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          Landesarchiv NRW Abteilung Rheinland, 337.01.00 · Fonds · 1860-1976
          Part of Landesarchiv NRW Rhineland Department (Archivtektonik)

          The files of the present holdings NW 223 were handed over to the Main State Archives on 13 October 1976 in 10 packages and 8 files and were accepted under No. III 82/76. These are documents of the Zoological Research Institute and Museum Alexander Koenig, Bonn, which document the emergence of the institute as a foundation and its work as a state institution. Numerous purchase contracts for the properties on which the construction of the Museum Koenig and the Villa Hammerschmidt, today's "House of the Federal President", are located, provide information about the development of the former rural property in this area in the second half of the 19th century. The construction of the museum building, a neo-Renaissance building, is documented, as is the transfer of the furnishings to the Reich as a result of unsuccessful efforts to complete the construction with Prussia's own funds or with the help of the Prussian government. The correspondences convey a vivid picture of the patriarchal character of the "Reichsinstitut" under the direction of its founder, Prof. Dr. Alexander Koenig. The scientific diaries as well as the documents belonging to the "Alexander Koenig Foundation" on the basis of testamentary provisions are still kept in the Koenig Museum. For the history of the institution and the Koenig family cf. Martin Eisentraut, Alexander Koenig und sein Werk, Bonn 1973. For the history of the Zoological Research Institute and Museum A. Koenig after 1945 cf. also the holdings NW 60. The holdings were recorded from December 1976 to January 1977 by the State Archives Council, Dr. Jürgen Rainer Wolf. Mrs. Angela Mauritz wrote the find book. The records must be quoted: NW 223 No. ... The stock is freely visible.

          Landesarchiv Sachsen-Anhalt, E 144, Nr. 216 (Benutzungsort: Dessau) · File · 1912 - 1914
          Part of State Archive Saxony-Anhalt (Archivtektonik)

          Contains among other things: Issue 1: The District Administrator of Uslar, working with the divining rod in South West Africa. - List of members of the Union. Issue 3: Count Carl von Klinckow-Stroem, Bibliography of the divining rod since 1910 and supplements (1610-1909). - Contribution by Dr. Ing. R. Weyrauch to the concept of success in the work of diviners. - Tables for statistical recording of the work with the divining rod. - Members list of the association of the divining rod question. Issue 4: Test protocol on the effects of electrical cables on the diviner by G. Franzius. - Results of the prospecting activities of the District Administrator Uslar in Germany, edited by Count Carl von Klinckow-Stroem. - Report on the sealing work at the Gotha dam at Tambach by Stadtbaurat Goette, Plauen. Issue 5: Report about dowsing tests for the detection of water pipe damage. - Preparation of the publication of the Munich Municipal Water Authority on rod walker experiments for the detection of water pipe damage, G. Franzius. Issue 6: Report on the conference for the clarification of the divining rod question in Halle/Saale from 18 - 20 Sept. 1913 - Report on divining experiments at Eisleben. - Report about tests to find underground pipelines of the waterworks in Halle/Saale. - Dowsing rod experiments in the saltworks in Bad Dürrenberg.

          ALMW_II._MB_1895_9 · File · 1895
          Part of Francke's Foundations in Halle

          Author: Excerpt from Miss's diary. Althaus. Scope: pp. 132-135. Includes, among other things: - (SW: approaching completion of the house construction; leopard hunt with the English merchant Fraser; Christmas and New Year celebration; Catechist Zacharias; jurisdiction by missionaries)

          Leipziger Missionswerk
          Stadtarchiv Bad Berleburg, Z (Zeitungen), Witt.Krb 56 · Collection · 1907
          Part of Bad Berleburg City Archive (Archivtektonik)

          Contains: (The numbers refer to the issue numbers) Construction history and urban development: Many construction and land issues are dealt with in the meetings of the city councilors meeting, see administration. No.36: Commemoration of the construction of Ludwigsburg 200 years ago No.74The Marburger Str. is paved from the Ederstr. to the bridge Agriculture: The newspaper brings in every issue advice for farmers, reports on new researches and experiments, reflections on the weather, statistics of the seeds and the slaughtered animals, farmer's rules, lists of the approved bulls and goats and the prize winners of the Stünzelfest, requests for further training and to the agricultural winter school, advice concerning insurance and pensions for farmers (are published). No.13,15: Advantages of land consolidation No.16: General assembly of the agricultural trade association No.21: Report on the general assembly of the agricultural trade association No.48,49: Report on the journey of the agricultural association to the German Agricultural Exhibition in Düsseldorf No.62: The rural indebtedness in the Wittgenstein district Nature and environment: No.60: Agriculture and natural monument conservation No.98: Extermination of crows by interpretation of poisoned fish at the creeks Statistics: A maid gets 18,-M monthly. A ground worker earns 40 Pf./hour Nr.19: Extrablatt with the election results of the election of the Reichstag Nr.75: Criminal statistics of the district Wittgenstein Trade, crafts and trades: Nr.58: Report about the Westphalian journeyman craftsman Nr.62: Winkel looks for accommodation for girls from the country, who work in the factory Traffic: Nr.7Delay in the construction of the line Raumland-Berleburg No.58: Start of the construction of the line Raumland-Berleburg No.60,61: Railway project Berleburg-Gleidorf No.68: Railway construction Raumland-Berleburg No.74: Expropriation of land for railway construction No.80: Report on the meeting of the Railway Committee concerning the railway Berleburg-Oberes Lahntal No.95: Cessation of work on the line School and training: No.15: Compulsory schooling regulations No.17,19,20,21: Education and training of commercial youth No.45: An association for the establishment of a toddler school is established No.76: Report on a concert in the Stadtkirche zur Besten der Kleinkinderschule No.80New acquisitions of the Volksbibliothek Kirche: No.66,67: Missionsfest am Dödesberg No.101,103: Article on the history of the churches Schüllar and Odebornskirche, dedication of the new church on 20 December 1907 Fire brigade: No.13Report on the General Assembly of the Voluntary Fire Service Administration and Administration of Justice: Announcements of the District Administrator's Office, the Police and the Princely Administration, detailed reports on the meetings of the Court of Aldermen, the City Assembly, the District Committee and the District Council as well as appointments and announcements of the District Court are published regularly, as are the appeals of the Military Authority. On 25 January 1907 Reichtag elections Vote distribution in Berleburg: Christl. Soziale 95, National-Liberale 104, freisinige Volkspartei 183, Zentrum 15, Sozialisten 55 Nr.17: Obituary to chamber director Rotberg Nr.23,26,47,74,90: Report on meeting of the municipal council Nr.29: Report on district committee meeting Nr.72: Obituary to municipal council leader Kaufmann Fingerling Vereine: Vereinsnachrichten are found in every issue of the newspaper. To the already 1900 known associations come still in addition: Stenographer's Association ''Stolze'', Cyclist's Association , Innkeeper's Association , Shooting Association , Sauerland Mountain Association (SGV) Free Craftsmen's Guild, Saxo-Borussia Youth Association Local Group of the German Fleet Association Goat Breeding Association Orchestra Association ''Grines Hitchen'' (meets in ''Kaiser Friedrich'') District Teachers' Association Wittgenstein Fatherland Women's Association Singing Association Harmony Men's and Youth Association Volksbildungsverein Railway Association No.31SGV-Herrenkommers im Wittgensteiner Hof Nr-.101: Report about the local group of the German Fleet Association Nr.103The ski club Sauerland, seat Arnsberg, which has a local group in Berleburg, counts 200 members emigration: No.17: North America resists against the immigration No.32: Emil Wolff, a Berleburger, who emigrated to America, makes a donation of 1000 M. to the hospital, likewise 1910 of the infant school No.94From Sauerland miners go to South West Africa, work in the mine, commitment 14 months, 250 m. per month, free station, clothes and laundry Other: No.10,11: In the gym photos from the war 1870/71 are shown No.91: Complaint about burglary thefts, foreign workers (Croats, Italians) are suspected, who are employed in road and railway construction Darin:

          Stadtarchiv Bad Berleburg, Z (Zeitungen), Witt.Krb 37 · File · 1888
          Part of Bad Berleburg City Archive (Archivtektonik)
          • 1888, town archive Bad Berleburg, newspapers* Contains: (The numbers refer to the output numbers)<br /><br />house names:<br />Johannhermes (1880 and 1885 Hermann Schneider, Unterstadt)<br />Dilches ( master baker Heinrich Langenfeld<br />Kellers (Jakob Hackenbracht)<br />Pütze (Ludwig Bald)<br />Eckebald<br />Brachs (Heinrich Bald)<br />Langes (Schneider)<br />Pflügers (1888 Saßmannshausen)<br />Bartgörges (1889 Sauer)<br />Diele (1889 Klotz)<br />Granes (1889 Hackebracht)<br />Kämmerers (1889 Hardt)<br />Antonies (1889 Hackebracht)<br /><br />Building history:<br />No.3,4Building Accident Insurance Law<br />No.23Water supply<br />No.29: Water pipe, connection of houses<br />No.31: Water pipe, costs: annual fee 10,- M., connection in own contribution<br />No.32: Letter concerning water pipe in Berleburg<br />No.34: Water pipe, call for declaration of accession<br />No.45Water question completed <br />71 connections to the water pipe secured in front of the louse, further connections in prospect.<br />The water is chemically investigated <br /><br />Agriculture:<br />No.40: Report on the raffle at the Stünzelfest<br /><br />Trade and crafts:<br />Commercialists:<br />H. Matthey: From 1.Novemberg 1869 book, art and music shop, calendar, writing and drawing books, fretwork accessories, glue, cigars, view of Berleburg, candles, wallets, also lending library <br />Louis Cronau: salt, Stollwerk chocolate, very good sourland bread, mixed goods, Przellan <br />Fritz Cronau: roofing slate from Fredlar <br />C. Luhne: Indian herb bitter<br />Marcus Wolff, J. Wolff, Wolff-Wolff (later Salomon Wolff): Clothing, fabrics, jewellery, also colonial goods<br />F. Heinemann: Flour. Cloth, accordion <br />Joseph Rosenthal: Clothing, fabrics, flour <br />J.B. Becker, Christian Friedrich <br />Carl Schnieder: Cookers <br />G.Spieß: Ladies' and men's watches, Goldware <br />A. Nilasch: Ölkuchen, Sämereien<br />Ludwig Althaus<br />Franz Kiessler: Petroleum-Lampen<br />Carl Wilhelmi: Buchhandlung, Taschenkalender<br />Winkel und Böttger: Samenhandlung, Heringe, Sardellen, Käse, Honig, Kolonialwaren, Kerzen, Spielzeug, Schuhe, Kleidung Hüte, Mützen, Gluhe, Schirme, Strickgarn.<br />(The partners separated in 1869, Böttner continued to run the business, Winkel opened a shop for manufactured goods and haberdashery, colonial goods and country products)<br /><br />Restaurateurs:<br />Gasthof Bald ( in the black whale)<br />Utsch (Posthalterei)<br />Bodechrist ( Müsse, later Sauer, then Carl Winter): Auctions and theatre performances<br />Gasthof Sauer vor der Lause<br />Dickel am Stein<br />Elorin am Dödesberg<br />Georg Schneider<br />Gasthof zum Tiergarten<br />Carl Mengel, Wilhelm Mengel (dance courses take place there)<br />Carl Pletsch<br />Rossels Gasthaus<br />Fr. Kaiser<br />Franz Kießler<br />P. Müller, Nachf. v. Louis Cronau: Colonial goods shop with economy <br /><br />Craftsmen:<br />Master tailor:<br />Ambrosius,<br />Ludwig Spieß,<br />Sophie Beitzel,<br />Loos,<br />Ludwig Dörr,<br />Pletsch (Oberstadt),<br />W.Walter,<br /><br />Turning master:<br />Wilhelm Rompel (spinning wheels)<br /><br />Tile burner master:<br />Control nail ( stove stones for bakeries)<br /><br />Carpenter's master:<br />Gustav Wild (also brushes),<br />Heinrich Scheffel,<br />Heinrich Born (Berghausen)<br /><br />Master saddler:<br />W. Wüstenhöfer ( also upholsterer),<br />Heinrich Göbel ( Oberstadt)<br />Clockmaker:<br />G. Skewer<br />Painter and decorator:<br />Hermann Sasse<br />Master baker:<br />J. Wolf, Christian Schneider, W. Schneider<br />Shoemaker:<br />Weber, Schaefer, Louis Fischer<br />Glaser:<br />Ph. Weather<br />Fitters:<br />Augsut Schweitzer, Christian Rompel<br />Wagner:<br />Louis Jung, Friedrich Schneider<br />Metzger:<br />Fr. Bald<br />Eichmeister:<br />Krämer<br />Schornsteinfegermeister:<br />Gebhardt<br />Mülltr: Christian Kamm leases the princely grinding mill<br in 1873 />Schmied:<br />G. Beltz jun.<br />Bierbrauer:<br />Georg Schneider<br /><br />There were Hot-Sattlermeister, Hof-Glaser, etc.<br />No.14: Statute of the commercial advanced training school<br />No.55Reference to the ''Führer durch das Sauerland'' (Kneebusch) and ''Bäder und Sommerfrische Westfalens'', where Berleburg is not mentioned, therefore suggestions for Berleburg des<br />Tourism.<br />So far, Luete mainly come from the cities to collect blueberries in Sauerland<br />No.56The Hofapotheke closes in the evening at 9 o'clock, then only urgent things<br /><br />Traffic:<br />No.4: Railway construction Hilchenbach-Laasphe<br />No.10: Landslide on the line Hilchenbach-Laasphe<br />No.13: Railway construction planning Laasphe-Raumland<br />No.29Railway construction accident<br />No.31: Traffic routes of the Wittgenstein district<br />No.32: Via the new Hilchenbach-Erndtebrück railway line<br />No.48: Expropriation of land for construction of the Erndtebrück-Laasphe railway />No.51: From railway construction to Erndtebrück<br />No.53Report from the railway construction at Lützel<br /><br />Statistics:<br />Births: 50 (21 boys, 27 girls, 2 stillbirths)<br />Deaths: 29<br />Combinations: 9<br />No.29,30Statistics of the district Wittgenstein for the year 1887<br />No.31: One egg costs 4 Pf., one pound butter 95 Pf., one pound Limburger cheese 30 Pf<br />No.32,33,34Continuation of no. 29,30 - Status of the administration of the district:<br />Insured persons, savings banks, police, school system, taxes, state, provincial and district municipal affairs<br /><br />School:<br />Since about 1550 there were school lessons in Berleburg, the two pastors taught the older pupils, mainly preparation for confirmation, an under teacher taught the younger children, at times there was a teacher for the girls.<br />No.27.27Students (from abroad) are admitted to the Selekta<br />No.136: Construction of school desks<br />No.146: Volksschullastengesetz<br />No.153: Report on the commemoration of Emperor Friedrich at school. Lectures by Rector Florin, Lehrer Kapen, Lehrer Werthan, Selekta<br />><br />Emmigration:<br />Immigration intentions are published in the newspaper.<br />Often an auction of household goods or livestock is connected with this, sometimes also of houses and properties<br />No.31Warning of an agent who has undertaken to import (!) 6000 European immigrants to Brazil via Antwerp <br /><br />Vereine-Kunst:<br />The newspaper keeps you up to date on the clubs, invitations to meetings and events and reports about them.<br />The following clubs are mentioned:<br />Homrighäuser Bienenverein<br />Schützenverein<br />Wiesenverband ''Bürgeraue''<br />Armenverein<br />Spar- und Vorschussverein<br />Darlehnskassenverein ( the first in Westphalia, founded 1869)<br />branch association of the Gustav-Adolf-Stiftung<br />warriors' support association<br />warriors' association<br />association for the insurance of fallen pigs<br />botanical association<br />fencing school association<br />hospital association<br />snuff association (association for the care of the poor)<br />carnival society Na-Nu<br />Red Cross Branch Association<br />Turnverein<br />Governed Diet Box Office Association<br />Voluntary Fire Brigade<br />Gesangsverein ''Germania''<br />Gesangsverein ''Erholung''<br />Nr.40: Concert of the Schmallenberger chapel in the hall of the innkeeper Rossel<br />><br />Fire brigade:<br />No.7: Construction of a climbing scaffold on the cattle market at the Odeborn<br />Advertising for members<br /><br />Administration and administration of justice:<br />No.1: The district court has its own courthouse<br />No.17: Most important provisions of the military service law<br />No.21Stadtverordnetenversammlung, Tagesordnung<br />No.23: Report on the Stadtverordnetenversammlung<br />No.29: List of district taxes for the individual towns<br />No.31: Stadtverordnetenversammlung, Tagesordnung<br />No.38,54: Stadtverordnetenversammlung<br /><br />Health care:<br />Dr. Herrmann is practical. Doctor in Berleburg. In 1889 he goes to New Guinea in the service of the Colonial Society for three years.<br />Now Dr. Florin and Dr. Costers are doctors in Berleburg<br />No.9: Obituary to Dr. Völkel<br />No.34: A dentist comes to Berleburg at times, consultation days are announced in the newspaper<br />No.36: Wilhelm Springer is announced as practical. Doctor and obstetrician named in Berleburg.<br /><br />Darin:<br /><br />* description: Contains: (The numbers refer to the output numbers) - - House names: - Johannhermes (1880 and 1885 Hermann Schneider, Unterstadt) - Dilches (master baker Heinrich Langenfeld - Kellers (Jakob Hackenbracht) - Pütze (Ludwig Bald) - Eckebald - Brachs (Heinrich Bald) - Langes (tailor) - Pflügers (1888 Saßmannshausen) - Bartgörges (1889 Sauer) - Diele (1889 Klotz) - Granes (1889 Hackebracht) - Kämmerers (1889 Hardt) - Antonies (1889 Hackebracht) - - building history: - No.3,4Building accident insurance law - No.23: Water supply - No.29: Water pipe, connection of houses - No.31: Water pipe, costs: annual fee 10,- m., connection in own contribution - No.32: Writing concerning water pipe in Berleburg - No.34: Water pipe, call for declaration of membership - No.45: Conclusion of water question - 71 connections to water pipe in front of the Lause secured, further connections in prospect. - The water is chemically analyzed - - Agriculture: - No.40: Report about the raffle on the Stünzelfest - - Trade and crafts: - Merchants: - H. Matthey: From 1.Novemberg 1869 book, art, and music shop, calendar, writing and drawing booklets, fretsaw accessories, glue, cigars, view of Berleburg, candles, wallets, also borrowing library - Louis Cronau: salt, Stollwerk chocolate, very good sauerländisches bread, Gemischtwaren, Przellan - Fritz Cronau: roofing slate from Fredlar - C. Luhne: Indian Herb Bitter - Marcus Wolff, J. Wolff, Wolff-Wolff (later Salomon Wolff): Clothing, Fabrics, Jewellery, Colonial Goods - F. Heinemann: Flour. Cloths, accordions - Joseph Rosenthal: Clothing, fabrics, flour - J.B. Becker, Christian Friedrich - Carl Schnieder: Cook stoves - G.Spieß: Ladies' and men's watches, gold goods - A. Nilasch: Ölkuchen, Sämereien - Ludwig Althaus - Franz Kiessler: Petroleum-Lampen - Carl Wilhelmi: Buchhandlung, Taschenkalender - Winkel und Böttger: Samenhandlung, Heringe, Sardellen, Käse, Honig, Kolonialwaren, Kerzen, Spielzeug, Schuhe, Kleidung Hüte, Mützen, Gluhe, Schirme, Strickgarn. - (The partners separated in 1869, Böttner continued to run the business, Winkel opened a shop for manufactured goods and haberdashery, colonial goods and regional products) - - Innkeepers: - Gasthof Bald (in the black whale) - Utsch (post office) - Bodechrist (Müsse, later Sauer, then Carl Winter): Auctions and theatre performances - Gasthof Sauer vor der Lause - Dickel am Stein - Elorin am Dödesberg - Georg Schneider - Gasthof zum Tiergarten - Carl Mengel, Wilhelm Mengel (dance courses take place there) - Carl Pletsch - Rossels Gasthaus - Fr. Kaiser - Franz Kießler - P. Müller, Nachf. v. Louis Cronau: Colonial goods shop with economy - - Craftsmen: - Master tailor: - Ambrosius, - Ludwig Spieß, - Sophie Beitzel, - Loos, - Ludwig Dörr, - Pletsch (upper town), - W.Walter, - - Master woodturner: - Wilhelm Rompel (spinning wheels) - - Master bricklayer: - Control nail (stove stones for baking ovens) - - Master carpenter: - Gustav Wild (also brushes), - Heinrich Scheffel, - Heinrich Born (Berghausen) - - Master saddler: - W. Wüstenhöfer ( also upholsterer), - Heinrich Göbel ( Oberstadt) - Watchmaker: - G. Spieß - Painter and upholsterer: - Hermann Sasse - Master baker: - J. Wolf, Christian Schneider, W. Schneider - Shoemaker: - Weber, Schaefer, Louis Fischer - Glazier: - Ph. Weather - Schlosser: - Augsut Schweitzer, Christian Rompel - Wagner: - Louis Jung, Friedrich Schneider - Metzger: - Fr. Bald - Eichmeister: - Krämer - Schornsteinfegermeister: - Gebhardt - Mülletr: Christian Kamm leases the princely mill in 1873 - Schmied: - G. Beltz jun. - Bierbrauer: - Georg Schneider - - There were hot saddler masters, court glass makers, etc. - No.14: Statute of the commercial further training school - No.55: Reference to the ''Guide through the Sauerland'' (Kneebusch) and ''Baths and Summer Resorts of Westphalia'', where Berleburg is not mentioned, therefore proposals for the Berleburg des - Tourismus. - So far Luete mainly comes to collect blueberries from the cities to the Sauerland - No.56: The Hofapotheke closes in the evening 9 o'clock, then only urgent things - - Traffic: - No.4: Railway construction Hilchenbach-Laasphe - No.10: Landslide on the line Hilchenbach-Laasphe - No.13: Railway construction planning Laasphe-Raumland - No.29: Accident at the railway construction - No.31Traffic routes of the district Wittgenstein - No.32: About the new railway line Hilchenbach-Erndtebrück - No.48: Expropriations of land for the construction of the railway Erndtebrück-Laasphe - No.51: From railway construction to Erndtebrück - No.53: Report from railway construction at Lützel - - Statistics: - Births: 50 (21 boys, 27 girls, 2 stillborn) - Deaths: 29 - Marriages: 9 - No.29,30Statistics of the district Wittgenstein for the year 1887 - No.31: One egg costs 4 Pf., one pound butter 95 Pf., one pound Limburger cheese 30 Pf. - No.32,33,34Continuation of no. 29,30 - Status of the district administration: - Insurance, savings banks, police, school system, taxes, state, provincial and district municipal affairs - - School: - Since about 1550 there were school lessons in Berleburg, the two pastors taught the older pupils, mainly preparation for confirmation, a subteacher taught the younger children, at times there was a teacher for the girls. - No.27: Students (from abroad) are admitted to the Selekta - No.136: Construction of school desks - No.146: Volksschullastengesetz - No.153: Report on the commemoration of Emperor Friedrich in the school. Lectures by Rector Florin, Teacher Kapen, Teacher Werthan, Selekta - - Emigration: - Emigration intentions are announced in the newspaper. - No.31: Warning of an agent who has undertaken to import (!) 6000 European immigrants to Brazil, which he shipped via Antwerp - - Vereine-Kunst: - The newspaper constantly brings news about the associations, invitations to meetings and events and reports about them. - The following associations are mentioned: - Homrighäuser Bienenverein - Schützenverein - Wiesenverband ''Bürgeraue'' - Armenverein - Spar- und Vorschussverein - Darlehnskassenverein ( the first one in Westphalia, founded in 1869) - branch association of the Gustav Adolf Foundation - warrior support association - warrior association - association for the insurance of fallen pigs - botanical association - fencing school association - hospital association - Schnupfverein (association for the care of the poor) - carnival society Na-Nu - branch association of the Red Cross - gymnastics association - jury diets cashier association - volunteer fire brigade - singing association ''Germania'' - singing association ''Erholung'' - no.40Concert of the Schmallenberger chapel in the hall of the innkeeper Rossel - - Fire brigade: - No.7: Construction of a climbing scaffold on the cattle market at the Odeborn - Advertising for members - - Administration and administration of justice: - No.1: The local court has its own court house - No.17: Most important provisions of the military service law - No.21No.23: Report on the City Assembly - No.29: List of district levies for the individual towns - No.31: City Assembly, Agenda - No.38,54: City Assembly - - Health care: - Dr. Herrmann is practical. Doctor in Berleburg. In 1889 he went to New Guinea in the service of the Colonial Society for three years. - Now Dr. Florin and Dr. Costers are doctors in Berleburg - No.9: Obituary to Dr. Völkel - No.34: A dentist comes to Berleburg for a time, consultation days are announced in the newspaper - No.36: Wilhelm Springer is announced as practical. doctor and birth helper in Berleburg. - Darin: - - -
          RMG 2.533 a · File · 1900-1913
          Part of Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

          see also RMG 2.571; quarterly, annual and conference reports on the work in the field. Herero- u. Nama-Gemeinde Windhoek, by Karl Friedrich Wandres, Friedrich A. Meier u. Gustav Becker, 1900-1913; Contract for property exchange between Fiskus u. RMG (copy), 1906; visitation reports, 1906 1908; accounting for building costs of the Chapel in Klein-Windhoek, 1908; estimate for the construction of the 2nd mission house, 1909; plans for the conversion of the old school, 1912; application for purchase of land, 1912; report on trips to the mission house. Farmen im Nähe von Windhoek m. Kartenskizze, Lage u. Namen d. Farmen, by Gustav Becker, 1913; Disputes with the Shipyard Elder Franz, 1913

          Rhenish Missionary Society
          Geheimes Staatsarchiv Preußischer Kulturbesitz, I. HA Rep. 180 C · Fonds
          Part of Secret State Archive of Prussian Cultural Heritage (Archivtektonik)

          Preliminary remarks History of the authorities The Welfare Office for civil servants from the border areas was established at the same time as the Supreme Welfare Office for civil servants from the border areas (GStA PK, I. HA Rep. 206) with the law on the accommodation of indirect civil servants and teachers from the areas ceded by the Versailles Treaties (Accommodation Act) on 30 March 1920 (GS. p. 63). The law concerned indirect state officials who lost their office as a result of the assignment or occupation of Prussian parts of the country or gave up their office because, according to the circumstances, they could not be expected to continue their work under foreign rule. It also applied to the former Alsace-Lorraine indirect civil servants and teachers and to teachers who had had to give up their jobs in the foreign or colonial school service (the welfare office for teachers was responsible for this; its file stock is not handed down). The Welfare Office was the decision-making authority of the Ministry of Finance. His court of appeal was the Supreme Welfare Office. The 1920 law was amended by the law of 21 May 1935 (p. 69). The president of the Prussian Building and Finance Directorate was also chairman of the "Welfare Office"; the main fund of the Building and Finance Directorate handled its cash transactions (see also the state handbooks). Inventory Six acts of the authority were transferred to the Secret State Archives in 1941 (Accession 68/1941) and the "I. HA Rep. 180 E" collection was set up for this purpose. These files were outsourced during the war and finally reached the German Central Archive in Merseburg after the war. The other files of the authority listed here were transferred from the building of the Prussian Building and Finance Directorate Berlin (Invalidenstraße 52) to the main archive of Berlin in 1947; the "I. HA Rep. 180 C" collection was formed from them - probably in ignorance of what had already been established earlier. After the merging of the two components, they were combined to form the "I. HA Rep. 180 C Welfare Office for Civil Servants from the Border Regions". The stock is in the magazine Dahlem. The files are to be ordered as: I. HA Rep. 180 C, No. ### The files are to be quoted as: I. HA Rep. 180 C Welfare Office for officials from border areas, No. ### The last number assigned is: signed. Dr. Kober, November 2013 finding aids: database; finding guide, 1 vol.

          Water basin in the jungle
          ALMW_II._BA_A6_24(174) · Item · 1900-1914
          Part of Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig

          Phototype: Photo. Format: 10,5 X 7,5. Description: with waterfall. Reference: Cf. print templates sample book, no. III/6, Diap. a.II17 (16,8 X 12,0) "Church in Mamba, building of the church tower", retouched.

          Leipziger Missionswerk
          FA 4 / 580 · File · 1909 - 1913
          Part of Cameroon National Archives

          (call number uncertain)nExpropriation of land intended for the construction of an isolation wing for whites at the Government Hospital in Douala. - Compensation from the former owner, 1906 - 1913

          Bezirksamt Duala
          RMG 2.532 a · File · 1891-1945
          Part of Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

          Deputation to Christian congregation in Warmbad (concept in Dutch), 1891; sketch of the location of Warmbad with attack and retreat routes of troops in the war, signed by Karl Friedrich Wandres, 1903; ground plan of the mission house, list of inventories, 1913; annual and conference reports, by Hermann Nyhof u. August Karl-Friedrich Rethemeier, 1908-1945; Visitationsberichte, 1909 1912; Grundstücksangelegenheiten, Eigentumsverhältnisse, 1911; Kaufvertrag von Warmbad, 1912; Bau e. Kapelle in Haib, cost estimate, correspondence, 1912-1913; Antrag auf Windmotor u. Wasserleitung, 1913; cost estimate for new construction of the mission house, 1914

          Rhenish Missionary Society
          Waria Syndicate: Vol. 1
          BArch, R 2/3561 · File · 1932-1935
          Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

          Contains among other things: Contract between the Syndicate for the Development of the Waria Area (Waria Syndicate) and the Reich Treasury for Mining and Mining Rights in the Southeastern Part of Kaiser-Wilhelmsland (German New Guinea, New Guinea), July 1914 (copy); Waria Syndicate's claim for compensation against Australia on the basis of the German-Australian Liquidation Agreement; selection of an expert for the evaluation of the Waria Treaty in German New Guinea; expert opinion: "The Waria Syndicate"; Settlement Agreement between the German Reich and the Waria Syndicate (draft), 1933; Partnership Agreement of the Waria Syndicate, 1915 (transcript)

          BArch, N 224/6 · File · 11.02.1898-16.04.1898
          Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

          Contains among other things: Truppel hands over the business of the commander of the land forces to captain to the sea Rosendahl, 15.04.1898 report about the Kiautschou bay (copy) with a map Rear Admiral of Diedrichs, boss of the Kreuzergeschwader, to the commanding Admiral in Berlin betr. Land acquisition at the entrance to Kiautschou Bay, 10.01.1898 Remarks on the question of the demarcation and organisation of German territory at Kiautschou Bay, economic report on trade and mining 'Ostasiatischer Lloyd' No 47 of 19.09.1898: Orders concerning land acquisition in the German Kiautschou areas

          Truppel, Oskar von
          Waldenburger coal seam map
          Geheimes Staatsarchiv Preußischer Kulturbesitz, XI. HA, AKS, E Nr. 53231 · File · 1905
          Part of Secret State Archive of Prussian Cultural Heritage (Archivtektonik)

          available are the sheets[zw]1 - Waldenburg Ost[zw]2 - Waldenburg West[zw]3 - Schwarzwaldau[zw]5 - Fellhammer[zw]6 - Konradswaldau; blackprints with hand drawings, published by the Lower Silesian Mining Aid Fund 1905; each 77 x 63 (65 x 50,5) cm; 1:10000

          W Forest 1808-1929 (stand)
          Stadtarchiv Solingen, W · Fonds · 1703-1940
          Part of City Archive Solingen (Archivtektonik)

          The beginnings of the settlement of the "Wauler Dorps", as the older people still call the village centre today, probably date back to the 10th century. The construction of the front courtyard belonging to Deutz Abbey and the construction of the parish church in the 11th century created the conditions for the parish of Wald. His territory included the later communities of Gräfrath, Wald and Ohligs. In the following years new settlements around the Walder church could have created a small town. But the development of the monastery founded in 1187 in Gräfrath led to a settlement there, which was granted freedom rights in 1402. Thus Gräfrath, and not Wald with its parish church, became the urban centre in the parish of Wald. Only after the sale of the monastery property, which surrounded the church from all sides except in the west, and the extension of the country road, which connected Wald and Gräfrath with the Rhine port of Monheim, did the "Wauler Dorp" get a rounded village centre at the beginning of the 19th century through new buildings around the church. In 1808 Wald became an independent municipality, in 1816 the mayor's office Wald had 2767 inhabitants. Their municipality stretched from Weyer in the west to Foche in the east. In the southeast, Wald am Schlagbaum and Mangenberg bordered Solingen. By the middle of the 19th century the population had grown to 5278 inhabitants. In 1856 Wald was granted town rights and the main source of income for the Walder population for centuries, as in the entire Solingen region, was the production of small-scale cutlery. But with the umbrella manufacture industry, Wald was already able to make the leap into the factory age at the beginning of the 19th century. In the course of the high industrialization further modern metal enterprises were added starting from 1870. Tool factories, iron and metal foundries, lock and key factories, drop forges and factories for bicycle parts were established. The Walder railway station, built in 1887, played a particularly important role in the economic upswing, although it was only located on the side line from Solingen to Vohwinkel, known as the "Corkscrew Railway". Not even the neighbouring cities of Cologne and Düsseldorf could be reached directly. For industrial freight traffic, however, it was of extraordinary importance at the turn of the century. New factories and new jobs led to a rapid increase in the Walder population. In 1910 the town had 25311 inhabitants. The urban lifeline of the city was the main street between the railway station in the east and the Catholic church built in 1831/33 in the west. The Protestant church Wald formed the centre of urban life. Trade, services (Walder Bank, savings bank, post office) and administration (town hall) were concentrated in their vicinity. Since 1899 the tram has been winding its way through the narrow town centre. With the steady increase of individual motorized traffic, the solution of the problems on the roads in the "Wauler Dorp" became more and more urgent. In particular, the narrowness of the "Walder Schlauchs", as the part of the main street between the Protestant church and the junction of the Poststrasse - today Wiedenkamper Strasse - is popularly known, caused city planners and architects headaches even before the 1929 city unification. In order to relieve the main road of through traffic, a bypass was planned that would lead from the Catholic church to the railway station. This project could not be realised due to the world economic crisis and the Second World War. It was not until 1961 that the narrowest section of the Walder Hauptstraße, now known as Friedrich-Ebert-Straße, was relieved of through traffic by the construction of a small bypass. For this purpose, a large part of the historic buildings around the Protestant church were demolished, the "Walder Rundling" disappeared. The "Walder Schlauch", called Stresemannstraße since 1962, was converted into a pedestrian zone in 1978. At the same time, the renewed planning of a southern bypass of the entire town centre began. In 1982 the first construction measures of the Walder urban redevelopment were started. Citizens' initiatives fought on the one hand against the demolition of old houses in the centre of the "Wauler Dorps" and on the other hand against the extension of Liebermannstraße to the southern bypass around Wald. The city administration defended the redevelopment. Only in this way could Friedrich-Ebert-Straße be freed from through traffic (25,000 cars a day) and the Walder town centre be restored to its old form. In the summer of 1998, the completion of the new "Walder Rundling", which with its commercial and residential buildings follows the form of the historical model, marked the completion of the district redevelopment. But forest does not only offer an old village centre and industrial culture from the time of the high industrialization. With the Itter Valley, the district has an area which until the 19th century, with its Schleifkotten on the Itterbach, was one of the most important sources of income for the Walder. With the loss of function of the hydropower-driven workshops, the Ittertal valley was transformed into a recreational and leisure area. As early as 1914, the entrepreneur Carl-Friedrich Ern from the Walde region, who had his company on the Wittkulle, had a public lido built in the Ittertal valley. In 1936 the city of Solingen took over responsibility for the Ittertal open-air swimming pool and in 1975 an ice rink was added. In order to avoid its closure, the recreational facility was transferred to the non-profit association "Sport- und Kulturzentrum Ittertal" in 1987. In the immediate vicinity of the Ittertal lido, the "Fairytale Forest" opened its doors at the beginning of the 1930s. For decades it has been a popular destination for young and old, and for some time now new operators have been trying to revive its former attractiveness. Another remarkable monument in the district is the Jahnkampfbahn, a stadium for 10,000 spectators, opened on 27 May 1928. The area in the upper Krausener Bachtal was already acquired by the town of Wald in the years 1912 to 1920, originally to create a park in the valley marshed by sewage. From 1921 to 1926 the area between two road dams was made usable by emergency works. The construction work on the actual sports facility then took two years. With the already existing Wald-Merscheid gymnasium in the west and the erection of the Fallenen memorial in the east, a connected recreation and play area was created in the immediate vicinity of the city centre. The history of the development of the collection After the town unification in 1929, the old registries of the formerly independent towns were first accommodated in the newly established Solingen town archive under the direction of Richard Erntges in the new administration building Cronenberger Straße (formerly WKC). None of the formerly independent cities had previously had their own archives. Erntges - with the help of auxiliary staff - developed these six stocks according to a uniform file plan. Therefore there are gaps in the systematics in all files of the formerly independent cities. In most cases, the individual classification group titles also served as file titles, usually only differentiated according to "generalia" (usually without local subjects) and "specialia" (the files created by the respective city administration for the local occur. Some files, which according to the file plan or tape count had originally once been available, were included in the directory by Erntges because he probably had the hope that the files could possibly appear again. To date, this has not happened, so that in these cases we have to assume cassations before 1929. In the search book you will find the note "empty" in these files. For reasons of completeness, the data records from the "Historical Archive" were also duplicated into this collection, the term of which ends after 1808. Likewise a part of the files (above all school chronicles and trade or restaurant concessions) ends only after 1930, thus correctly belongs to the stock SG. A further distortion has been omitted until today due to time reasons. Only in the forest stock were notes recorded by Mrs. Gisela Jacobs at the end of the 1980s. May 2008 Ralf Rogge

          Stadtarchiv Mainz, VOA 6 · Fonds · 1820 - 1934
          Part of City Archive Mainz (Archivtektonik)

          After Bischofsheim's incorporation, the almost 9 m files of the VOA 6 holdings were transferred to the Mainz municipal archives in the course of two deliveries. On 01.12.1934, 161 "Rechnungs-Archivalien" (Invoice Archives), mostly from the second half of the 19th century, were handed over by the local administration of Mainz-Bischofsheim (Zug.: 1934/96). At the beginning of 1939 she had 60 parcels of "finished files" ready for stamping. The then director of the city archive, Dr. Dertsch, singled out 40 packages with files mainly from the second and third decades of the 20th century as not worthy of archiving. They concerned social welfare, food supply during and after the First World War, "general course of business", state and Reichstag elections as well as forest and municipal affairs. On 03.03.1939 20 packages (without access number) were taken over. These included eight packages of "various old files from 1820-1920", four packages each of militaria and "school affairs until 1930", two packages of mayoral and municipal elections between 1850 and 1914, and one package each of agriculture (1870-1900) and construction ("older files"). With the two entrances, the documents of the Bischofsheim municipal administration that had been handed down and intended for permanent storage did not reach the Mainz municipal archives in their entirety. A part remained in the place, so that the Bischofsheimer tradition is today divided. In Bischofsheim, mainly files and official books from the early modern period and the first half of the 19th century are kept. This is a collection which was listed in its core as early as 1914 in the inventories of the municipal archives of the district Groß-Gerau (cf. Becker, Wilhelm Martin (ed.): Invententare der Gemeindearchive des Kreises Groß-Gerau, Darmstadt 1914 (Invententare der nichtstaatlichen Archive im Großherzogtum Hessen, vol. 3: Invententar der hessischen Gemeinde-Archive, H.1), pp. 7f. The Bischofsheimer directory was compiled by the teacher Bechtolsheimer and supplemented by the Kreisurkundenpfleger). After the Second World War, the holdings were obviously supplemented with more recent materials (cf. Inventory Catalogue of the Municipal Archive of the Municipality of Bischofsheim). In: Bischofsheimer Geschichtsblätter, H.40, September 1967, p.212-219). Although the 701 volumes (without duplicates of invoices) kept in the Mainz City Archives run from 1733 to 1937, they focus on the second half of the 19th century and the first three decades of the 20th century. Thematically, the areas "Church Affairs" and "Education" stand out. Reference should also be made to the files on voluntary jurisdiction, the French occupation after the First World War and the construction industry. When it was taken over by the town archives, the files were roughly arranged according to the 1908 registration plan for the grand ducal mayor's offices. When examining the archives, however, it became apparent that, on the one hand, the titles of the files given by the registration plan often did not describe their contents sufficiently and, on the other hand, that there was often no organic and, in many cases, no factual connection between the individual documents of a file volume. This made the distortion work more difficult. In order to ensure sufficient indexing, new file units had to be formed in part - disregarding archival principles. For the same reason, the titles were formulated in as much detail as possible and often supplemented with notes ("Contains", "Contains, etc.", "Contains, etc."). Reference was made to foreign documents as well as to newspapers and printed matter, photographs and plans (except for construction files) with "Darin auch". Only a few documents were collected, above all incomplete forms and questionnaires for statistical surveys, which were available in several copies, as well as advertising material from companies outside the Sprengels of the Mainz City Archive. A comparison between the delivery notes or lists from 1934 and 1939 on the one hand and the found stock on the other hand suggests that a small amount of material was destroyed between the time of the takeover and the distortion. It must remain unclear whether this was due to an archival decision or to the effects of war. In the final classification, the complete adoption of the 1908 registry plan did not seem to make much sense, as numerous departments would have been occupied with little or no occupancy at all. For this reason, a new scheme was developed on the basis of the registry plan and on the basis of the classifications found in other suburban archives of the Mainz Municipal Archives, which seeks to take account of the actual files found. Due to a personnel change, two editors were involved in the creation of the finding aid book, whose different "manuscripts" could not be completely suppressed during the final editing. It began with the drawing in spring/summer 1988 by Mrs. Andrea Eckel, was completed in winter 1990/91 by the undersigned, Mr. Heiner Stauder, who also carried out the classification and wrote the preface. The search book was entered into the database "Archibal" in November 1999 by Mrs. Gerda Kessler in cooperation with Mrs. Ramona Göbel (Chief Inspector of the Archives). Local history of Bischofsheim: The beginnings of today's Bischofsheim date back to the time of the Frankish occupation of the land. Both archaeological finds and the ending of the place name on "-heim" speak for this. However, the prefixed place of destination is not a personal name, as is usually the case, but an ecclesiastical official designation. Staab concludes that the bishop of Mainz was the founder of the Franconian settlement. He probably also owned the local church, which was probably dedicated to Saint Martin. It probably passed into the possession of the Sankt Viktor monastery near Weisenau around 1000, which was the most important landlord of the Mainz monasteries and monasteries wealthy in Bischofsheim alongside the cathedral monastery. It also received a large tithe in most of the district and had the right of patronage, which it retained even after the introduction of the Reformation in Bischofsheim during the 16th century. In the second half of the 13th century, members of various branches of the Reichsministerialengeschlechts von Bolanden could be seized as holders of sovereign rights. At the beginning of the 14th century the Hohenfels line had apparently prevailed, but in 1331 members of this house sold the village of Bischofsheim with court, people and all accessories for 400 pounds of heller to Count Rudolf von Wertheim and Gottfried von Eppstein. The aristocracy of Wertheim soon seems to have passed into the hands of the arch monastery of Mainz, which pledged it to Henne von Erlebach in 1417: von Weilbach. One of his descendants, Adam von Erlebach, and his wife Margarethe came in the same way into possession of the Eppsteiner share, which the pledgee lord sold to Count Philipp von Katzenelnbogen in 1478. After his death in the following year the Landgraves of Hesse inherit him, whose Darmstadt line succeeded in putting themselves into the complete possession of Bischofsheim. In 1577, after lengthy negotiations, the lords of Hattstein sold their rights to Landgrave George I to succeed von Erlebach, and two years later the archbishopric of Mainz did the same. Thus Bischofsheim has belonged to Hesse (-Darmstadt) since 1579. The change of rule in 1577/79 and the Reformation, which was presumably already in place before that, left the possessions and rights of the Mainz monasteries and monasteries untouched. Not until 1802/03 did their estates fall to the Hessian state in the course of secularisation. This transition was one of the many innovations that took place during the 19th century. In the wake of the constitution issued by the Grand Duchy of Hesse in 1820, the judiciary and administration were separated, which necessitated a reorganization of the state. Bischofsheim, which had previously belonged to the Rüsselsheim office, was assigned to the Dornberg district in the province of Starkenburg or to the Groß-Gerau district court. While the division of the judiciary remained largely the same over the next 110 years - only in 1879 did the district court of Groß-Gerau become the district court with the introduction of the German Court Constitution Act of 3 September 1878 - the territorial division of the administration was subject to several changes. In 1832 Bischofsheim was added to the district Groß-Gerau, after the dissolution of the districts in the course of the revolution of 1848 to the administrative district Darmstadt. When the districts were restituted in the course of the reaction in 1852, Bischofsheim returned to the Groß-Gerau district, where it remained until it was incorporated into Mainz in 1930. With the constitution of 1820, the traditional municipal constitution was also no longer compatible, which is why a new municipal order was issued in 1821. In Bischofsheim it also replaced the mayor's office with the mayor, who together with the deputy and the local council formed the local executive committee. However, in Bischofsheim the term "Schultheiß" seems to have been in use for some time. A further innovation in the first half of the 19th century meant the abolition of the traditional agricultural constitution: the rule of the land and the rule of the tenth disappeared with the transfer of the land charges, which had largely been carried out in Bischofsheim until 1842. At this time the Bischofsheimer still lived predominantly from agriculture. Their village had not yet expanded beyond the local embankment, which had been built to protect the inhabitants of the Mainufergemeinde from the often threatening floods. A profound socio-economic and demographic change began with industrialization in the second half of the 19th century. Numerous employees of the companies being established in the neighbouring communities, namely MAN in Gustavsburg and Opel in Rüsselsheim, came from or moved to Bischofsheim. However, the most important employer for the Bischofsheimers was the railway, which had a decisive influence on the history of the town. After the Mainz-Darmstadt line had been opened in 1858 and the Mainz-Frankfurt line in 1863, the Bischofsheim railway station was expanded at the turn of the century to become the largest marshalling yard in southern Germany and Mainz's relief freight yard. This contributed significantly to the growth of the settlement and population. The influx of railway employees and factory workers also created a Catholic community, after Bischofsheim - apart from some Jews - had been purely Protestant. The changes in the course of industrialization naturally also affected the activities of the municipal administration. Reference is made here to the construction of schools and local roads, which is reflected in the files at hand. These also provide information about the consequences of the French occupation of the Rhineland after the First World War and the passive resistance. Since this was exercised in particular also by numerous railwaymen, it came in Bischofsheim to numerous expulsions by the occupation authorities. At the end of the 1920s, the local government planned to lay gas and water pipelines. These two projects brought the community into severe financial distress in the context of the global economic crisis. In this situation, the idea of incorporation into Mainz was awakened for the first time, which was finally realised after hard disputes between the population and the local council. On 01.01.1930 Bischofsheim was incorporated into the city of Mainz together with neighbouring Ginsheim-Gustavsburg, Bretzenheim and Weisenau, which hoped to benefit from an expansion of its area. In 1930 their area doubled from 4096 ha to 8195 ha, of which 930 ha were in the Bischofsheim district. After the incorporation, Fischer, who had been mayor since then, initially acted as head of the village until, after the National Socialist seizure of power, he was replaced by the party member Fritz Eitel, who also headed the Ginsheim-Gustavsburg district. During his term of office the discrimination of the Jewish population began, which reached its first climax in the pogrom night of 9/10.11.1938. At that time the synagogue in Bischofsheim was damaged. The remaining Jewish inhabitants in Bischofsheim were victims of the Holocaust during the war. Victims were also claimed by the Allied bombing raids, which targeted the railway station, but often also affected the settlement. After the war, the Rhine became the border between two occupation zones or federal states. As a result, the connection between Mainz and Bischofsheim was dissolved, and Bischofsheim declared itself an independent parish again in the district of Groß-Gerau. Mayor and local leader of Bischofsheim (1853-1945), (Source: Mangold, p. 114 and Bischofsheimer Geschichtsblätter 14, 1965 (special issue). A listing of the mayors before 1853 was omitted, since the archives showed deviations from the terms of office, which were mentioned in the gen. Literature can be called. For checking and, if necessary, correction, archival records must also be consulted which are kept in the municipal archives in Bischofsheim. In particular the invoices are to be consulted.) 1853-1862: Johannes Schneider, mayor; 1862-1865: Michael Dammel, mayor; 1865-1909: Philipp Jakob Wiesenecker, mayor; 1910-1920: Heinrich Hünerkopf, mayor; 1921-1933: Georg Fischer, mayor, from 1930 local head; 1933-1939: Friedrich Eitel, local head; 1939-1945: Georg Fischer, local head of population development Bischofsheim Quellen, unless otherwise stated: Mangold, p. 73. 1792: Total: 400; 1829: Total: 668; 1861: Total: 1078; 1865 (statistical overview in volume 621): Total: 1169, of which Protestant: 1093, Catholic: 6, Jews: 70, Houses: 146; 1873: Total: 1404, (according to the German Federal Statistics Office): 1,964, (according to the German Federal Statistics Office): 1,971. Hartwig-Thürmer, p. 11ff.): of which cath.: 50, Jews: 60; 1895: Total: 2264; 1900: Total: 2961; 1910: Total: 4456, of which ev.: 3686, cath.: 717, Jews: 46; 1930: (according to "Groß-Mainz", p. 5:) Total: 5438, of which Protestant: 4358, Catholic: 982, Jews: 31, Houses: 690; 1939: Total: 6407 (Hartwig-Thürmer, p. 11ff.); 1948: Total: 7412 (Hartwig-Thürmer, p. 11ff.) Bischofsheimer Geschichtsblätter 1950 ff. (= publication organ of the Heimat- und Geschichtsverein Bischofsheim); "Groß-Mainz". Special edition of the Mainzer Anzeiger on 1 January 1930. Supplement to edition no. 303 of 31.12.1929; Hansel, Klaus: Das Stift St. Victor vor Mainz. Phil.Diss. Mainz. Gernsheim 1952; Hartwig-Thürmer, Christine: Ginsheim-Gustavsburg, Bischofsheim. The Mainspitze under the swastika. Frankfurt/M. o.J.; This: "Here it was already bad ...". In: When the last hopes burned. 9/10 November 1938. Mainz Jews between integration and annihilation. Mainz 1988 (Mainz Edition, Vol. 5), pp. 115-125; Leiwig, Heinz/ Neliba, Dieter H.: The tip of the Main in the crosshairs of the Royal Air Force and the 8th USAAF - Bischofsheim 1939-1945 -. Ginsheim-Gustavsburg 1985; Mangold, Georg: Bischofsheim. A historical homeland book. Mainz 1929 (Starkenburg in its past, vol. 5). Müller, Wilhelm (editor): Hessian place name book vol.1: Starkenburg. Darmstadt 1937; Ruppel, Hans-Georg/ Müller, Karin (Bearb.): Historical place index for the area of the former Grand Duchy and People's State of Hesse. Darmstadt 1976 (Darmstädter Archivschriften, vol. 2); Staab, Franz: Studies on the Society on the Middle Rhine during the Carolingian period. Wiesbaden 1975 (Historical regional studies, vol. 11).

          Stadtarchiv Mainz, VOA 11 · Fonds · 1815 - 1975
          Part of City Archive Mainz (Archivtektonik)

          In 1970 (access number 1970/16) - i.e. after the incorporation of 1969 - the archive of the municipality of Ebersheim, which covers an area of approx. 13 metres, was transferred to the Mainz City Archives. The files, official books and some plans were in a completely disordered state. According to a note dated 09.12.1949 in No. 638 "Brände in Ebersheim" (Fires in Ebersheim), a large part of the municipal records was destroyed by the effects of war in the Second World War. There is no list of the missing file material in the stock. For example, these can be municipal council minutes, association files, files on Reichstag, Landtag and municipal council elections, which are missing in the Ebersheim inventory. The documents of the municipality of Ebersheim mainly document the period 1815-1863, but also contain - albeit only a few - documents from the 18th century. Within this range, however, there are numerous gaps. The order work of the collection was considerably complicated by many loose-leaf collections in addition to individual case files within a bundle. The individual case files had to be partially closed and new file units had to be created. Because of the long duration of individual files and because of the new format of the files, the titles of the registered files were deliberately formulated in detail. They were supplemented by detailed subtitles (Contains, Contains, etc.); records within a file unit that were not related to the subject were marked "therein". A larger cassation was omitted for the distortion, because there was no possibility of comparison with the traditions in other suburban archives. In order to avoid double overdeliveries within the stock, a single sheet cassation was occasionally carried out, e.g. with forms. During the classification of the recorded files, an attempt was made to establish an affiliation with the Hessian registry plan of 1908. Due to the large number and diversity of file subjects and the long duration within individual files, the surtitles of the registry plan in particular have undergone major changes. The birth, marriage and death registers of the years 1798-1802 were taken from the inventory and attached to the civil status registers of Ebersheim in the inventory 50 "Register of civil status and files of civil status" under the current no. 272. In 1985 the local administration of Mainz-Ebersheim (access number 1985/25) delivered another file with a circumference of approx. 4 metres. The files, which run until 1975, focus on elections and budgetary, cash and accounting matters. They were arranged analogously to the classification points and added to the end of the finding aid book. Local history Ebersheim: 2nd half of the 8th century: First documentary mention (document book of the monastery Fulda I Nr. 191 and 217); until 1420: Changing circumstances of rule; 1420: Transfer to the Archbishopric of Mainz, belonging to the electoral office of Nieder-Olm, since 1782 to the vice-chamber office of Mainz, office bailiwick of Nieder-Olm; 1798: Conquest by the French; 1801: With the transition to France (Peace of Lunéville), assignment to the canton Nieder-Olm in the department Donnersberg, affiliation to Mairie Nieder-Olm, since 1807 Mairie Ebersheim; 1814: withdrawal of the French; 1816: Affiliation to the Grand Duchy of Hesse, belonging to the canton Nieder-Olm in the newly formed province Rheinhessen; 1835: division of the province Rheinhessen into districts, allocation of Ebersheim to the district Mainz; 1909/1911: construction of the fort Muhl of the fortress Mainz; 1945: allocation to the administrative district Mainz with its seat in Oppenheim, formation of the administrative district Rheinhessen; 1946: formation of the state Rheinland-Pfalz; 1969: in the course of the administrative reform incorporation to Mainz, district Mainz, district Mainz; 1969: in the course of the administrative reform incorporation to Mainz, district Mainz, district Mainz. Mayor of Ebersheim since 1808: Friedrich Schäfer, Maire in Ebersheim, from 18.01.1814 Mayor (1808-1818); Michael Sieben (1818-1819); Johann Becker (1819-1831); Johann Bär (1831-1833); Michael Knußmann II. (1833-1849); Johann Kimpling (1849-1853); Philipp Glaser (1853-1859); Jakob Becker VI (1859-1875); Lorenz Eckert III (1859-1875). (1875-1891); Nikolaus Becker (1891-1896); Matthäus Sieben (1896-1916); Peter Vollmer (1916-1922); Peter Fuchs (1923-1927); Balthasar Becker III. (1929-1936); Heinrich Herdt (1936-1944); Balthasar Becker III. (1945-1956); Johann Baptist Eckert II. (1956-1964); Johann Ambros Becker (since 1964, from 1969: local leader) Residents of Ebersheim: 1780: 540 (in 124 houses); 1850: 1073 Catholics, 1 Protestant, 47 Jews; 1871: 1083 Catholics, 17 Protestants, 56 Jews; 1882: 1043 Catholics, 12 Protestants, 52 Jews; 1905: 1069 Catholics, 7 Protestants, 38 Jews; 1927: 1057 Catholics, 9 Protestants, 33 Jews; 1941: 1150 Catholics, approx. 10 Protestants; 1983/total: approx. 4000 inhabitants Brilmayer, Karl Johann: Rheinhessen in the past and present, Gießen 1905; Hoffmann, Klaus Dietrich: Die Geschichte der Provinzial- und Bezirksregierung für Rheinhessen. 12.07.1816-01.10.1968. Mainz 1977; 1500 years Ebersheim, commemorative publication for the anniversary celebration of the community Ebersheim in 1964, Oppenheim 1964; 120 years Sängervereinigung 1862/63 Mainz-Ebersheim e.V., Festschrift zum 120jährigen Jubiläum, 1983; 800 Jahre Kirche im Dorf 1184-1984, Festschrift zum 800-Jahrfeier der 1. documental mention of a church in Ebersheim and for the 75th anniversary of the extension of today's church, Klein-Winternheim 1984.