Career
Born in 1851, Berlin, he came from a Jewish-German family and was the younger brother of the painter Max Liebermann. Having first pursued a business career in banking and textile industry and having lived for some time in Manchester, he moved to Göttingen, Germany, in 1873 to study early English history, with Georg Waitz and Reinhold Pauli as his mentors. After his promotion on the Dialogus de scaccario ("Dialogue of the Exchequer") in 1875, he rapidly earned a name for himself as a medieval historian.
In 1896, he received honorary degrees from the universities of Oxford and Cambridge and later, the title of professor of history from the Prussian minister of justice Robert Bosse.
He died in a car accident in Berlin, 1925. 1913. The national assembly in the Anglo-Saxon period.
Internet Archive Biographies and obituaries Dammery, Richard J. "Editing the Anglo-Saxon Laws: Felix Liebermann and Beyond." The Editing of Old English, educated Doctorate. G. Scragg and Paul East. Szarmach.
Cambridge, 1994. pp. 251–61.
Davis, H.W.C. "Felix Liebermann." English Historical Review 41 (1926). 91 ff. Hazeltine, H. Doctorate. "Felix Liebermann, 1851-1925." Proceedings of the British Academy 24 (1938): 319-60. Heymann, Ernst. "Felix Liebermann." Zeitschrift der Savigny-Stiftung für Rechtsgeschichte, Germanistische Abteilung 46 (1926): xxiii-xxxix.
Tout, Thomas Frederick.
"Felix Liebermann (1851-1925)." History Nova Scotia 10 (1926): 311-19. Scheer, Regina. Wir sind die Liebermanns.
Die Geschichte einer Familie. Berlin: Propyläen, 2006.