internet Archive
  • Commentary on vols. 1-4 of Haller's Restoration of Political Science (patrimonial and military states)
  • Commentary on vol. 6 of Haller's Restoration of Political Science (on republics)
  • English-language Haller readings and critical commentary

karl, ludwig, haller, august, 1768, 1854, swiss, jurist, statesman, political, philosopher, author, restauration, staatswissenschaft, restoration, political, science, 1816, 1834, book, which, gave, namesake, restoration, period, after, congress, vienna, which,. Karl Ludwig von Haller 1 August 1768 20 May 1854 was a Swiss jurist statesman and political philosopher He was the author of Restauration der Staatswissenschaft Restoration of Political Science 1816 1834 a book which gave its namesake to the Restoration period after the Congress of Vienna and which Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel strongly criticized in 258 of Elements of the Philosophy of Right Karl Ludwig von HallerBorn1 August 1768BernDied20 May 1854 1854 05 21 aged 85 SolothurnNationalitySwissEra19th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolconservatismNotable ideasPatrimonialism private law theory of the state critique of Roman lawInfluences Johann Stephan Putter Georg Friedrich von Martens Gottfried Achenwall Dietrich ReinkingkInfluenced Luigi Taparelli Antonio Rosmini Karl Ernst Jarcke Ernst Ludwig von Gerlach Guillaume Groen van Prinsterer Thomas Carlyle Hans Hermann Hoppe counterrevolutionary thought in general 1 Von Haller s work which was burnt during the Wartburg Festival was a highly systematic defense both of the principles of dynastic legitimacy and monarchy founded on territorial lordship as well as of pre modern republics like those of the Swiss city states and the most consistent rejection of modern political ideas of the social contract public law and state sovereignty Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early life 1 2 Travels 1 3 Vienna and conversion to Catholicism 2 Restauration 2 1 Earlier work 2 2 Magnum opus 2 3 Commentary on Haller s work 3 References 4 Sources 5 Further reading 6 External linksLife EditEarly life Edit Von Haller was a son of Bern statesman and historian Gottlieb Emanuel von Haller and grandson of poet and polymath Albrecht von Haller His lineage descended from Johannes Haller 1487 1531 a Reformed preacher who died alongside Huldrych Zwingli in the Second War of Kappel 2 He did not however receive an extensive education but only some private lessons and a few classes at the Gymnasium As a child Haller studied at a Greek school under Philipp Albert Stapfer the latter going on to serve as an official in the Helvetic Republic At the age of sixteen he entered the chancery of the Republic of Bern as a volunteer The family moved to Nyon due to his father s promotion as a Landvogt bailiff 3 He studied by himself and so filled out the gaps in his education Following the death of his father in 1786 he became the de facto guardian of his estate He is elected substitute chancellor the next year and begins attending the lectures of Swiss theologian Johann Samuel Ith At the age of nineteen he was appointed to the important office of Kommissionsschreiber or clerk of a public commission In this capacity he obtained an insight into methods of government practical politics and criminal procedure As secretary of the Swiss diet held in Baden and Frauenfeld he became familiar with the conditions of things in the Swiss Confederation citation needed In 1789 he began investing in a French annuity plan which he resold two years later due to his ethical opposition to the French government s confiscation of church estates as biens nationaux Around this time he read the works of Emmanuel Joseph Sieyes and found himself drawn to constitutional liberalism Travels Edit A journey to Paris in 1790 provided him further acquaintance with new revolutionary ideas and he was present at the Fete de la Federation The same year he was elected to Bern s Kornkammer responsible for managing the city s granaries In 1792 he became a member of the Bernese Economic Society and publishes his first written work a report arguing against the export ban on butter 4 As secretary of legation he served several important embassies for instance one to Geneva in 1792 about the Swiss troops stationed there to Ulm in 1795 regarding the import of grain from southern Germany to Lugano Milan and Paris in 1797 regarding the neutral attitude of Switzerland towards the warring powers These journeys acquainted him with some of the leading personalities of the day including Napoleon and Talleyrand When the Old Swiss Confederacy was threatened clarification needed he was dispatched to Rastatt to allay the storm It was too late however and by the time he returned in February 1798 the French army was already on Bernese territory He tried to conciliate the authorities by penning a constitutional proposal Projekt einer Constitution fur die schweizerische Republik Bern and attempted one last mediation with Gen Guillaume Brune on March 1 1798 but was unable to stay the dissolution of the Old Swiss Confederacy Bern would fall definitively four days later at the Battle of Grauholz Von Haller soon renounced any liberal principles entirely and became an uncompromising opponent of the Revolution Thereupon he resigned the government office he had held under the revolutionary authorities and established a paper the Helvetische Annalen running for 64 issues from April to November 1798 in which he attacked the excesses and legislative schemes of the Helvetic Republic with such bitter sarcasm that the sheet was suppressed and he himself had to flee to escape imprisonment The specific article that led to his being proscribed was Beitrage zum einem revolutionaren Gesetzbuch Contributions to a revolutionary code of law a political satire Featuring lines such as To slander or overturn any authority means patriotism and to the patriots one should be loyal but an oligarch or a citizen from a former capital or an honest magistrate who has done his duty is not a man but a wild animal with which one can do what he wants the work did not impress the Helvetic authorities 5 Henceforth von Haller was a reactionary and a divisive figure The Swiss physiognomist Johann Kaspar Lavater was his most vocal defender in Switzerland during this time and Haller would pay tribute to him in an essay after Lavater s death 6 Vienna and conversion to Catholicism Edit After many wanderings he came to Vienna where he was court secretary of the council of war from 1801 until 1806 Public opinion at home resulted in his being recalled by the Bernese Government in 1806 and appointed professor of constitutional law at the newly founded higher school of the academy When the old aristocratic regime was reinstated in 1814 he became a member of the sovereign Grand Council and soon after also of the privy council of the Bernese Republic and he abandoned his professorship in 1817 But in 1821 when his return to Catholicism became known he was dismissed This change of religion caused great controversy and the letter he wrote to his family from Paris explaining his reasons for the step he had taken went through about fifty editions in a short time was translated a number of times and called forth numerous rejoinders and apologies citation needed In this document he made known his long felt inclination to join the Catholic Church and his growing conviction that he must bring his political opinions in harmony with his religious views Though he had expressed philo Catholic sympathies for years the immediate impetus for his conversion was a correspondence he started with Pierre Tobie Yenni the bishop of Lausanne in 1819 7 Haller was soliciting advice on the fourth volume of the Restoration of Political Science dealing with ecclesiastical states whereupon Yenni began correcting his views on sacramental theology and other doctrinal subjects After his conversion to Catholicism his family soon followed him with them he left Bern permanently and took up residence in Paris in 1822 after his initial requests to Friedrich von Gentz for settling back in Vienna were unsuccessful 8 In 1824 the Foreign Office invited him to assume the instruction of candidates for the diplomatic service in constitutional and international law filling a vacancy left by Chateaubriand After the July Revolution of 1830 he went to Solothurn and from that time until the day of his death was a contributor to political journals including the Neue Preussische Zeitung and the Historisch Politische Blatter In 1833 he was elected to the Grand Council of Solothurn and exercised an important influence in ecclesiastical affairs which constituted the burning question of the hour clarification needed and held this post until 1837 In 1844 he was awarded the Order of St Sylvester by Pope Gregory XVI 9 Restauration EditEarlier work Edit In connection with his other work Haller had propounded and defended his political opinions as early as 1808 in his Handbuch der allgemeinen Staatenkunde des darauf begrundeten allgemeinen Rechts und der allgemeinen Staatsklugheit nach den Gesetzen der Natur This considered by some his most important work impelled Johannes von Muller to offer Haller the chair of constitutional law at the University of Gottingen In spite of the great honour involved in this offer he declined it The Handbuch itself was an extended version of his inaugural lecture Uber die Nothwendigkeit einer andern obersten Begrundung des allgemeinen Staatsrechtes published on November 2 1806 and delivered shortly after his return to Bern Two other essays would follow in 1807 the Uber den wahren Sinn des Naturgesetzes dass der Machtigere herrsche dealing with his doctrine of natural superiority as the basis for political authority and Uber die Domainen und Regalien covering the jura regalia sovereign rights of kings deriving from their ownership of the royal domains 10 By that point Haller s political doctrine had been fully formed Haller published three essays in Friedrich Schlegel s Concordia 1820 1823 and his various writings in journals and periodicals were collected in two volumes and published as Melanges de droit public et de haute politique 1839 Magnum opus Edit Haller s magnum opus however was the Restauration der Staats Wissenschaft oder Theorie des naturlich geselligen Zustandes der Chimare des kunstlich burgerlichen entgegengesetzt It was published in Winterthur in six volumes from 1816 to 1834 In this he uncompromisingly rejected the revolutionary conception of the State and developed a natural and juridical system of government arguing at the same time that a commonwealth can endure and prosper without being founded on the omnipotence of the state and official bureaucracy The first volume which appeared in 1816 contains his history and his rejection of the older political theories and also sets forth the general principles of his system of government In the succeeding volumes he shows how these principles apply to different forms of government in the second to monarchies in the third 1818 to military powers in the fourth 1820 and fifth 1834 to ecclesiastical states and in the sixth 1825 to republics It was written primarily to counteract Jean Jacques Rousseau s The Social Contract Moreover Haller s Digression on Slavery in the third volume made a deep impact on the Scottish historian Thomas Carlyle and surfaced again in his polemical Occasional Discourse on the Negro Question 11 The book in its entirety was translated into Italian part of it into French and an abridged version into Latin and Spanish All his later writings are influenced by the ideas here set forth and oppose vigorously the revolutionary tendencies of the times and the champions of liberalism in Church and State Haller s political views were heavily influenced by his long tenure as a Bernese public official a city state with dependent territorial possessions that did not officially call itself a republic until 1716 and which was governed by a patriciate of 236 families who were eligible for election in the grand council known as regimentsfahigen Geschlechter der Stadt Bern Direct taxation public debt and military conscription were virtually absent in 18th century Bern 12 Repudiating the abstract juridical conceptions of sovereignty and civil society Haller based political authority instead on a combination of personal power and acquired rights deriving from possession of property Unlike most theoreticians who posited the formation of a civil state which partially or completely negated the state of nature Haller posited an uninterrupted state of nature In the Handbuch of 1808 he defined the state as nothing more than a natural sociable relationship between free and servant which differs from other similar relationships only in the independence of its head He used the term sovereignty interchangeably with independence and perfect freedom defining it as a perfection or elevation of already existing private social relationships among extended households one that increased the means for these social bonds to exercise their already existing rights but which did not inherently confer any new ones Depending on whether the source of personal power was in a natural person or fictive person corporation the state would either be a monarchy or a republic In turn monarchies were subdivided into three principal ways of exercising personal power from land ownership patrimonial states from authority over a retinue of troops military states or from doctrinal and teaching authority over disciples and followers spiritual states a k a theocracies He was strongly critical of the influence of Roman law on European jurisprudence for what he saw as obscuring the social relationships that had emerged following the dissolution of the Roman Empire by falsely analogizing them to ones that properly pertain to republics only In his own words the Roman Empire and the code of law it bequeathed was in a monstrous state of incomplete usurpation which one could call neither monarchy nor republic which seemed to derive from both but no longer rested on any basis a state of affairs in which the forms and locutions of the republic had been preserved but where in fact there remained only an absolute despotism founded solely on military power vol I ch VII of the Restauration der Staatswissenschaft Commentary on Haller s work Edit The Swiss historian Bela Kapossy contextualizes Haller s thought by placing it in his Swiss background and cites his criticism of Roman law as anticipating the field of conceptual history 13 Kapossy quotes Haller on the substance of his critique Just as the citizens of Rome constituted a community Gemeinde a citizenry a genuine societas civilis all other forms of human association and relations too had to be called societas civilis or civil societies Soon all forms of states even principalities had to be called civitates or respublicas republics commonwealths the aggregate of serviceable people was called populum liberum a free people individual subjects who amongst themselves did not form any corporation and who were not in any particular way legally bound to one another were now called cives citizens the estates servicemen who were called into council and vassals were called comitia popular assemblies where the majority should carry the vote princely domains were called patrimonium populi public or state domains the treasure of an individual lord became an aerarium publicum private services owed to powerful and mighty lords were called munera publica public offices etc The term patrimonial state would later make its way into the sociology of Max Weber Haller also exerted a great influence on modern German jurisprudence and the debates over whether the constitutional form of the Holy Roman Empire could be said to constitute a modern state as recounted by Austrian medievalist Otto Brunner in his work Land and Lordship 1939 References Edit Bonacina Giovanni Anticipazioni della teoria della Restaurazione secondo Carl Ludwig von Haller Rivista Storica Italiana 122 2010 500 59 Missionen der Berner Regierung nach Genf 1782 Mailand Paris und Rastatt 1797 1798 Mittheilungen aus dem Nachlass des Herrn K L von Haller Berner Taschenbuch 1868 Aufzeichnungen Karl Ludwig von Hallers uber seine Jugendjahre 1768 1792 Berner Zeitschrift fur Geschichte und Heimatkunde vol 23 1961 Wyss Regula Stuber Martin 2012 Paternalism and Agricultural Reform The Economic Society of Bern in the Eighteenth Century Konig K G Karl Ludwig Von Haller Zubenannt der Restaurator Kritische Ueberschau Der Deutschen Gesetzgebung Und Rechtswissenschaft 3 1856 89 104 Accessed August 29 2021 http www jstor org stable 43125190 Historischer Verein des Kantons Bern Herausgeber Band 41 1951 1952 Heft 1 Haasbauer Adolphine Briefwechsel zwischen Johann Kaspar Lavater und Karl Ludwig von Haller aus den Jahren 1798 und 1799 Bischof Yenni und Karl Ludwig von Haller Freiburger Geschichtsblatter Band 55 1967 Gentz Haller Karl Ludwig von An Karl Ludwig von Haller Wien 14 Juni 1821 Archives de l Etat Fribourg Schweiz Fonds Haller K 92 2 1821 Historischer Verein des Kantons Solothurn Herausgeber Band 27 1954 Reinhard Ewald Die Resumes der Tagebucher des Restaurators Karl Ludwig von Haller Litterarisches Archiv der Akademie zu Bern vol 1 1806 Hans Fassler Une Suisse esclavagiste Voyage dans un pays au dessus de tout soupcon Preface de Doudou Diene Duboiris Paris 2007 pp 142 145 Altorfer Ong Stefan 2007 State building without taxation The political economy of government finance in the eighteenth century republic of Bern PhD thesis London School of Economics and Political Science United Kingdom Kapossy Bela Karl Ludwig von Haller s critique of liberal peace in Kapossy Bela et alii dir Commerce and Peace in the Enlightenment Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2017 p 244 271Sources EditLiedke Herbert R The German Romanticists and Carl Ludwig von Hallers Doctrines of European Restoration in The Journal of English and Germanic Philology 1958 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Karl Ludwig von Haller Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Further reading EditGuggisberg Kurt Carl Ludwig von Haller Frauenfeld Leipzig 1938 Kruska Alexander Die Polemik der Restauration Metapolemische und ideengeschichtliche Betrachtungen zum Initialband der Restaurationsschrift Karl Ludwig von Hallers Bielefeld 2019 transcript verlag de PDF Neumann Sigmund Die Stufen des Preussischen Konservatismus Emil Ebering 1930 Pfister Christoph Die Publizistik Karl Ludwig von Hallers in der Fruhzeit 1791 1815 Bern Herbert Lang Frankfurt M Peter Lang 1975 Reinhard Ewald Carl Ludwig von Haller Ein Lebensbild aus der Zeit der Restauration Koln 1915 Rommen Heinrich Albert The State in Catholic Thought B Herder Book Co 1945 Valjavec Fritz Die Entstehung der Politischen Stromungen in Deutschland 1770 1815 Verlag fur Geschichte und Politik 1951 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Karl Ludwig von Haller Works by or about Karl Ludwig von Haller at Internet Archive Commentary on vols 1 4 of Haller s Restoration of Political Science patrimonial and military states Commentary on vol 6 of Haller s Restoration of Political Science on republics English language Haller readings and critical commentary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Karl Ludwig von Haller amp oldid 1134482407, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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