Akten
551 Archival description results for Akten
History of the authorities: Until the beginning of the 18th century there were no special forestry offices in Paderborn, neither in the court chamber nor in the individual offices. The forest administration was also carried out by the office pension masters. In 1705 a chief forester was appointed as "wood inspector" for the sovereign forests and it was only in the middle of the 18th century that the local forestry gained a certain independence. The forest administration was now transferred to the official authorities and their subordinates, the forest rangers and forest keepers. In the later Oberförsterei Böddeken existed the service farms Telegraf, Neuböddeken, Gellinghausen and Sprengelborn. As part of the reorganization of the forestry administration in 1817, the Prussian administration set up forest inspections staffed by forest masters as subordinate authorities to the government. Subordinated to these were the chief forest rangers, to whom several protective districts administered by sub forest rangers were subordinated. Until 1803 the areas of the present Böddeken Forestry Office were owned by the Böddeken Monastery and the Paderborn Cathedral Chapter. Area changes were caused by separations and separations, in particular by the Wewelsburg separation. After the first survey and division of the forest district had taken place in 1833/34, the first estimate and the first plant were completed in 1856 after various attempts. The Oberförsterei Böddeken was at that time subject to the Paderborn Forest Inspectorate. Already in 1833 the Sprengelborn forestery, formerly belonging to the Oberförsterei, had been sold. Since 1861, however, it has served as a sub-forestry farm for Eggeringhausen. In 1882 the area of Böddeken consisted of the following protectorates: Telegraf, Altböddeken, Wewelsburg, Neuböddeken, Atteln, Eggeringhausen and Gellinghausen. Around 1900 Atteln was ceded to the new Oberförsterei Dalheim. Parts of Neuböddeken were used to form the Henglarn protectorate, while the remainder continued to exist as the Neuböddeken hunting ground or lower forestery. According to an assessment work of the Oberförsterei (D 6 B Böddeken No. 61), which was established in 1900, the forest district at that time consisted of the forest locations Telegraph, Blindeborn, Kluss, Teufelskammer, Kölnische Mark, Okenthal and Kiefernkamp. In 1947, the Böddeken Forestry Office comprised a forestry master post in Böddeken, a head forester post in Gellinghausen, the Telegraf, Altböddeken, Wewelsburg, Henglarn, Neuböddeken, Eggeringhausen and i. G. district forester posts as well as two employee posts (see D 6 B Minden No. 305). In 1934 the Öberförsterei Böddeken became the state forestry office of the same name. In 1949, the new state of North Rhine-Westphalia incorporated the forestry administration into the district governments, as bureaucratic forestry departments subordinate to the district president. This meant for Böddeken that it was subordinate to the Minden forest department of the Detmold government president. On April 1, 1952, the forester's office, built in 1908 and moved from Wewelsburg to Gellinghausen in 1928, was dissolved. In 1956, the forest departments became departments. From 1 January 1970, the tasks of the higher forestry authorities were transferred from the presidents of the provinces to the directors of the Chamber of Agriculture as state representatives. On 31.12.1971 the forestry office Böddeken was dissolved. The State Forestry Office in Paderborn became the successor authority. Inventory history and indexing: The inventory D 6 B Böddeken initially comprised an access originally handed over to the former State Archives Münster with a duration of 1819 to 1860, which later reached here in connection with the division of responsibilities between the former State Archives Münster and Detmold, the access 42/1967, which has a duration of 1920 to 1955 and was handed over directly from the Forestry Office Böddeken to the State Archives Detmold, as well as some documents from the access 50/1969. The signature scheme of the older files is very complicated (Fach ..., Nr. ..., Kap. ..., Tit. ..., Sect. ..., Lit. ..., lit. ...). In the case of the more recent files, this registration plan was replaced by a considerably simplified one (Dept. ... / Roman number / No. ... / Arab number /). From the middle of the 19th to the middle of the 20th century it is possible to determine an order by title (Tit.), number (No.) and volume (Vol.) for some files. For example, the following titles stood for the following file plan items:Title III: Area and border matters Title X: Forestry and police matters Title XIII: Accounting and registration matters Title XIV: Various items The new order was initially based on a 1871 registration plan for the forestry offices, although the individual subject groups were changed in order to separate the actual forestry and hunting matters from the administration. A subdivision into intermediate and sub-groups was not necessary for the time being due to the small size of the file. For this reason, some of the subject groups remained unoccupied for the time being. The classification of the find book was revised after the more recent file additions 125/2004 (now: D 6 B Böddeken no. 49 to 88), 11/1989 (now: D 6 B Böddeken no. 89-90), 50/1969 (now: D 6 B Böddeken no. 91 to 93 as well as 157 and 158) and 89/2009 (now: D 6 B B Böddeken no. 94 to 156) were listed. There was no cassation of documents - in particular the wood receipts manuals and forest culture plans - as most of the operations of the forestry office obviously remained within the authority. The file D 6 B Böddeken No. 76 contains a so-called "Chronicle of the Oberförsterei", which was kept in the years 1924 to 1974 and goes back to the year 1855 in terms of content. The file D 6 B Altenbeken No. 464 also contains a short history of the former Böddeken forestry office for the years 1820 to 1971. A group picture from 1913, probably taken in the Böddeker forest, a portrait of the head forester R., taken at Whitsun 1900 on the balcony of the Oberförsterei in Neuböddeken. of Eschwege and two portraits of the forestry officers Detmar Hüffer and Wegener from 1890 and May 1927 respectively were added to the collection D 75 (picture collection) under the signature D 75 No. 9096. Further documents of the Oberförsterei Böddeken can be found in the files D 6 C Büren. It is to be quoted after order no.: D 6 B Böddeken Detmold in 1972, 2012 and 2013 signed. Simon and Schumacher
Until 1872, clergymen appointed by the government were in charge of state school supervision on the district level. Only after the school supervision law of 1872 were increasingly full-time district school inspectors appointed. A full-time district school inspector was first appointed for the Halle district school inspection in 1909 (cf. file M 1 II B no. 157). Since 1924, school inspectors have been using the official term "Schulrat". As a direct organ of the government, it was responsible not only for public primary and secondary education but also for all other education, including private education, in its own district, insofar as it fell within the jurisdiction of the government. Occasionally, in 1932, the school supervision district Halle with the district Bielefeld-Land was reorganized to the school supervision district Bielefeld II-Halle i. W. (cf. file M 1 II B No. 118). Since the state supervision of schools at district level remained with the school councils even after 1947, their records in the Detmold State Archives are uniformly recorded in the D 7 holdings. This find book lists the files of the former Halle District School Inspectorate which were handed over from the Münster State Archives to here. The individual files date back to the 1890s and usually close in 1932. Judging by the gaps in the individual successive original locatures or old signatures (on file flags), however, this should not be the entire registry. At least - according to an old list of files (now: file D 29 no. 413) - there is a closed registry group. It must be quoted after the order number: D 7 Hall no. ... Detmold, 31 March 1983 signed. Dr. Strecke
- c. 1878 - 1919, Sächsisches Staatsarchivn* Contains, among others: Woermann-Linie Hamburg.- Westdeutsche Binnenschifffahrtsberufsgenossenschaft Duisburg.- Secretary of Lloyds.- Deutscher Verband für das kaufmännische Unterrichtswesen.- Verein der Industriellen des Regierungsbezirks Köln.- Zentralstelle für Vorbereitung von Handelsverträgen Berlin.- Arbeiterwohlfahrt Berlin.- Dienstbotenheim Dresden.- Prussian Association of Industrialists of the Administrative District of Cologne. Dienstbotenheim Dresden.- Preußische Zentralbodenkreditaktiengesellschaft.- Steinkohlenbauverein.- Hänichen.- Grusonwerk Magdeburg-Buckau.- Fabrik Siemens Dresden.- Landständische Bank Bautzen.- Hüttenwerk Dillingen.- Römisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum Mainz.- Hannoversche Bahnindustrie.
- Contains, among other things: Map of the German sphere of interest in East Africa (sheet 8).- Map of the Usambara region with the Tanga-Korogwe railway line (sheet 25).- General location and elevation plan of the Dar es Salaam-Morogoro railway line (sheet 31).- German East Africa. General location and elevation plan of the Dar es Salaam-Tabora-Udjidji and Tabora-Mwansa line (sheet 32).- Map of Africa showing the completed and projected railways (sheet 45).n* 1889 - 1918, Saxon State Archives
- Contains, among other things: General map of German South West Africa, with handwritten entries (p. 12).- Map of South West Africa (p. 147).- Memorandum on the course of the uprising in South West Africa (with maps), Reichstag printed paper no. 5, 11th legislative period, II session 1905/06.- Map of farm damage in the Herero region according to the status of investigations up to 10 August 1904 (p. 93).- Map crocis of the Lüderitzbucht-Kubub railway line (p. 164).- Map of German South West Africa (p. 173). 164).- Map of German South West Africa (sheet 173).- General plan of the section km 0.0 to km 145.0 of a railway connection Aus (Kubub)-Keetmanshoop, 1906 (sheets 180, 182 and 209).- General plan of the Windhoek-Rehoboth line, 1905 (sheet 197).- Map of the area in German South-West Africa to be placed under the military protection of the government (sheet 236).n* 1891 - 1907, Sächsisches Staatsarchiv
- 1899 - 1906, Saxon State Archives description: Contains among others: Maps and photos 1898-1906. Contains among other things: Maps and photos 1898-1906.
- description: Contains, among other things: Maps and photos 1904-1910. Includes among others: Maps and photos 1904-1910 1905 - 1921, Saxon State Archive
July 7, 1899 - Aug. 19, 1900, Saxon State Archives
1878, Sächsisches Staatsarchiv
- Includes among others: Appointment as Director of the Colonial Department of the Federal Foreign Office and Real Secret Legation Council 1900 - Two letters of the German Protestant community in Santiago 1900 - Transcription of two reports of Dr. Georg Hartmann to Leutwein, Governor in Deutsch-Südwestafrika 1901.- Four reports of Dr. Georg Hartmann 1902.- Letters of Johann Albrecht v. Mecklenburg, President of the Deutsche Kolonialgesellschaft 1903.- Letter of Henry de Leyn from Willebroeck 1903. description: Contains among others..: Appointment as Director of the Colonial Department of the Federal Foreign Office and Real Secret Legation Council 1900 - Two letters of the German Protestant community in Santiago 1900 - Copy of two reports of Dr. Georg Hartmann to Leutwein, Governor in German Southwest Africa 1901.- Four Reports by Dr. Georg Hartmann 1902 - Letters by Johann Albrecht v. Mecklenburg, President of the German Colonial Society 1903 - Letter by Henry de Leyn from Willebroeck 1903 1900 - 1905, Saxon State Archives
Scope :2074 files (454 boxes), find book B 251.
The district Bochum was formed in 1817 and in 1884/85, around the counties Gelsenkirchen and Hattingen reduced, it was divided into city and county Bochum. After the district was abolished in 1929, it was assigned to the city districts of Bochum, Witten, Herne and Dortmund. The holdings, which comprised 199 numbers at the time of the new indexing, were transferred to the State Archives in 1888 (116 files). A file was added in 1908. It was not possible to determine where the remaining files came from. By far the largest part of the district registry and the district committee is located in the city archive of Bochum. The serial numbers 153 to 1962 were given to the city of Witten in 1955. Further files of the administrative district are stored in the city archives of Gelsenkirchen and Witten (see old repertory for listings). In the case of the new registration, files 47, 117a, 121a and 128a were found to be missing. The numbers 37 and 96 are not documented. The new distortion was mainly performed by the trainees Dr. Becker, Dr. Fleckenstein, Hoen, Dr. Ostrowitzki, Dr. Prell and Dr. Uhde. Münster, January 1994 H. Müller The files no. 187 - 192 originate from the Zgg. 120/2010 of the police headquarters Bochum. They're listed under Classification Point 7. Police. Schraven, January 2011 Due to their personal character, individual volumes of records are blocked from regular use in the reading room. It is advisable to send an inquiry to the Landesarchiv NRW by e-mail to: westfalen@lav.nrw.de
Preliminary remark: Most of the building files listed in this finding aid book were handed over to the State Archives by the District Office Ludwigsburg in the years 1963 to 1976. Smaller subsequent deliveries were made up to 1985. The present collection consists of documents on all municipalities of the Altkreis Ludwigsburg with the exception of the Großer Kreisstadt Kornwestheim. However, only two construction files refer to the large district town of Ludwigsburg. These have apparently been transferred to the State Archives in another context. The holdings mainly contain the years 1939 to 1959. In some municipalities, the tradition ends with the year 1954. The documents on the municipality of Bietigheim even date back only to 1944. On the other hand, the holdings still contain individual building files of the upper office of Besigheim, which was dissolved in 1938, which were continued by the successor authority. The documents relating to the municipality of Marbach relate primarily to submissions and complaints in building matters, but not to building permit procedures. For the period before 1939, reference is made to the inventories F 154 II (Besigheim upper office), F 181 III (Ludwigsburg upper office) and F 182 II (Marbach upper office). Since there can be several years between the submission of the building application and the granting of the building permit or the closing of the file, the duration of the stock actually extends up to the beginning of the seventies. in the title entries the name and the occupation (or the company) of the builder, his place of residence (or his place of business), if this differs from the place of construction, the construction diary no. (or the construction case no.), if applicable the approval date as well as the extent and the duration of the file are indicated. The building project is only mentioned in the Contained Note if it is not the new construction of a residential building. The title entries are first in alphabetical order of location, then sorted by year, whereby the year of the building diary number is decisive for the temporal allocation. Within the individual vintages an alphabetical order according to the names (and/or the companies) of the owners took place. the building files united in the present inventory were registered in the years 1980 to 1983 by the gentlemen Manfred Korreng (Aldingen - Beihingen) and Hans Schürle (Benningen - Erdmannshausen) as well as by Mrs. Anita Hundsdörfer (Erligheim - Winzerhausen). Mr. Alfred Ibrom worked on individual latecomers. The supplements to the municipalities Neckargröningen, Tamm and Walheim as well as Großsachsenheim, Kleinsachsenheim and Unterriexingen were prepared by Eberhard Royek in January 1995. The documents listed in the supplements for the latter three were taken from the FL 20/18 II (Landratsamt Vaihingen). The cataloguing was supervised by Wolfgang Schneider, archivist, Dr. Franz Mögle-Hofacker, State Archives Councillor, Udo Herkert, Archives Inspector, and Udo Schäfer, Archives Councillor. 17748 tufts in 107.5 metres of shelving were included in the holdings FL 20/12 I, the tufts having spring-numbers. The order numbers were assigned in accordance with numerus currens.Ludwigsburg, January 1995Udo Schäfer
The files listed below were handed over to the Munich State Archives by the Laufen District Office in 1959 (1827 files), 1962 (720 files), 1966 (280 files), 1972 (12 files), 1976 (approx. 40 linear metres) and 1977 (1 file). The indexing was carried out by various editors, among them the assistant archivists of the 1975/1977 course, who, under the direction of Chief Inspector Klaus Fischer, were responsible for the processing of the 1962 and 1976 levies from June to September 1976 as part of the practical training at the Munich State Archives. Since only one summary list was available for the older levy and no list at all for the more recent levy, both levies were combined and completely reworked. The subsequent reorganization into objectively connected groups was generally oriented towards the standard file plan, but also deviated from it when the circumstances made it necessary. The following record groups were not archived, but destroyed: Vaccination lists, subsidies for farmers' drainage work, state audit. In a further work step, the index data of the individual taxes were then summarized in a joint volume of repertories by Chief Archive Inspector Anton Grau at the end of the 1970s. As part of a retroconversion project in 2015, this analogue tape repertory was finally digitised unchanged.
- description: - The Rep. 18 Landratsämter stock is one of the loss-making stocks in the XX HA. Only 132 units of registration from 21 former district offices have survived. The number of files varies between one file (LRA Goldap, Heydekrug, Königsberg, Oletzko, Osterode, Pr. Holland, Rastenburg and Rößel) and 21 files (LRA Memel). An accession in 1999 brought three units of registration from the Zichenau administrative district, Mackeim district, established after the Polish campaign in 1939. These were added to the inventory. - The old Sammelfindbuch has been handed down, in which the files still available here were provided with revision hooks during revisions in Göttingen and after the move to Dahlem in Berlin. - Over the years, the large-format finding aid book has suffered particularly from its use, so that in 2008 the undersigned recorded the files handed down in a provisional finding aid book according to the original registration scheme. - In the course of the database input a new indexing took place in August 2011. - Find aids: database; find book, 1 vol.* Secret State Archives of Prussian Cultural Heritage, XX. HA, Rep. 18
The farm of the family Meiwes or Thöne once called Robrecht Stellbrink is located until 1900 in the community Wewer, a district southwest of Paderborn and since 1969 merged with the city. Since its relocation in 1900, the farm has been located in the district of Elsen, which today also belongs to Paderborn. In 1794 Henricus Altmiercks called Stellbrink was the first farm owner to be mentioned in a Meier protocol (file 45). From 1825 the documents show Ferdinand Robrecht named Stellbrink, married to Antoniette Drewer zu Wewer, as the owner of the court at Wewer (file 39). In 1839 the married couple Robrecht called Stellbrink transferred the farm to their stepson Johann Thöne (file 45). His son, the farmer and later head of the village Joseph Thöne, signed over the farm from his father on 11 February 1870 (file 45). In 1900 Joseph Thöne acquires a marsh area of about 200 acres in the neighbouring municipality of Elsen, bought fifty years earlier by Baron von Brenken, and then begins to cultivate it and builds the estate.
- Includes: Seven letters to F. A. Brockhaus - Two letters from F. A. Brockhaus to him - Postcard with the portrait of Adolf Friedrich Herzog zu Mecklenburg - description: Contains: Seven letters to F. A. Brockhaus - Two letters from F. A. Brockhaus to him - Postcard with the portrait of Adolf Friedrich Herzog of Mecklenburg * 1912 - 1914, Saxon State Archives
1900 - 1910, Saxon State Archives
- description: Contains, among other things: Provisions for the Formation of an East Asian Expeditionary Corps - Budget for the East Asian Expeditionary Corps - Fee Statements for the East Asian Expeditionary Corps 1900 - 1907, Saxon State Archives Contains, inter alia..: Provisions for the Formation of an East Asian Expeditionary Corps - Budget for the East Asian Expeditionary Corps - Fee Statements for the East Asian Expeditionary Corps.
1900-1909, BayHStA, FZM 4.2.7 Field tool shop
1900 - 1904, Saxon State Archive
1905, Saxon State Archives