Contains above all :Photos and glass plates of South West Africa, before 1915;Documentation of a nurse in Africa;East Africa;English East Africa;Keetmanshoop;Lazarett Keetmanshoop;Carnot;Lazarett;Sleep laboratory;1 Letter of the nurse
1.Weltkrieg
36 Archival description results for 1.Weltkrieg
History of the Inventory Designer: 24.07.1871 - 10.09.1950, Vice Admiral Description of the Inventory: Memoirs until 1918; private correspondence as well as documents and records mainly from East Asia and Africa (1889-1914); documents on warfare in the Mediterranean area during the First World War; lectures and elaborations on marine history (1910-1920). Citation style: BArch, N 284/...
Contains: Statements on All-German Chauvinism before the First World War
Two fiches.
Leipziger MissionswerkContains above all: Inquiries and mailings from associations and institutions Darin: sent publications (15 Months Austro-Hungarian War Aid in Württemberg, 1916; Modern Therapy and War Wounded, 1916; Zur Tuberkulose-Bekämpf 1914, 1914; W. Liese, Die katholischen Orden Deutschlands und der Völkerkrieg 1914/15, 1915; Report of the German Association for Medical Dogs, 1915; Adolf Bachrach, Aus dem Rechtsleben im Kriege, 1914; Kriegskonterbande und Überseeische Rohstoffe, 1914; Edward L., 1914. Blackshear, An American Proposal for an Inter-state Federation of the States of Europe into the United States of Europe (...), 1914; Annual Report of the Blind Asylum of Schwäbisch Gmünd, 1914); sent manuscript on the establishment of a trading company in D e u t s c h - O s t a f r i k a..
Contains: - In the Federal Foreign Office, colonial dept, later Imperial Colonial Office (26 p.); - As Imperial Judge in German New Guinea (13 p.); - First stay in Samoa (16 p.); - Second stay in Samoa (12 p.); - (unknown author:) "Dr. Schnees Samoa years" (14 p.)); - Back at the Federal Foreign Office, Kolonial-Abt (9 p.); - Colonial Advisory Council at the Embassy in London (21 p.); - Lecture by the South Pole researcher Sir Ernest Shackleton for Wilhelm II at Villa Dernburg (3 p.)); - As Governor in German East Africa (10 p.); - Characterization of the Great Admiral of Tirpitz (4 p.); - Speech of the Minister of National Defence, Smuts, in the House of Representatives in Cape Town on September 10, 1914 (6 p.); - Scout Report of the Goanese and Government employee Ribeiro on his journey from German East Africa to Germany during the war (45 p.).); - Speech by the Governor on the occasion of Wilhelm II's birthday to officers and crews of the garrison thong (2 p.); - Excerpts from the report of the government adviser, Government Building Councillor Brandes, on the activities of the civil administration during the war in German East Africa (p. 14).); - Return from East Africa (18 p.); - My relationship with Lettow-Vorbeck (46 p.); - Prince Henry of the Netherlands (1 p.); - General Groener's statements on leading personalities of the First World War. World War II (8 p.); - State Secretary Solf on Baron von Eckardtstein, former Counsellor of the Embassy in London (3 p.); - Talk with Foreign Minister Simons (5 p.); - Schnee on Wirth, Reich Minister for Reconstruction (5 p.); - Rosen, Reich Minister of Foreign Affairs (2 p.); - Admiral v. Truppel, Governor of Kiautschou (2 p.); - Violations of international law during the war in German East Africa (2 p.).
Schnee, HeinrichContains among other things: Support from the DEKA. - Financing. - Tasks. - Organization. - Order of the EO on a contribution in church prayer for 15 June 1913 on the occasion of the Emperor's 25th anniversary of government, Apr. 1913 - Distribution of the national donation for the benefit of the missions in the German colonies and protectorates, July - Dec. 1913 - Report by Mirbt on the spiritual care of D e u t s c h - O s t a f r i k a (transcript), Dec. 1913 - Stiftung Deutsche Evangelische Missionshilfe. - 1913 - 1921 - Performed his duties during the 1st World War and in the post-war period. - Protection of German missions in enemy countries and colonies, 1915 - 1921; prints: Berlin mission reports. Double 8/9, Aug - Sep 1919 - East Asia - Yearbook. An annual report of the General Evangelical-Protestant Missionary Society, 1921.
UntitledContains also: Prepared tree bark of the Myombo tree from D e u t s c h - O s t a f r i k a as replacement for gauze (explanation with sample)
History of the Inventory Designer: 01.11.1858 - 15.02.1928, General of the Infantry Inventory description: Documents from the entire period of service, e.g. in colonial service in Africa (1889, 1894), as military attaché¿ in Constantinople (1897-1901), about the participation in the Sudan campaign of Lord Kitchener (1896-1898) on the English-Turkish side, in the Thessalian War (1897) on the Greek side, from the 1st World War as commander of the 3rd Reserve Division and commander general of the 1st and 4th Reserve Corps; manuscript of the memoirs. Citation style: BArch, N 227/...
Morgen, Kurt vonPhotographer: Blumer. Phototype: Photo. Format: 10,8 X 7,7. Description: Wagon with ox team, 2 Europeans, 1 of them in the foreground (uniform and rifle), 4 Africans, plantation i. Himtergrund. Remark: Plate damaged and glued. Reference: See enlargement on cardboard I (estate of Leonhard Blumer) (29,8 X 23,8) "Our Miss. Church in Aruscha - Station - Tower 15m built in the 1st World War by an Indian master builder. I made my own bricks. Two bells. Later corrugated iron roofing, Aruscha East Africa. Arnold's baptism at 1919 Whitsun, his youngest brother, died as Dr. med. 1943 in Marburg/Lahn. Cf. album 19, no. 232 (10,7 X 8,2) "Arnolds Christening Miss. Aruscha 8 June 1919". Cf. estate Leonhard Blumer, no. 694 (9.3 X 8.2) (pale, left corner torn out and part of the photo cut off) "Our little church with the baptismal font Arnold, Otto, Gothf?.. the church and baptismal guests June 8, 1919".
Leipziger MissionswerkHistory of the Inventor: During the 1st World War, occupied Belgium was subordinated to a governor general. His chief of the general staff had to secure the area militarily; next to him stood a chief of the civil administration. Inventory description: By cabinet order of 23.8.1914 the occupied Belgium was subordinated to a general government. His chief of the general staff had to secure the area militarily; next to him stood a chief of the civil administration. From 1915 an independent "Political Department of the General Governor in Belgium" was subordinated to the civil administration, to which the following tasks were assigned: 1. diplomacy, 2. domestic politics, 3. Belgian-American food factory, 4. Belgian archives, 5. press. Characterization of content: The records of the Political Department include records and files of Schwertfeger and his collaborators Professor Dr. Karl Spannagel and Professor Dr. Alfred Doren. Schwertfeger's handfiles consist mainly of copies of the Belgian diplomatic reports, from which Schwertfeger published the file "Zur europäischen Politik 1897-1914" in 1919. Among other things, these contain material on Belgian economic interests in Africa, Asia and Latin America. The civil administration has handed down minutes of meetings, studies, memorandums and other documents on economics, transport and banking. Pre-archival order: The files of the Political Department of the Governor General in Belgium have been completely lost. Some files from the archive department of the Political Affairs Department have been transferred to the Federal Archives as part of the estate of their head, the then Colonel Bernhard Schwertfeger. Some remains of the civil administration have been preserved. In 1965, the Rehse Collection, which had been transferred from the Library of Congress in Washington to the Federal Archives, brought further remains of written documents into the military archives. In 1994, a few fragments of files from the former military archives of the GDR were added to the collection. Scope, explanation: 239 AE Citation method: BArch, PH 30-I/...
Iringa mission of the Scottish Church in 1925; mission work in the Uhehe area before World War I; Tanganyika subcommittee of the Commission for World Mission 1952; report on the visit of the former mission fields in Tanganyika 1952; report on the visit of Rev. Harald von Sicard in Tanganyika 1944; Statistics of the Swedish Mission in the area of the Lutheran Church South Tanzania 1952-1954; Letter course of Dr. A. L. Warnshius to Dr. W. A. Visser "t Hooft 1942
Berlin Missionary SocietyProtocols and correspondence on issues such as:; customs privileges; education; arbitrariness of colonial officials; whereabouts of mission property after World War I; internment and exchange of prisoners of war; overview of activities, assets and members of the mission in Southwest Africa and New Guinea, 1904; official stenographer. Report on speeches on the dissolution of the Reichstag and colonial politics, 47 p., Dr., 1907; Die deutsche Flagge im Stille Ozean, 25 p. m. Map, Dr., 1915
Rhenish Missionary SocietyFederal Archives, BArch, BILD 105
Contains: Correspondence of Ernst II with snow and with the Commissioner and Military Inspector of Voluntary Nursing Prince Hermann von Hatzfeldt-Trachenberg.
Report by E. Källner, report by R. Schneider (former farmer and master carpenter) about destroyed stations, reports of the missionaries Heil, Tramp, Maaß, Herrmann and Hübner
Berlin Missionary SocietyDigital copies of press articles on the subject
History of the Inventory Designer: Under the name Rechnungshof des Norddeutschen Bund (Court of Audit of the North German Confederation), the Prussian Chamber of Upper Legislation took control of the budget of the German Reich for the financial years 1867-1869 for the first time, renaming the authority the Rechnungshof des Deutschen Reiches (Court of Audit of the German Reich). In addition to controlling the Reich's budget, the Oberrechnungskammer, in its function as Court of Audit, was responsible for auditing the budget of Alsace-Lorraine (1874-1919) and for controlling the budget of the protectorate (since 1892/95 Africa, since 1898 all protectorates). The Court of Audit (Rechungshof, RH) was chaired by the Chief President of the Chamber of Appeal; its members were appointed by the Emperor at the suggestion of the Federal Council. The task of auditing the accounts of the Reich's budget had to be transferred to the Upper Chamber of Accounts by repeated individual legislation, usually on an annual basis. Article 86 p. 2 of the Weimar Constitution ("The audit of accounts is regulated by the Reich Law") established the audit of accounts for the Reich Administration under constitutional law. The Reich Budget Code of 31.12.1922 accordingly provided for the fundamental audit of the Reich budget by the Court of Audit of the German Reich (legalization of the audit of the "economic efficiency of the administration"). Thus, for the first time, auditing was fixed as a right of the state; at the same time, the establishment of the Court of Audit as an independent Reich authority independent of the Reich government was regulated. The Imperial Budget Code determined - as an important objective of the Court of Audit after examination of the submitted annual accounts - to prepare memoranda on the most important audit results and to submit proposals to the Imperial Government for the amendment and interpretation of laws in order to remedy identified deficiencies in the administration. The Court of Audit of the Weimar Republic represented a college of President, Directors and Councillors, which decided all fundamental matters by majority vote in the Plenary Assembly. In order to decide on matters that were limited in scope and only concerned individual administrative areas, the Reich Budget Code granted the formation of senates consisting of at least 3 members. In addition, the expert activity could be carried out at the request of the Reich Ministers, the Reich Parliament and the Reich Council; in addition, companies with their own legal personality could also be audited by the Court of Audit. The President and the other members of the Court of Audit were now appointed by the President of the Reich, countersigned by the Reich Minister of Finance. The President of the Court of Audit was also responsible for the management of the Prussian Chamber of Accounts. From October 1, 1922, however, he no longer headed the Prussian but the Reichsbehörde full-time. Presidents of the Court of Audit were: 1869-1890: Karl Ewald von Stünzner 1890-1898: Arthur Paul Ferdinand von Wolff 1898-1914: Eduard Ludwig Karl von Magdeburg 1914-1922: Ernst Holz 1922-1938 Friedrich Ernst Moritz Saemisch 1938-1945 Heinrich Müller 1922 was also appointed Reichssparkommissara with the task, together with the Reich Minister of Finance, of examining the entire budget and drawing up expert opinions on it. He was supported by the savings committee of the Reichstag. In December 1933 this office was closed again and the tasks were transferred to the new presidential department of the Court of Audit. As the supreme audit and control authority, the Court of Audit was responsible for supervising the entire Reich budget by examining the budget accounts, including the unscheduled income and expenditure of all Reich administrations, the accounts for the entire non-monetary property of the Reich as well as the books and accounting documents of the enterprises of the Reich. Since the end of the First World War, the Court of Audit has also had to increasingly control the use of Reich funds, which flowed into the private economy in the form of loans, credits, guarantees, subsidies and participations, by including both important business enterprises and a rich country of smaller enterprises in its audit area. The internal structure of the RH remained essentially unchanged throughout its existence. It was divided into the presidential department and a changing number of audit departments, to which the authorities and companies to be audited were allocated according to objective criteria. For the collection and cartographic indexing of laws, ordinances, administrative provisions, official regulations and other documents required for auditing the accounts, a news agency was attached to the Presidential Department, which from 1937 was known as the "Archive". In 1933 the Court of Audit was confirmed as an independent supreme Reich authority vis-à-vis the Reich government, but the previous procedure of majority decisions was abolished and the President was largely granted authority to issue directives to all organs of the Court of Audit. With the exception of the Wehrmacht control and the use audit of state subsidies to the NSDAP, the Court was initially able to perform its duties within the framework of financial control to the full extent even after 1933. In 1934, the office of the Reich Savings Commissioner, who was responsible for advising the Reich government on all matters relating to budget management and the appropriate design, simplification and cost reduction of the administration, was dissolved and its most important functions transferred to an office of the Presidential Department of the Court of Audit. Also from 1934, the Act on the Maintenance and Increase of Purchasing Power (Gesetz zur Erhaltung und Hebung der Kaufkraft) made it possible to extend the jurisdiction of the Court of Audit to include the auditing of corporations, institutions and other legal entities under public law (finally laid down by law in the Reich Auditing Ordinance of 30 March 1938). In the course of the imperial reform efforts of the Third Reich, the "Law on the Budgetary Management, Accounting and Auditing of the Länder and on the Fourth Amendment to the Reich Budget Code" of 17 June 1936 brought important changes: with the beginning of the 1936 accounting year, the auditing of the budget and economic management of the Länder was transferred to the Technical University. For this purpose, based on the already existing State Audit Offices, the Regional Court set up in 1937 foreign departments responsible for one or more Länder, initially in Hamburg, Karlsruhe, Leipzig (from 1940 Dresden) and Munich. Later Vienna (1939), Poznan (1942) and Metz (1942) were added. These external departments of the Court of Audit were assigned "accounting offices" by the Länder as preliminary audit offices in accordance with the "Vorprüfordnung für die Länder" of 9 April 1937. After 1938, especially during the war, the focus of the audit activities of the Court of Audit shifted: on the one hand, the audit of the administrations in the so-called "Old Empire" was reduced, on the other hand, however, the jurisdiction of the Court of Audit was extended to all German administrations in the occupied territories and also exercised there to a large extent. Only the Generalgouvernement and the autonomous protectorate government had their own examination offices. . Inventory description: Inventory history The majority of the RH's registry, which is already in the Reichsarchiv, was transferred to the former Central State Archives of the GDR after the war. At the end of the war, a further part of the existing records was still kept in the RH buildings in Potsdam and Berlin and was archived after 1946. The losses caused by the Allied air raid on Potsdam in April 1945 amount to approx. 9 running metres. Since the Prussian Oberrechungskammer took over the examination of Reichaufgabe für Kunst, Wissenschaft, kirchliche Angelegenheiten und Forstwirtschaft in 1934 (the Prussian Oberrechungskammer already had corresponding departments for these areas), these records - as well as the previous files of the Court of Audit in the holdings of Rep. 138 of the Geheimes Staatsarchiv, Stiftung prußischer Kulturbesitz. Archival evaluation and processing The registries of the Court of Audit distinguished three groups of files according to the tasks of the authority, which are also reflected in the classification: - General files - Technical files with special audit documents and instructions - Audit files for the actual audit negotiations. In this finding aid book, both the relevant files of the tradition kept until 1990 in the Central State Archives as fonds R 2301 and the files kept in the Federal Archives as fonds R 47 are recorded. Although the necessary standardisation of individual development information was achieved by merging the two parts of the transmission, a complete re-drawing did not take place. The general files were kept according to a uniform file plan and are summarised at the beginning of the inventory. The specialist and examination files are arranged according to the most recently valid business distribution plan. In addition, the files of the "archive" are listed separately as a relatively independent structural part with various special registries. The creation of archival file titles, volume sequences and series was usually required when the files were recorded; the creation of identical titles was unavoidable due to the specific nature of the structure. Characterisation of content: The Court of Audit's transmission more or less comprehensively covers the authority's entire spectrum of tasks with the following focal points: - Organisational, legal, administrative and operational matters - Court of Audit and Reich Savings Commissioner - Civil servant duties and rights - Affairs of employees and workers - Budget, cash, accounting and auditing - Specialist and audit files on individual authorities and companies such as the Reich Ministry of Finance, the Reich Ministry of Labor, the Reich Ministry of the Interior, the Reich Office for Regional Planning, the Reich Nourishment State, Reich offices and main associations, Vereinigte Industrieunternehmungen AG und Untergesellschaften (VIAG), Kleinbahnunternehmen und Wohnungsbauunternehmen, Hauptversorgungs- und Versorgungsämter sowie Wehrmachttversorgungsämter - Collection of administrative reports, statutes and other printed matter from local and district administrations (locations A-Z) - Budgets and budget accounts of the Länder and municipal institutions - Gesetzsammelmappen In addition, 3089 personnel files are part of the inventory. , citation style: BArch, R 2301/...
Leaflets, pamphlets, invitations, programmes, commemorative publications, newspapers, articles, disputes, memoranda, speeches, occasional poems - each unique - about Cologne, its past and history. I. Imperial city; Icewalk from 1784, funeral service for Emperor Leopold II, Imperial Post Office in Cologne, pamphlet of the evangelicals against mayor and council in Cologne (Wetzlar 1715), municipal lottery, occasional poems for weddings, individual personalities (Jan von Werth, Frhr. Theodor Steffan von Neuhoff); II. Time of the French occupation 1794-1815: opening of the Protestant church (1802), educational affairs (Collége de Cologne, Université), Heshuisian inheritance, secularization, Peace of Tilsit, election of the department 1804; assignates, dentists, liberation wars; successor society of the society at Wirz, Neumarkt (1813); III. Prussian period (1815-1945): Visit of members of the Prussian royal house, imperial birthday celebrations, cathedral, cathedral building, cathedral completion celebration 1880, cathedral building association; Hohenzollern bridge, southern bridge, monument to Friedrich Wilhelm III, Laying of the foundation stone of the Rhine. Appellhofs (1824), building festival for the town hall (1913), town hall, provost's house at St. Maria ad Gradus; suburbs (terrain in Marienburg, parish St. Marien, Kalk: Fabriken, Arbeiter, 1903); travel brochures, city maps, articles on Cologne for tourism; commemorative and public holidays; revolution 1848; parties, elections (centre, liberal parties, social democratic party); Reichstag elections, city elections; city announcements/publications, decrees concerning the city of Cologne. Debt management (1824), rules of procedure of the city council, census, distribution of business in the administration; announcements of the news office; general comptoir or table calendar 1814-1829 (incomplete); programmes of the Konzertgesellschaft Köln and the Gürzenich concerts (1849-1933); programmes of the chamber music concerts (1897-1914); programmes of the Musikalische Gesellschaft (1900-1916), music festivals, etc. Lower Rhine Music Festivals (1844-1910); Cologne Theater Almanach (1904-1908), City Theater, Schauspielhaus, including program booklets and leaflets; Theater Millowitsch; musical performances at celebrations and festivals, concert programs; Cologne Arts and Crafts Association (Annual Report 1912); Rheinisch-Westfälisches Wirtschaftsarchiv: Statutes, Rules of Procedure 1907; Exhibitions, etc. Art in Cologne private possession (1916), Carstan's Panoptikum (1888), German Art Exhibition, Cologne 1906, Deutsche Werkbund-Ausstellung 1914, Exhibition for War Welfare Cologne 1916; Handelshochschule Köln; university courses in Brussels (1918); Women's university studies for social professions (1916/17); music conservatory (1913); grammar schools, further education schools, elementary schools, weaving school in Mülheim, Waldschulhof Brück (1917), elementary school teachers' seminar; scientific conferences: 43. Meeting of German Philologists and Schoolmen 1895, IX. Annual meeting of the Association of Bathing Professionals 1910, 12th Association Day of the Association of German Professional Fire Brigades 1912; occasional poems for family celebrations, weddings; associations; programmes, membership cards, diplomas, statutes of health insurance funds and death funds; Catholic Church: associations, parishes, saints and patrons; Protestant Church: religious service order or Death ceremonies for the chief president Count Solms-Laubach (1822), for Moritz Bölling (1824); inauguration of the new synagogue, Glockengasse (1861); military: regimental celebrations, forbidden streets and restaurants (before 1914); memorandums about the garrison Cologne (1818); food supply in the First World War: food stamps, bread and commodity books, ration coupons and forms, etc.a. for coal purchasing; Einkaufs-Gesellschaft Rhein-Mosel m. b. H.Economy: Stadtsparkasse, cattle market in Cologne, stock exchange, beer price increase 1911; individual commercial enterprises, commercial and business buildings, hotels: brochures, letterheads, advertising cards and leaflets, price lists, statutes; shipping: Rhine shipping regulations, timetables, price lists, memorandums; main post office building, inauguration 1893; Rheinische Eisenbahn, Köln-Gießener Eisenbahn; German-French War 1870/71; First World War, etc.a. Leaflets, war loans, field letters, war poems; cruisers "Cologne"; natural disasters: Rhine floods, railway accident in Mülheim in 1910, hurricanes; social affairs: charity fair, asylum for male homeless people, possibly home for working young girls, invalidity and old-age insurance; St. Marien-Hospital; Sports: clubs, sports facilities, gymnastics festivals; Carnival: programs, carnival newspapers, - songs, - poems; celebrations, ceremonies for imperial birthdays, enthronements of archbishops, celebrations of other personalities; IV. Weimar Republic and National Socialism: floods; churches, treasure chambers; cathedral; individual buildings, monuments, including the old town, town hall, Gürzenich, Haus zum großen Rosendal, Mühlengasse; Revolution 1918: workers' and soldiers' council; gifts, honorary citizenship to NS greats; hanged forced laborers; bank robber Gebrüder Heidger (1928); municipal and other official publications concerning the Weimar Republic and National Socialism. Luftschutz, NSRechtsbetreuungsstelle; Newsletter of the Welfare Office 1937, 1938; Kameradschaftsdienst der Verwaltung für Wirtschaftsfürsorge, Jugendpflege und Sport 1940, 1943, 1944; Müllabfuhr und Müllverwertungsanstalt, Wirtschaftspolitik, Industrieansiedlung, Eingemeindung von Worringen, Erweiterung des Stadtgebiets; political parties: Advertising flyers for elections, pins, badges of DNVP, NSDAP, SPD, centre; camouflage letters of the KPD; appeals, rallies of various political groups, including the Reich Committee for the German Referendum (against the Young Plan, 1929), Reich Presidential Election, referendum in the Saar region, Working Committee of German Associations (against the Treaty of Versailles); Municipal Stages: Periodical "Die Tribüne", 1929-1940, annual reports 1939-1944, programme and cast sheets for performances in the opera house and the Schauspielhaus, also in the Kammerspiele; Lower Rhine music festivals; galleries (Dr. Becker, Goyert), Kölnischer Kunstverein: Invitations to exhibitions (1934-1938), circulars to members; art auctions at Fa. Math. Lempertz (1925-1931); music performances, concerts: Kölner Männer-Gesang-Verein, municipal orchestra, concerts of young artists, Concert Society Cologne; Millennium Exhibition 1925; museums: Wallraf-Richartz-Museum, Rautenstrauch-Joest-Museum, Kunstgewerbemuseum (among others monuments of old Russian painting, 1929), Schnütgen-Museum, art exhibitions, among others. Arno Breker (NSDAP-Gaupropaganda-Amt Gau Köln-Aachen), exhibition of works by West German artists (Deutsche Arbeitsfront), Richard Seewald, Deutscher Künstlerbund, Ausstellungsgemeinschaft Kölner Maler; universities, including the University of Cologne (lecture timetables, new building, anniversary 1938), Hochschule für Musik bzw. Conservatory of Music in Cologne; Reich activity reports of the foreign office of the lecturers of the German universities and colleges (1939-1942); Lower Rhine music festivals; scientific and cultural institutions and events and events in the region.a. Petrarca-Haus, German-Italian Cultural Institute, Volksbildungsstätte Köln, German-Dutch Institute, Cologne Meisterschule, Vereinigung für rechts- und staatswissenschaftliche Fortbildung in Köln, Austrian Weeks, Kampfbund für deutsche Kultur e.V.Conferences (Westdeutscher Archivtag 1939, Deutsche Anthropologische Gesellschaft 1927, Rheinische Siedlungstage 1925, Conference for Monument Conservation and Cultural Heritage Protection, Grenzland-Kundgebung der Beamten der Westmark, Cologne 1933, Internationaler Brieftauben-Züchter- Kongress (IBRA) 1939; Schools: Invitations, Testimonials Concerning the German Anthropological Society 1927, Rheinische Siedlungstage 1925, Conference for the Preservation of Monuments and Cultural Heritage, Borderland Demonstration of the Officials of the Westmark, Cologne 1933, Internationaler Brieftauben-Züchter-Kongreß (IBRA) 1939; Schools: Invitations, Testimonials Concerning the German Anthropological Society 1927, Rheinische Siedlungstagestage 1925, Conference for the Preservation of Monuments and Cultural Heritage, Borderland Demonstration of the Officials of the Westmark, Cologne 1933, International Brieftauben Congress (IBRA) 1939) Elementary schools, vocational schools, grammar schools; Sports: Vaterländische Festspiele 1924, Zweckverband für Leibesübungen Groß-Köln, 14th German Gymnastics Festival 1928, II German Fighting Games 1926, Leichtathletik-Welt- und Länderkämpfe, Westdeutscher Spielverband, Hockey-Damen-Länderspiel Deutschland- Australien 1930, Excelsior-Club Köln e.V., XII. Bannerspiele der weiblichen Jugend der Rheinprovinz 1926; Catholic Church (official announcements and publications, e.g. Kirchlicher Anzeiger für die Erzdiözese Köln; pamphlets; programme, prayer slips); British occupation, French colonial troops in the Rhineland, identity cards, passports; British World War I pamphlets; Liberation celebration in Cologne 1926; Second World War: appeals, leaflets concerning the Second World War; information leaflets concerning the Second World War: "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution". Air raids, defence, low-flying combat, darkening, etc.; newspaper articles about air raids on Cologne; advertising: leaflets, leaflets of the advertising office, the Cologne Week publishing house and the Cologne Tourist Association for Cologne, including the surrounding area and the Rhine Valley; invitations, menus to receptions and meals of the Lord Mayor Adenauer (1927-1929); pay slips, work certificates, work books of Cologne companies; Cologne Trade Fair: Programmes, brochures, adhesive stamps, catalogues for trade fairs and exhibitions (1924-1933); food stamps and cards for World War I; announcements; clothing cards, basic cards for normal consumers for World War II; vouchers for the city of Cologne (emergency money) from 1920-1923, anniversary vouchers for Gewerbebank eGmbH Köln-Mülheim, also for Dellbrücker Volksbank eGmbH; savings banks: Annual reports of the Sparkasse der Hansestadt Köln; documents, savings books of the Spar- und Darlehnskasse Köln-Dünnwald, the Kreissparkasse des Landkreises Köln, Bergheim und Mülheim, also the branch Köln-Worringen, the Bank des Rheinischen Bankverein/Rheinischen Bauernbank; Köln-Bonner-Eisenbahnen: Annual reports, balance sheets (1939-1941); trams: Annual Report, Annual Report (1939, 1940), Ticket; Köln-Frechen-Benzelrather Eisenbahn: Tariffs; Shipping: Preussisch-Rheinische Dampfschiffahrts-Gesellschaft zu Köln, Dampfschiffahrtsgesellschaft für den Nieder- und Mittelrhein zu Düsseldorf (Annual Reports 1938-1940), Köln- Düsseldorfer Rheindampfschiffahrt, Weber-Schiff (Timetables); Kraftverkehr Wupper-Sieg AG, Wipperfürth (Annual Reports 1939, 1940, Advertising Brochure 1937); Advertising brochure of the Airport Administration Cologne (1929); Individual Companies: House announcements, advertising leaflets, cards, brochures, adhesive stamps, receipts from industrial companies (Ford Motor Company AG, Glanzstoff- Courtaulds GmbH, Herbig-Haarhaus, department stores). Department store Carl Peters, insurance companies, newspapers, publishing houses, bookstores, craft businesses, shops (tobacco shops); Cologne bridges (Mülheimer bridge), post office, restaurants, hotels; invitations to festivals, events, anniversaries of associations, programmes; professional associations; cooperatives (Cologne-Lindenthal cooperative savings and building association (1930-1938); social affairs: Cologne emergency aid, housing assistance, sending of children (mostly official printed matter); collecting cards from Cologne and other companies, above all from the food and luxury food industries, such as coffee and tobacco companies, etc.a. the companies Haus Neuerburg, Himmelreich Kaffee, Stollwerk AG, König
Contains among other things: Reports by German prisoners of war in Dahomey, 1914- 1915 Report by Dr. W. Leuze on his experiences as a prisoner of war in Africa and Europe, 1916
Letters from Nitsch to Methodists and I.M.R. about a new beginning after World War I
Untitled167 sheets, Contains: Marriages March 1869 - March 1921 (with name index) Baptisms February 1869 - November 1920 (with name index) Dead January 1869 - September 1920 (with name index) Communions March 1869 - March 1913 (only statistical data, no names) - Military Community - Retired Officers Prussian Army (from 1806/07): Army Division: Army Inspection No. 1 Gdansk: Army Corps No. 1 Königsberg/ East Prussia: - Füsilier Regiment No. 1 Königsberg/ East Prussia: - Füsilier Regiment No. 1 Königsberg/ East Prussia: - Füsilier Regiment No. 1 Königsberg/ East Prussia: - Füsilier Regiment No. 1 Königsberg/ East Prussia: - Füsilier Regiment No. 1 Königsberg/ East Prussia: - Füsilier Regiment No. 1 Königsberg/ East Prussia: - Füsilier Regiment No. 1 Königsberg/ East Prussia 33 (East Prussian) Count Roon, 1892 Army Corps No. 17 Gdansk: - 1st Life Hussar Regiment No. 1, 1882 Army Inspection No. 2 Berlin: Guard Corps Berlin: - Guard Fuesilier Regiment, 1916 - Training Infantry Regiment Schubin, 1917 Army Inspection No. 3 Hanover: Army Corps No. 9 Hamburg-Altona: - Infantry Regiment No. 84 (Schleswigsches) von Manstein, 1916 Army Inspection No. 4 Munich: Army Corps No. 3 Berlin: - Landwehr-Bezirkskommando Crossen, 1886 - Grenadier-Regiment No. 12 (2nd Brandenburg) Prince Carl of Prussia, 1869 - 1880, 1919 - Füsilier-Regiment No. 35 (Brandenburg) Prince Heinrich of Prussia, 1916 - Infanterie-Regiment No. 48 (5th Brandenburg) von Stülpnagel in Küstrin, 1919 - Infanterie-Regiment No. 52 (6th Brandenburg) Brandenburgisches) of Alvensleben, 1881 - 1920 - Infantry Regiment No. 52 (6. Brandenburgisches) of Alvensleben, Replacement Battalion, 1917 - 1918 - Infantry Regiment No. 64 (8. Brandenburgisches) Prince Friedrich Karl of Prussia, 1893, 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 18 (2. Brandenburgisches) General Field Commander, 1919 - District Command Crossen, 1872 - 1919 Army Corps No. 3 (Bavarian) Nuremberg: Chevauleges Regiment No. 6 Prince Albrecht of Prussia in Bayreuth, 1915 Army Inspection No. 5 Karlsruhe: Army Corps No. 8 Koblenz: - Infantry Regiment No. 28 (2nd Rheinisches) of Groeben, 1914 Army Inspection No. 8 Berlin: Army Corps No. 2 Stettin: - Infantry Regiment No. 49 (6th Pommersches), 1871 - Sanitäts-Kompanie No. 3, 1916 Army Corps No. 5 Posen: - Ulan Regiment No. 10 (Posensches) Prince August of Württemberg, 1916 - Infantry Regiment No. 58 (3rd Posensches), Machine Gun Company No. 3, 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 5 (1st Lower Silesian) of Podbielski, 1918 Army Corps No. 6 Breslau: - Grenadier Regiment No. 10 (1st Silesian) King Friedrich Wilhelm II, 1901 - 1907 - Grenadier Regiment No. 11 (2nd Silesian) King Frederick III, 1907 - Pioneer Battalion No. 6 (Silesian), 1916 Other Army: - Field Artillery Brigade No. 38 Erfurt, 1907 - Landwehr Regiment No. 12 (2nd Brandenburg), 1869 - 1870 - Schutztruppe für Deutsch-Ostafrika, 1906 Landwehr Regiment No. 57, 1871 Troops 1st World War: - Labour Battalion No. 26 Goslar, 1916 - Army Telephone Department No. 18, 1917 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 43, 1917 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 26 Goslar, 1916 - Army Telephone Department No. 18, 1917 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 43, 1917 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 18, 1917 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 43, 1917 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 18, 1917 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 43, 1917 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 18, 1917 102, 1917 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 142, 1917 - Replacement Pioneer Battalion No. 3, 1917 - Stage Medical Depot No. 15, 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 283, 1918 - Telephone Department No. 31, 1917 - Telephone Department No. 4051, 1917 - Flieger-Ersatz-Abteilung Nr. 1 Altenburg, 1918 - Guard-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 7, 1918 - Guard-Train-Ersatz-Abteilung, 1915 - Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 426, 1918 - Landsturm-Bataillon Nr. 21, 1918 - Landstorm Battalion Brandenburg/Havel, 1916 - Landstorm Battalion Guben (III/25), 1916 - 1919 - Landstorm Infantry Battalion Halle/Saale, 1917 - Landstorm Infantry Replacement Battalion Guben (III/52), 1915 - Landwehr Infantry Regiment No. 52, 1914 - Landwehr Infantry Regiment No. 368, 1918 - Mine Search Semi-Flotilla No. 6 Cuxhaven, 1917 - Mine Launcher Battalion No. 3, 1917 - Pioneer Battalion No. 31, 1917 - Pioneer Battalion No. 33, 1916 - Pioneer Replacement Battalion No. 3, 1918 - Pioneer Regiment No. 368, 1918 - Mine Search Semi-Flotilla No. 6 Cuxhaven, 1917 - Pioneer Battalion No. 3, 1917 - Pioneer Battalion No. 33, 1916 - Pioneer Replacement Battalion No. 3, 1918 - Pioneer Regiment No. 3, 1918 36, 1916 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 24, 1918 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 52, 1916 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 61, 1918 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 226, 1915 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 267, 1918 - Schiffer-Ersatz-Bataillon Wendisch Sagar, 1918 - Schützen-Regiment No. 10, 1914 Provisional Reichswehr 1919/1920: - Reichswehr-Schützen-Regiment No. 6 Berlin, 1920 - Reichswehr-Schützen-Regiment No. 9, 1920 - Sicherheitswehr Münster, 1921 Reichswehr 1921 - 1935: - Sicherheitswehr Naumburg, 1921..;
Missions-Kirchenordnungen, Dr., 1869, 1875 o.J.; Agreement on the transfer of the Hakka Mission (China) to Berlin, 1882; Negotiations on a joint teacher training institution and on the ordination of colored helpers in Africa, 1903; Negotiations on the coordination of the work at the Cape, 1904; Report on the death of Insp. Sauberzeig-Schmidt in Hong Kong, Dr., 1906; J. Neitz: Report of a journey to Samuel Maherero, 13 p., 1907; Foundation of church coffers in China, Vorschlag Glüer, 1907; Satzung d. Berliner Missionsgesellschaft, Dr., 1907; Die Aufsicht über die Missionsarbeit d. Berliner Mission, 18 p., ms., ca. 1908; Admission of Miss. Behrens/Hermannsburg, 1913; Reports of fights in Tsingtau, 1914; Vertraul. Report on obstruction of missionary work by World War I, 18 p., ms., 1915; conflict with P. Theo. Fliedner/Madrid, 1920; What still holds us to the pagan mission today, pamphlet, ca. 1920
Rhenish Missionary Society