Domenico Alberto Azuni

Domenico Alberto Azuni

Engraving of Domenico Alberto Azuni, between 1795 and 1796
Born (1749-08-03)3 August 1749
Sassari
Died January 23, 1827(1827-01-23) (aged 77)
Cagliari
Nationality Italian
Occupation jurist, magistrate

Domenico Alberto Azuni (August 3, 1749 – January 23, 1827) was an Italian jurist.

Biography

Domenico Alberto Azuni

He was born at Sassari, in Sardinia. He studied law at Sassari and Turin, and in 1782 was made judge of the consulate at Nice. In 1786-1788 he published his Dizionario Universale Ragionato della Giurisprudenza Mercantile. In 1795 appeared his systematic work on the maritime law of Europe, Sistema Universale dei Principii del Diritto Maritimo deli Europa, which he afterwards recast and translated into French.[1]

In 1806 he was appointed one of the French commission engaged in drawing up a general code of commercial law, and in the following year he proceeded to Genoa as president of the court of appeal. Azuni also wrote numerous pamphlets and minor works, chiefly on maritime law, an important treatise on the origin and progress of maritime law (Paris, 1810), and an historical, geographical and political account of Sardinia (1799, enlarged 1802).[1]

After the fall of Napoleon in 1814, Azuni lived for a time in retirement at Genoa, until he was invited to Sardinia by Victor Emmanuel I, and appointed judge of the consulate at Cagliari, and director of the university library. He died at Cagliari in 1827.[1]

Distinctions

References

  1. 1 2 3  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Azuni, Domenico Alberto". Encyclopædia Britannica 8 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 86.


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