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  1. Legal Scholar, Educator. Baron Hozumi Nobushige (穂積 陳重, 23 August 1855 –7 April 1926) was a Japanese statesman and jurist of the Meiji period . Hozumi was born in Uwajima Domain, Iyo Province (present-day Ehime Prefecture) as the second son to a family of kokugaku scholars.

  2. View PDF. Nobushige Hozumi (1855-1926) Rafael Domingo y Aiki Mauleón Muramatsu Juristas universales III (Marcial Pons, Madrid, 2004) 655-657. Primer japonés doctor en Derecho (Hogaku Hakushi) y padre del Código civil Meiji (1898), que él mismo calificó como “un fruto de la ciencia del derecho comparado” (The new Japanese civil Code ...

  3. Hozumi Nobushige (1855-1926) was a law scholar originally from Uwajima in Ehime prefecture. He contributed greatly to the development of the Japanese legal system in the late nineteenth and. early twentieth centuries. He married Utako (1863-1923), the oldest daughter of the industrialist.

  4. his theoretical ground, Nobushige Hozumi (1856-1925), a jurist, was interested in the family institution as it was actually at work, and conducted empirical studies of the Japanese system of retirement from household headship and the practices of ancestor worship (1891, 1901).

  5. 2 de nov. de 2009 · Hozumi, Nobushige, 1855-1926. Publication date. 1904. Topics. Law, Comparative law. Publisher. Tokyo : Printed by the Tokyo printing co., ltd. Collection. cornell; americana. Contributor. Cornell University Library. Language. English. The metadata below describe the original scanning.

  6. 27 de dic. de 2013 · Abstract. The problem of legal system began to draw the attention of the world legal field since 1884 when the famous Japanese jurist, Hozumi Nobushige had put forward his proposal that the world legal system should be divided into “Indian Legal Group”, “Chinese Legal Group”, “Islamic Legal Group”, “British Legal Group ...

  7. Hozumi Nobushige (穂積 陳重, 23 August 1856 –7 April 1926) was a Japanese statesman and legal expert in Meiji period. [1] Hozumi was appointed to the House of Peers in 1890. In 1915, he was ennobled with the title of danshaku ( baron) under the kazoku system.