Goethe’s legal career did not unsuccessful

One of the interesting facts about Johann Wolfgang von Goethe is that his legal career was unsuccessful. He studied law at the University of Leipzig for three years (1765–1768). He soon realized that studying law was too dull for him, so he spent a lot of time attending poetry lectures by Christian Fürchtegott Gellert or visiting the Auerbachs Keller, Leipzig's most renowned bar. He published Annette, his first book of poems, under an assumed name in 1770. When he developed a fascination for Gotthold Ephraim Lessing and Christoph Martin Wieland, his great admiration for many current poets vanished.


He enrolled at the University of Strasbourg in the spring of 1770 to finish his legal education. The following year, Goethe earned a Licentia Docendi degree a level below a Ph.D. and, with help from her father's money, started a modest law practice in Frankfurt. Goethe began a modest legal practice and got an academic degree from the Lizenziat (Licentia docendi) in Frankfurt at the end of August 1771. Although he stated in his academic work that he wanted to make the law more compassionate, his inexperience caused him to act too violently in the early cases, which cost him many cases. This quickly put a stop to his legal career after just a few months.


He soon relocated to Darmstadt to start a writing career after selling his license. He quickly comes to the conclusion that the money he makes from writing and editing part-time is insufficient to support himself. He consequently reopened his Wetzlar law office in the spring of 1772.

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