Michał Pius Römer

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Rector Mykolas Romeris (second from the left siting) of University of Lithuania
Rector Mykolas Romeris (second from the left siting) of University of Lithuania
Plaque in memory of Mykolas Romeris on the house in Vilnius where he lived
Plaque in memory of Mykolas Romeris on the house in Vilnius where he lived

Michał Pius Römer, later used the Lithuanian form Mykolas Römeris (1880 in Bagdoniškis-1945 in Vilnius) was a Lithuanian lawyer, scientist and politician.

Römer was born in Lithuania into a Polonized family of Baltic-German (Livonian) origin. He was one of szlachta members loyal to the heritage of Grand Duchy of Lithuania, referred to as Krajowcy. He gave the first lecture on Lithuania in Paris in 1905, together with another Lithuanian activist, Tadas Ivanauskas.

Later Römer became a member of Piłsudski's Polish legions, but in 1920, he declined an offer to become the prime minister of the Republic of Central Lithuania, and chose instead to move to Kaunas, which had become the temporary capital of the recently re-established independent Republic of Lithuania.

He was a notable figure in the interwar period, and was a member of the Lithuanian Supreme Court (1921-1928), a professor at the University of Lithuania (in 1930 renamed to Vytautas Magnus University), Vilnius University, and the rector of the University of Lithuania for three terms (1927-1928, 1933-36 and 1936-1939). As an international lawyer, he represented Lithuania in 1932, at the Hague Tribunal, when the legality of Klaipėda directorate actions question arose, especially after the activity of Otto Böttcher in 1931, who, as stated Hague tribunal, had violated the statute of Klaipėda Region.

He wrote important works on Lithuanian history and also on the law, and is considered to be one of the most prominent Lithuanian jurists, the progenitor, first lector and one of the most prominent authors of interwar Lithuanian Constitutional Law. While his writings on the law were written in Lithuanian and his signature on documents and letters was Mykolas Römeris, (sometimes credited as Mykolas Rėmeris or Mykolas Riomeris), he continued to write his diary in Polish.

The Law University of Lithuania in Vilnius was renamed to the Mykolas Romeris University in 2004.

[edit] Publications


[edit] References

  • (English) Academical biography. Retrieved on 2007-10-02
  • (Polish) Solak, Zbigniew (2004). "Między Polską a Litwą. Życie i działalność Michała Römera". Kraków: Arcana. ISBN 83-89243-86-5. 
  • (Polish) Miknys, Rimantas. "Wilno i wileńszczyzna w koncepcjach Michała Römera i krajowców" ("Vilnius and its Area in the conception of Michał Römer and his compatriots"). 
  • (Polish) Solak, Zbigniew (1996). "Nie dokończona autobiografia Michała Römera". 
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