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Journal Article

Citation

Karl S, Bachhiesl C. Arch. Kriminol. 2014; 234(1-2): 19-32.

Vernacular Title

Hans Gross als Archäologe. Zum Stellenwert der Archäologie in der "enzyklopädischen" Kriminologie.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Verlag Schmidt-Romhild)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

25122991

Abstract

In some cases, forensics and criminology have to cooperate with disciplines that usually are counted among the humanities, e.g. with archaeology. This article examines the significance of this cooperation for the criminological epistemology at the turn of the 19th century. These methodological considerations are illustrated by an example: When Hans Gross, who became the founder of the Austrian School of Criminology later, saw an unusually shaped hill near Feldbach, a town in southern Styria, he assumed this hill to be a burial mound and informed the responsible archaeological authorities immediately. Further investigations showed, however, that this hill was a natural formation. This is an early example for interdisciplinary cooperation, which proves that both in archaeology and in criminology a thorough inspection of the site is decisive for further scientific analysis of the topic of research.


Language: de

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