Besitz

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          40 Dokumente results for Besitz

          40 Ergebnisse mit direktem Bezug Engere Begriffe ausschließen
          Staatsarchiv Bremen (STAB), 16,24/1 · Bestand · 1893 - 1902
          Teil von State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

          Explanation: Documents from the possession of the leader of the indigenous movement against the German colonial rule in today's Namibia, at that time German South West Africa, Hendrik Witbooi (ca. 1830-1905) had fallen into the hands of the Bremen merchant August Engelbert Wulff in 1895 in the course of military conflicts in Gibeon, Namibia. In 1935 he sold it to the then German Colonial and Overseas Museum. The documents were handed over to the National Archives of Windhoek in 1995 after reproductions had been made for the State Archives of Bremen and the Übersee-Museum. Content: Correspondence

          Witbooi, Hendrik
          926/2 - Vaihingen files, municipal files
          926/2 · Bestand
          Teil von Stuttgart City Archive

          Brief description: The file tradition on Vaihingen begins in the 1820s and lasts until 1945. In 1942 Vaihingen was incorporated into Stuttgart together with the pipe incorporated in 1936. Circumference: 2543 units / 43.2 running metres 24 running metres. Content: Files: Municipal registry For the official registers, see fonds 926. Duration: 1822-1963 (1984, 1985) Hints for use: For the majority of files there are no restrictions on use, some documents are subject to personal blocking periods. Preface: The first documentary mention of Vaihingen dates back to the time around 1100, when the village was owned by the Counts of Calw, before it reached the Palgraves of Tübingen at the end of the 12th century. These sold Vaihingen in 1297 to the hospital in Esslingen. At the beginning of the 19th century the town came to Württemberg. In 1936 Vaihingen was merged with Rohr to form a municipality. On 1.4.1942 the incorporation to Stuttgart took place. The files recorded here were handed over to the City Archive by the Vaihingen District Office in June 1977. They run from 1822 to 1963 and have a circumference of 24 linear metres. The original order according to the Flattich file plan was retained. Further documents can be found in the inventory 926-Vaihingen. Files, which have accrued after the incorporation to Stuttgart, are registered in the inventory 863/1-Bezirksamt Vaihingen. Literature: 900 Years of Vaihingen, commemorative publication for the 900th Anniversary, edited by Heimatring Stuttgart-Vaihingen/Rohr e.V; "Vaihingen, Rohr, Büsnau und Dürrlewang : aus der Geschichte eines Stuttgarter Stadtbezirks", Christine Bührlen-Grabinger ; Dagmar Kraus; Martin Zurowski, 1993 Old inventory signature: 919 Citation method: 926/2-Vaihingen-Flattichakten - Number of file Order method: 926/2-Vaihingen-Flattichakten - Number of file - Title - Duration Stuttgart, in March 2008 Dr. Christa Mack Supplement to foreword The individual family maintenance files, including the family maintenance file as well as individual case files from general welfare, tuberculosis and social and small pensioner welfare whose transfer date could no longer be determined, which were also taken over in 1977, were recorded in 2014/2015 and added to the inventory. The stock now comprises 2543 units with a circumference of 43.2 running metres. Stuttgart, March 2015 Elke Machon

          Archivalie - Process
          E 387/1894 · Akt(e) · 1894-01-01 - 1894-12-31
          Teil von Ethnological Museum, National Museums in Berlin

          description: Contains:Content: Herold sends a drawing of a drum with human skulls from Togo, which are only in the possession of the tribal chieftains and only hung with skulls of enemies killed in the war, mostly Aschanti. Reference to Ashanti War (1869-1874) as the last great slave hunt, therefore skulls date mainly from this time. Peace was only disturbed by the Tafieve War of 1888. Reference to Chief Kwadjo De from Peki, who had made trophies in this war. Similar drums at chiefs of Ho and Nkonya. Indication that decayed skulls are not replaced, which he sees as proof of the object's function as a fetish object. Drums are so highly regarded that only war or chance would bring them into the hands of Euopaeans. Suggestion that Dr. Gruner (Misahöhe) or Missionar Fies (Ho) should buy or photograph the drum of the Ho King Ho-Owosu. Description of the drum and how to use it. Request if MV is already in possession of a loom from Togo, which he might give as a present. (Sketches, pp. 206, 207) Letters: 2

          Gruner, Hans
          Archivaly - Akte
          I/MV 0741 · Akt(e) · 1905-01-01 - 1911-12-31
          Teil von Ethnological Museum, National Museums in Berlin

          description: Contains:StartVNr: E 1175/1907; EndVNr: E 2044/1907; and others: Cooperation with the Botanical Museum, p. 42, the Botanical Central Office for the Colonies at the Royal Botanical Garden and Museum, p. 144, and the Museum of Natural History, Berlin, (1907), pp. 2 f., 188 - Cooperation with the Museums of Ethnology, Dresden, (1908), pp. 107, 110 ff., and Cologne, (1907), pp. 205 ff. - Sale of doubles to the Hzgl. collections of the Veste Coburg, (1907), pp. 79 ff., the Städtische Museum, Braunschweig, pp. 176 ff., the Museums für Völkerkunde, Frankfurt a.M., pp. 69 ff., and Munich, (1907, 1908), pp. 124, 126 ff.- Cooperation with the Zoological Museum, Florence, pp. 162 f., and the South African College, Cape Town, (1907), pp. 13.- Exchange of doubles with a private person, (1907), pp. 146 ff.- Cooperation with the Governor of Togo, (1907), pp. 33, 99, 115 - Cooperation with the editorial staff of the Berliner Lokal-Anzeiger, [1907], Abschr., pp. 9 f - Cooperation with missionaries, (1907), pp. 22, 161 - Schweinfurth: "Egyptian Relics in the Ethiopian South". In: Vossische Ztg. : 1907-06-03, pp. 29 f., Offer of Kieselmanufacts, (1905), Folder, pp. 47, "Collection of Late Palaeolithic Kieselmanufacts of Gafsa (South Tunisia) 1906.", (1907), pp. 202 f. - Call for the foundation of a national museum in Lome, [1907], leaflet, p. 100 - [Kundt:] Problems with the acquisition of skeletons in South Africa, (1907), p. 118 f.- "Prozess Grübel-Walter.", 1907-11-01, Ztg.-Artikel, p. 138 - Wiese: Report about rock drawings, (1907), pp. 153 ff. - Publication problems of the Buschmann drawings from the possession Lloyd, (1907, 1908), pp. 166 ff.

          BArch, N 2225/20 · Akt(e) · Apr. 1904 - Juli 1905
          Teil von Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

          Contains: Recording of the Regierungsrat Haber on the printed matter: "Commission of the Deutsche Kolonialgesellschaft für die Bodenfrage" with 6 annexes, among them: List of the Kronland taken in possession and calculations of it until June 1905; Ordinance of 9 Oct. 1898 on mining in D e u t s c h - O s t a f r i k a; material on the East African protectorate by J. Graf von Pfeil for the publication: Kommission der Deutschen Kolonialgesellschaft für die Bodenfrage.- (Commission of the D e u t s c h e K o l o n i a l g e s c h a f t for the land question). Copy of a letter from the Governor of D e u t s c h - O s t a f r i k a from Götzen to J. Graf von Pfeil dated 8 Apr. 1904 - Copy of a report from Götzen to the Colonial Department of the Federal Foreign Office dated 12 Oct. 1904 on: previous treatment of the land question in the protectorates

          Pfeil, Joachim Graf von
          Community archive Leiselheim (inventory)
          Stadtarchiv Worms, 043 · Bestand
          Teil von City Archive Worms (Archivtektonik)

          Inventory description: Abt. 43 Gemeindearchiv Leiselheim Scope: 214 archive cartons (= 1341/1354 units of description and 1 lfm of official records = 34 lfm) Duration: approx. 1600 - 1942 Cataloguing: Augias database (retroconversion of the mechanical finding aid a.d. J. 1990) Nov. 2009 About the local history Gut situated four kilometres west of Worms north of the Pfrimmtal; first documented in 1141; at the latest since this time part of the high monastery Worms, belonged then to the dominion Stauf, from 1422 to the county Nassau-Saarbrücken (together with the bishop of Worms) and finally to Nassau-Weilburg, about 1683 finally in Electoral Palatine possession (already at the latest since the Reformation time Electoral Palatinate was de facto local lord), 1705 the bishop of Worms renounced the three villages Hochheim, Pfiffligheim and Leiselheim in favour of the Palatinate county; The town was predominantly reformed by the Electoral Palatinate rule since the Reformation, parish church St. Laurentius (Catholic after disputes between the Reformed and Catholic sides since the division of the church in 1705, since 18th/19th century the Catholics belonged to the parish of Pfeddersheim; the Reformed who belonged to Hochheim built a new church in 1716); around 1900 approx. 970 inhabitants; 1798 - 1814 French domination, from 1816 Grand Duchy or People's State Hesse; 1816 Canton Pfeddersheim, 1835 District Worms, 1848 Administrative District Mainz, 1850 Administrative District Worms, 1852 - 1942 District Worms, incorporation into Worms as of 1.4.1942 To the inventory The Dept. V - VII of the registration plan of 1908 are not documented. Compared to the inventory of 1937, the following losses can be noted: in IX: treasure register 1739-1780; treasure records 1742, 1780; treasure accounts and files 18th century and others; in X: purchase records 1689-1797; in XI: population lists 1695, 1705, citizens' assumptions 1777-1796; in XV: expenditure books of the mayor 1722-1758; in XXI: agricultural statistics 1771-1790. To mention are the older holdings (before 1800): in VIII war accounts 1699-1817, quarters and fourages etc. 1759; in IX: Hebregister über die Bede 1694-1796; tax lists 1694-1814, Schatzungsheberegister 1696-1796, files concerning interest rights on spiritual goods and concerning tithes 17th and 18th century, further lift registers 18th centuryTreasure records about Leiselheimer and Hochheimer capital 1740-1780; in X: court records 1768-1819, promissory notes and bonds 1703-1794 (in it Gültverschreibungen, 1712, 1743, 1748, 1752, 1754, 1756), register of wills 1759-1798, inheritance and guardianship matters 1690-1796, purchase and auction files 1701-1794; in XI: Population statistics 1758-1816, serfdom affairs 1717-1811, body register approx. 1725; in XII: single sheets of the ref. church book 1732-1798 as well as cath. Church book Leiselheim, Hochheim, Pfiffligheim 1696-1798 (according to inventory 1937, now in dept. 108); Confirmed 1733-1795, church elders and charity keepers 1733-1796, records of the church account 1703-1787; in XV: community officials 1720-1818, Bürgerweide 1786-1833, baking house and smithy 1721-1820; community debts 1700-1820; community accounts from 1795 (with gaps); in XVI: Alms gradient 1711-1769; in XXI: Livestock exchange and sales records 1715-1745, various purchase and sales records, auctions 17./18th century, Damage tables 1768-1789; various lists of goods 18th century, Renovation of the estates of the Martinsstift in 1750; in XXIII: Zunftsachen 1707 Supplementary Archive Holdings Cf. Documents in Dept. 41 (Hochheim) and 45 (Pfiffligheim) as well as in Dept. 13 No. 463 (dismissals from the Hessian Untertanenverband, 1844 - 1914); in Dept. 49 (XIII) documents concerning the settlement of Jews from the 19th century can be found; see also some volumes in Dept. 30 Lit.: Spille (Bearb.), City of Worms (pp. 246-251)

          Court Marshal's Office
          Thüringisches Hauptstaatsarchiv Weimar, 6-13-5001 · Bestand
          Teil von Thuringian Main State Archives Weimar (Archivtektonik)

          Description of the holdings: Hofmeister and Hofmarschälle can be found at the Weimar court as early as the 16th century (cf. present holdings no. 403). A new appointment and organisation ("re-establishment") of the Court Marshal's Office took place under the Saxon-Coburg supreme guardianship in 1750 (No. 411c). According to the state handbooks of the second half of the 19th century, the sphere of business of the Court Marshal's Office included the administration of the part of the chamber's property reserved for the Grand Ducal House, the so-called crown property (Ordinance of May 4, 1854, Reg. p. 229), and the overall supervision of the associated cash and accounting system, the care of the stocks at court and the supervision of their consumption, the affairs of the court etiquette, the pages, the court officers (court kitchen, winery, silver chamber, cloakroom, etc.).), the administration of the palaces, parks and garden centres, the handling of discipline by the subordinate servants, the exercise of police rights in the eximierten possessions of the Grand Ducal House, the supervision of the Pensionanstalt für Witwen und Waisen der Mitglieder der Hofkapelle opened in 1830 and the supervision of the Grand Ducal Museum für Kunst und Kunstgewerbe (state since 1903). The Court Marshal's Office carried out the business of the Court Theatre Directorate from 1828 to 1857 (No. 3123, 3126), and from 1851 to 1855 the business of the Court Stables Office, which was abolished at that time (Reg.Bl. 1851 p. 12, 1856 p. 64). After the Grand Duke renounced his throne in 1918, the Court Marshal's Office was abolished together with the Court Main Treasury on 31 March 1922 (No. 538). A Grand Ducal Saxon Schatull Administration existed in Weimar until the expropriation of the princes in 1948. The files of the Court Marshal's Office have mostly only been handed down since the end of the 18th century. This was caused by considerable losses during the fire at Weimar Castle in 1774 (cf. No. 2553, p. 2). During its existence, in 1893 and 1917, the Court Marshal's Office supplied the Weimar State Archives with documents that were ready for archiving, but these were exclusively series of volumes of accounts that were added to the archives available at the time. The files of the Court Marshal Office, on the other hand, were only handed over to the Weimar State Archives by the Thuringian Ministry of Finance as the successor authority to the Court Marshal Office in two deliveries in February 1923 and September 1933. Together with the files, the three repertories A, B and C (now classified in the inventory as No. 1b, 1c, 1d) were handed over; the delivery of 1933 comprised the files listed in the "new" repertory C. The files were handed over to the "new" repertory. Repertory C was the youngest repertory to be created at the Court Marshal's Office in 1898/99, with various files still needed being transferred from repertories A and B to the "new repertory" C, while the remaining pieces listed in A and B were "put back" (cf. No. 530). In addition, a large number of unlisted files and a collection of mostly handwritten sheet music for instrumental music from the period around 1775 were deposited in the State Archives. Here, all the files have been worked together to form an inventory. The capital classification of repertory C was used as the basis for the portfolio classification. The signatures given to the pieces in the repertories A, B and C due to their older distortion are recorded in a special column of the present repertory. From the traditional repertories, file titles were also transferred to the repertory created by the State Archives, for which files could no longer be ascertained. However, a large number of such initially missing files of the Court Marshal's Office were still to be found among the files left to the State Archives by the Ministry of Education of the State of Thuringia when it left for Erfurt in 1950. The actual holdings of the Court Marshal's Office (known as the Court Marshal's Office I) are appended in special parts as: - Court Marshal's Office II: Gartendirektion Eisenach (established in 1804, abolished in 1890) No. 4000 - 4142: Files that have grown up with this (special provenance) No. 4200 - 4222: Files of the Court Marshal's Office on this subject - Court Marshal's Office III: Gardens and Park Administration No. 4223 - 4463: Files of the Court Marshal's Office (These belong together with those in Court Marshal's Office I Chapter 58: Gardens, parks listed). The provenances of the Hofstallamt zu Weimar (B), which were related to the holdings of the Hofmarschallamt (Court Marshal's Office) and were in charge of the supervision of the Großherzogliches Marstall zu Weimar (Grand Ducal Marshal's Office), as well as of the Hofgestüt zu Allstedt (C) are treated as separate provenances (holdings), each with a new census and their own finding aids. Both authorities were abolished in 1920. The order and indexing of the holdings in the Weimar State Archives was carried out by Dr. Paul Goehts, a member of the Weimar government, between April 1945 and December 1847. The pieces found later, most of which had already been noted in the repertory, were added to the holdings in 1954 and 1955. The final work was done by the state archivist Dr. Rudolf Diezel. Weimar, September 30, 1955 Prof. Dr. Flach Remarks: The holdings contain the files of the Court Marshal's Office of the Duchy/Grand Duchy of Saxony-Weimar-Eisenach, primarily since the reorganization in 1750. They document the entire administration of the Weimar Court. In the years 1828 to 1857 the court theatre and the court chapel were also subordinated to the authority. From 1830 onwards, the Hofmarschallamt was the supervisory authority for the pension institution for widows and orphans of the members of the Hofkapelle and until 1903 for the Grand Ducal Museum of Arts and Crafts. Since 1854 he was also in charge of the administration of the "Krongutes", which had been given to the Grand Ducal House for its own use, and the police force on this property. The holdings also include the lists of the participants of the princely table kept by the Hoffouriers for the period 1749 - 1918 (Fourier books). The Court Marshal's Office was abolished in 1922. The files were delivered to the archive in several deliveries in 1893, 1917, but essentially only in 1923 and 1933.

          D.Mei · Gliederung
          Teil von Archive Office for Westphalia

          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.

          Sammlung · 1923-1938
          Teil von Augsburg State Archives (Archivtektonik)

          Preface: Johannes Christoph Ferdinand Lippert was born on 07.08.1875 in Sulzbach-Rosenberg as one of six children. In 1906 he married Elisabeth Serr in Germersheim (Palatinate). Hans Lippert was head of the Donauwörth Agricultural Office from 1925 to 1938. During these years he has been extraordinarily involved in the history of his homeland and from 1930 he was chairman of the Historical Association for Donauwörth and the surrounding area. During this time, he mainly took up a wealth of motifs in his Sprengel, which make up the unique value of the so-called Lippert picture collection. In 1938, Lippert resigned from the Gleichschaltung des Historischen Vereins. After his move to Fürth, he worked for many years as a volunteer in the local city archive and in the state archive of Nuremberg (e.g. state archive of Nuremberg, holdings: Reichsstadt Nürnberg, Losungsamt, city accounting records) (friendly note from Mr. Erich Hofgärtner). He lived until his childless death in Fürth (Königswarterstraße 72) and died as a retired Oberregierungsbaurat on 01.08.1961 in Fürth (Jakob-Henle-Straße 1). His will of 10 April 1939 does not contain any dispositions regarding his collection of pictures. The estate file is archived in the Nuremberg State Archives (District Court Fürth VI 843/1961; friendly note from Mrs. Magerla, Nuremberg State Archives). The image collection comprises a total of 2,431 photographs of all types of buildings, including interior and exterior views, mainly from the Donauwörth district. The main holdings of 1884 objects were taken over by the Augsburg State Archives in 1992 (Archivalienzugangsbuch-Nr.: 36/1992) and in 1993 (Archivalienzugangsbuch-Nr.: 14/1993) from the Land- und Universitätsbauamt Augsburg. In addition, the Donauwörth City Archives have a smaller collection of 547 objects, some of which are interlinked with those of the Augsburg State Archives. The photographs kept in the city archives became the property of the Historical Association for Donauwörth and its Surroundings, whose chairman Lippert was until 1938. The Augsburg State Archives took over the collection in 1992 and 1993, which is kept in a specially made wooden cabinet. After an initial review by Dr. Gerhard Hetzer, Bernhard Stadler and Simon Lutz (the latter formerly employed by the Landbauamt Donauwörth), handwritten lists for determining the motifs of the negatives were drawn up in addition to an already existing older list of slides. Mr. Richard Helfrich then numbered the photographs from 1 to 3202 without separating them into different series (narrow, typewritten stickers), with the slides retaining their old numbers, noted in pencil on the originals in one corner. The old parchment bags of the negatives, which are provided with explanatory inscriptions or contain enclosed loose labels, only partially carried older numbers. The numbering was done in view of a security filming in the Herrmann und Kraemer GmbH u. Co KG laboratory in Garmisch-Partenkirchen. Prior to the security filming, Mr. Simon Lutz, in consultation with Dr. Seitz, the official board member, removed the originals numbered by Mr. Helfrich, No. 2366 to 2999, from the picture collection, as they did not belong to it (mainly photographs of persons). In the laboratory, the image collection was divided into two groups for technical reasons: Negatives or Series A (1096 objects) Contains original glass plate negatives (format 13 x 18 cm, 9 x 11.5 cm, 6.5 x 9 cm), original film negatives (6 x 8.5 cm), negative duplicates (10.5 x 14.5 cm) and photographic prints (10.5 x 14.5 cm). Slides or Series B (759 objects) Contains original glass plate slides (format 9 x 12 cm), negative duplicates (10.5 x 14.5 cm) and photo prints (10.5 x 14.5 cm). The negative duplicates and photo prints were placed in a glassine bag in the laboratory with the originals; the bags were labeled with the order number (= order number) in the upper left corner with a black pen. In the Augsburg State Archives, the negative duplicates and photo prints (for submission to users) were separated from the originals by working students and provided with sub-numbers, since the older parchment bags often contained several originals. The trainees created, separately according to the formats of the originals, with typewriter several directories. In 2004, Florian Anton Kofler used the Excel program to record the holdings of the Augsburg State Archives and the Donauwörth City Archives on behalf of the Swabian District. Mr. Kofler also listed some older photo prints from the remaining disordered appendix (negatives on film strips as well as older photo prints) of the picture collection, for which a small series C (so far 29 objects) was formed. Mr. Kofler has kindly left his data records to the Augsburg State Archives, on the basis of which, after importing them into the Faust database program, the following finding aids with registers could be created: - Augsburg State Archives, Donauwörth Land Construction Office, Lippert Picture Collection. This archive stock has been added to the finding aids database. - Donauwörth City Archive, Historical Society, Lippert Picture Collection. This find book is located in the Augsburg State Archives as an external repertory. In addition, two files in the inventory LANDBAUAMT DONAUWÖRTH are to be referred to: J 63: Heimatschutz und Denkmalpflege with 36 photos, 1935-1940. J 65: Heimatschutz und Denkmalpflege with 11 photos, 1921-1929. Literature: Ottmar Seuffert "Hans Lippert, Chairman of the Historischer Verein für Donauwörth und Umgebung e.V. (Historical Association for Donauwörth and Surroundings) In difficult times (1930-1938)", in: Mitteilungen des Historischen Vereins für Donauwörth und Umgebung 2000, pp. 67-81. Augsburg, Günter Steiner, 6 April 2005

          Estate archive Eichenbarleben
          Landesarchiv Sachsen-Anhalt, H 61 (Benutzungsort: Wernigerode) · Bestand · (1578) 1593 - 1927
          Teil von State Archive Saxony-Anhalt (Archivtektonik)

          Find aids: Find book from 1987 (online searchable) Registraturbilddner: Eichenbarleben belongs to the municipality Hohe Börde, Lkr. Börde, Saxony-Anhalt. In the late Middle Ages, Eichenbarleben was a fief of the Archbishopric of Magdeburg, which fell to the Electors of Brandenburg in 1680 as the Duchy of Magdeburg and merged in 1816 into the Prussian province of Saxony, which existed until 1945. 1140 a count Hoyer created the basis for a noble seat in oak bar life by the acquisition of 12 hooves. Since 1283 ministerials of Eichenbarleben are provable. In 1452 the castle, known as the Magdeburg fief, which belonged to the von Wanzleben family, passed to the von Alvensleben black line at Hundisburg. Since 1565 Eichenbarleben has been the seat of its own family branch. In 1813 he had to sell the estate, but it remained in family hands and belonged to the line Erxleben II since 1821. After the death of the Prussian Minister of State Count Albrecht von Alvensleben in 1858, Eichenbarleben moved to the von Krosigk family, who owned the estate until its expropriation in the course of the land reform in 1945. The manor, which was described in 1842 as fit for state parliament, included the parish patronage and the patrimonial jurisdiction over Eichenbarleben and Süplingen. Inventory information: The holdings seized in the course of the land reform were handed over to the then State Archives of Magdeburg in October 1949. An incomplete distortion list did not show any inner order. As a result, the inventory was redrawn. Additional information: Literature: aristocratic archives in the Saxony-Anhalt state archives. Overview of the holdings, edited by Jörg Brückner, Andreas Erb and Christoph Volkmar (Sources on the History of Saxony-Anhalt; 20), Magdeburg 2012.

          Estate of Otto Glauning (Title)
          NL 226 · Bestand
          Teil von Leipzig University Library

          Letters from and to Glauning, manuscripts, collection of material especially on library studies and English studies, various material on activities in Munich and Leipzig, reports, brochures, collection of material on book covers, 1 box of literature indexes, excerpts, varia, books from the possession of Glauning etc. Correspondence from the registry of the Leipzig University Library until 1941 between the unbound correspondence of Glauning.

          Fabri estate

          Acquired 2009 by Antiquariat Steinkopf, Stuttgart, from the estate of Rössle]; Inspector Fabri's interpretation of 1 Cor. 12-15, written off by M. W. 1884, by Inspector K. Krafft (1862-1942) received 31.5.1939; Letter Jacobi from Inspector Dr. Fabri, written up in the Bible studies, various possession notes, written off probably 1865/1866; Fabri Matth. 13 and 1. Cor. 15, from possession F. Liederwald (1860-1947); Bible studies held by Insp. Dr. Fabri in the Mission House at Barmen, 1864-1866, various possession notes; Fabri, Dogmatics: The Means of Grace, received from Inspector K. Krafft 25.5.1939; Fabri, short outline of church dogmatics, received from Inspector K. Krafft 25.5.1939; The letter to the Ephesians, copy of Miss. Sundermann, 1942, also contains 1 page quotation Fabri "Der Krieg ist ein Gericht Gottes", drawn L. (Liederwald?); excerpts from a letter: Zur Biographie Heft III (Rössle); interpretation of Matth. 25,1-13, 9.10.1864, Nachschrift (Rössle?); booklet inscribed: Fabri's last speech in Nuremberg, issue IV, also contains; Letters to Fabri's sister Anna; Correspondence Rössle; Two speeches given at the funeral ceremony (of Fabri) in the church of Godesberg; 3 photos of Fabri; leaves of the memory of the beatified church councillor Dr. E. F. W. Fabri of Würzburg. Würzburg 1866, from the possession of the sister of Fabri?; Rössle's essay in the Deutsches Pfarrerblatt, 1943; various obituaries; notebook with various parts, mostly sermons; Die Ohnmacht des Amtes, 1864; Bible studies on the Philippian letter, Ringstedt 1859/1860; The Comforting Name of the Lord and other sermons; Experiences in Brazil, 1892-1900, "written by father 1901/1902", envelope Diarium Carl du ?, written by father Rössle?

          Rheinische Missionsgesellschaft
          Hospelt, Family (Existing)

          Hospelt, Familien- und FirmenarchivIn 1964, Adolf von Lauff donated the estate of his father, the Rhenish poet Joseph von Lauff (1855-1933), to the city of Cologne. He had married the daughter of the Cologne factory owner and city councillor Wilhelm Anton Hospelt (1820-1893) Josephine Hospelt in 1882. Therefore, the company and family archive Hospelt, which had fallen to the family through inheritance (via Artur Hospelt?), was also part of the Lauff estate. This was separated from the Lauff estate (Order 1170) when it was taken over and set up as a separate portfolio (Order 1175). On the occasion of the review and order of the Lauff estate, the Hospelt estate was also rearranged. Some of the documents still in the Lauff estate on the Hospelt ink works (original minutes of shareholders' meetings; managing director correspondence Adolf v. Lauff) were incorporated into this collection. In the Lauff estate only those files remained which had arisen as a result of Lauff's share as a shareholder of Farbwerke. The archives of the Hospelt collection comprise four archive cartons. They were arranged roughly, the company files according to subject groups, the family papers according to persons. The order found was maintained - even if it mixed the provenances in various ways - but more strongly structured. The individual pieces were summarized and briefly characterized under Subject resulting from the respective existing material. The descendants' tables attached to the index are intended to clarify the family relationships and the inheritance of the company shares of Farbwerke Hospelt. On July 2, 1844, Wilhelm Anton Hospelt opened a colonial material and paint shop in the house at Apostelstr. 9 in Cologne. 1879/80 Acquisition of the bankrupt Aktiengesellschaft für chemische Bleiprodukte und Farben in Ehrenfeld - 1893 Conversion of the company into a GmbH (limited liability company), in which the heirs of W.A. Hospelt, who died in 1893, became partners with a certain share in the share capital. 1893-19o4 Jean Hospelt sole managing director - financial difficulties at the end of the twenties which forced the reduction of the share capital (1932 and 1936) - almost complete destruction in the 2nd world war - 1944 centenary of the company - 1946-1955 reconstruction under the managing directors Adolf v. Lauff, Paul du Mont and Max Fackeldey - 1946-1955 reconstruction of the company by the managing directors Adolf v. Lauff, Paul du Mont and Max Fackeldey 1973 The company ceases to exist. Wilhelm Anton Hospelt (1820-1893); Jean (Johann Hubert) Hospelt (1852-1904), factory owner; Emeline Hospelt née de Ball (1862-1940), women's politician, social politician. includes among othersWilhelm Anton Hospelt: marriage and birth certificates, certificates; private cash books (1881-1893), honorary offices and memberships in associations (1851-1880), invitations (1861-1884), correspondence with Vincenz Statz (1861-1879), his wife Elisabeth Breiderhoff (1883-1884) and others; political appeals (1856, 1963, n. d.).Jean (Johann Hubert) Hospelt: documents (1881-1904), professional certificates (1873-1904), memberships in associations, invitations (1872-1904), family celebrations; correspondence with relatives and acquaintances (1872-1893); marriage process of the son Wilhelm Anton Hospelt before the S. R. Rota, Rome (1913) Emeline Hospelt: personal documents; activities in associations: Catholic German Women's Association - Zweigverein Köln (1913-1937), Sozial-Karitative Gemeinschaft St. Georgshaus (1927-1930), Frauenbund der Deutschen Kolonialgesellschaft, Dep. Cologne (1913-1940), war aids (1915-1917), memberships in associations; correspondence with parents and siblings (1876-1939), friends (1882-1926); letters, personal documents of parents Felix de Ball and Sophia Hedding as well as their siblings Felice, Alwin, Lothar and Rudolf; collection of genealogy material; book of the dead of the Hospelt family. Hospelt: transformation into a GmbH, later AG (1893-1902), correspondence with the partners, partnership agreement (1899-1944); minutes of the general meeting (1904-1945), balance sheets (1893-1943), monthly reports (1905-1945), appointment of a managing director (1921-1946), managing director correspondence (1891-1946); collection of materials on the history of the company.The files remaining in the Lauff estate relating to the Farbwerke Hospelt as well as the documents and letters of members of the Hospelt family in the possession of Josephine v. Lauff are to be used as additions to the holdings: Johann Scherer: Wilhelm Anton Hospelt (1820-1893), Cologne 1956, 23 pages.

          Imperial Treasurer of the NSDAP (stock)
          BArch, NS 1 · Bestand · 1906-1919, 1922-1945
          Teil von Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

          History of the Inventor: The function of the Reich Treasurer was already enshrined in the statutes of the NSDAP of 1926. As chairman of the party's finance committee, he was responsible for the entire treasury system and for securing the financial basis of the "movement". 1931 by order of Hitler, authorized to administer and represent all economic, financial, property, and legal affairs of the Party; also responsible for all membership matters. He was responsible for the entire financial and administrative organization. Offices under the control of the Reich Treasurer and/or over which he exercised financial sovereignty: I. Party 1. Reichsleitungsdienststellen Zentralkassen- und Vermögensverwaltung Amt für Lotteriewesen Reichszeugmeisterei Hilfszug Bayern Catering facilities of the Reichsleitung Reichsautozug Germany Reichsorganisationsleitung Reichspropagandaleitung Verwaltungsleitung der Organisationsleitung der Reichsparteitage Local Group Brown House Section Reichsleitung Adolf-Hitler Schulen Hohe Schulen Reichsschule Feldafing Reichslager Bad Tölz 2. Reichsdienststellen Chancellery of the Führer Party Chancellery Nußdorf Reich Press Office Offices of the Reichsleiter Rosenberg including World Service Frankfurt/M. Reichsamt für das Landvolk Rassenpolitisches Amt für Sippenforschung NS-Schrifttum Party Liaison Office Prague 3. Special facilities of the Reich Administration - Reichspropagandalleitung: Deutsche Filmherstellungs- und Verwertungs-GmbH, Institut für Deutsche Kultur- und Wirtschaftspropaganda, Deutsche Kulturpropaganda GmbH, Dr. Goebbels Rundfunkspende, Reichszentralstelle Gemeinderundfunk - Wirtschaftsbetriebe der Reichsleitung: Hotelbetriebs-GmbH "Der Deutsche Hof" Nürnberg, Hotelbetriebs-GmbH "Berchtesgadener Hof", Berchtesgaden 4. Gaue, districts and local groups NSDAP Gaue NSDAP Districts NSDAP Local groups NSDAP Gau- und Kreisschulen Auslandsorganisation Landesgruppe Norwegen Arbeitsbereich Niederlande einschließlich Bezirksstellen Arbeitsbereich Generalgouvernement einschließlich Distrikte Arbeitsbereich Ostland einschließlich Bezirksstellen 5. Special facilities of the Gauleitungen Parteiforum Bayreuth Münchener Großveranstaltungen Gemeinschaftshaus München-Oberbayern 6. special offices of the Germanische Leitstelle including domestic and foreign offices Volksdeutsche Mittelstelle including domestic and foreign offices II. divisions of the NSD-Dozentenbund NS-Frauenschaft including Reichsfrauenführung, Gaufrauenschaften and NS-Frauenwarte NSD-Studentenbund SA SS NS-Kraftfahrkorps Hitlerjugend III. divisions of the NS-Kraftfahrkorps Hitlerjugend III. divisions of the NSD-Dozentenbund NS-Frauenschaft including Reichsfrauenführung, Gaufrauenschaften and NS-Frauenwarte NSD-Studentenbund SA SS NS-Kraftfahrkorps Hitlerjugend III. divisions of the Gauleitungen Parteiforum Bayreuth Munich major events Gemeinschaftshaus München-Oberbayern 6. special offices of the Germanische Leitstelle including domestic and foreign offices Volksdeutsche Mittelstelle including domestic and foreign offices Affiliated Associations of the German Medical Association NS War Victim Care Reichsbund of the German Civil Servants NS Teachers' Association NS Legal Guardian Association NS German Technology Association including School Plessenburg NS People's Welfare Nutrition Aid Association NS Sisters German Sisters Winter Aid Association of the German People German Work Front Strength through Joy IV. Other Organisations NS-Altherrenbund Working Group for Comradeship Houses German Volksgemeinschaft in Lothringen Volksdeutsche Bewegung in Luxemburg Kärntner Volksbund e. V. Sacrificial ring in Alsace Volksbund for the Germans abroad Reichsluftschutzbund Kyffhäuser Foundation Parteiforum Weimar Reichsbund German Family Stillhaltekommissar Ostmark Stillhaltekommissar Sudetenland Stillhaltekommissar Alsace Stillhaltekommissar Lothringen Stillhaltekommissar Luxemburg Aufbaufonds GmbH Heimattreue Front Eupen-Malmedy Steirischer Heimatbund e. V. Anhalt-Dank-Stiftung Dessau NS-Schulungsverein Schwerin Association Stedingsehre e. V., Bookholzberg Ostmark-Selbsthilfe GmbH, Bayreuth Lebensborn e. V. Deutsches Jugendherbergswerk Deutsche Gemeinschaft im Generalgouvernement Reichsbeauftragter für die Altmaterialerfassung Verein zur Pflege des deutschen Volkstums in Böhmen und Mähren Erholungsheime Verwaltungs-GmbH, Berlin Tag der Deutschen Kunst Gemeinschaft "Das Ahnenerbe" Reichstagfraktion der NSDAP Deutsches Frauenwerk Through administrative release of 1. In October 1940, the Reich Treasurer elevated the previous office for membership to the main office under the name of Hauptmitgliedschaftsamt. With Announcement 14/41 of 5 August 1941, the Hauptamt VII - Hilfskasse - was renamed Hauptamt VII - Sozialamt - with effect from 1 July 1941. By resolution of 22 May 1942, the Reich Treasurer decreed that the membership system be reintegrated into the Hauptamt V. The Reich Treasurer's office was to be reinstated on 22 May 1942. The dissolution of the Main Office II - Reich Budget Office - took place on 1 July 1943. The area of responsibility of the previous Main Office II was integrated into the Main Offices I and VI. Willi Damson, the previous head of the Hauptamt II, was called to Berlin to be the representative for folklore issues. Processing note: Online-Findbuch (2011) Inventory description: Inventory history In September/October 1962, a large stock of documents from the collections of the former Berlin Document Center Berlin, including those of the Reich Treasurer of the NSDAP, was transferred to the Federal Archives. Further charges by the Berlin Document Center followed in 1978, 1980 and 1988. 68 bundles of files were handed over by the Bavarian Main State Archives in Munich in 2003. These were applications for admission and the questionnaire attached to the application for admission. As before, the personal records of the former Berlin Document Center include above all the NSDAP's Reichskartei (Central and Gaukartei), which is part of the Membership Office, the applications for membership as well as processes of individual party members, such as the loss of membership books, payments of dues, recognition of former memberships, etc. The NSDAP's membership records are still recorded in the personal records of the former Berlin Document Center. Archive evaluation and processing Only for a small part were the files indexed by an inadequate list of deliveries, which formed the provisional NS 1 finding aid. The overwhelming majority of the documents were handed over by the Berlin Document Center in a completely disordered and undeveloped manner. Part of the portfolio - reported by the BDC as "asset, property and legal matters" - was ordered in 1968 and recorded by Mr Gregor Verlande. The first structure of the stock resulted from the organization of the office of the Reich Treasurer of the NSDAP. Since 1937 this included the office of the chief of staff, the main offices I - VIII as well as two special commissioners, since 1939 also the office for lottery affairs, which had been separated from the main office I, and the office physician of the Reich leadership. The files from the access of the BDC originate from the areas of the Chief of Staff as well as from the main offices I, II, IV, V and VII. These are only relatively small parts of the files created in the individual offices with the exception of the files of the main office V. This major part consists of files relating to the NSDAP's asset management. Such files were created by the chief of staff and in the main offices I, III and V. The main part of them are files of the main office V on the administration of the party's own properties, buildings and homes. These are not only properties which were acquired or rented by the NSDAP for sale or by donation, but also those which originated from confiscated Jewish property within the territory of the Reich which had been transferred to the NSDAP or from hostile property in the territories incorporated and occupied before and during the Second World War. In a smaller subgroup of files, the administration is mainly reflected in the movable assets of dissolved associations and other organisations in the incorporated and occupied territories that have been transferred to the NSDAP. Additional information can be found in the corresponding volumes of the Hauptamt I and the Staff Chief, the latter also containing an incomplete list of NSDAP properties. The files of the Main Office III contain property overviews of the Gaue, districts and local groups of the NSDAP for the period from December 1936 to December 1938. In addition to annual and monthly balance sheets, the number of party members of the Gaue and districts is also indicated monthly, so that for the years 1937 and 1938 the growth of the NSDAP in the Gaue and districts can be followed. At that time, the receipts of the central accounting were cashed in the central, cash and asset management of the Hauptamt I. In the course of the further levies by the Berlin Document Center, the inventory was revised in 1988. However, the indexing was so different with regard to many different agents that the completion of a finding aid book was initially postponed. A complete revision of the holdings, including the 1293 archive units already recorded, was started in 2009. The existing classification according to the organization chart of the Reich Treasurer was adopted and only slightly changed. The individual head offices essentially worked according to the file plan, so that the classification of the files, provided they were still in their original state, was relatively unproblematic within the classification. It was more difficult to assign the files taken over from the BDC. In the BDC, files were for the most part newly created according to the pertinence principle, so that especially in the area of the Membership Office, documents from the Arbitration Office, the Card Index Office and the Admission Office can be found in one file. Since the files were already in use, however, a reorganization of individual files was dispensed with, also for reasons of time. Only too large files were separated. The files were indexed in accordance with the valid indexing guidelines for the Federal Archives and included corrections (nominal style, valid grammar and spelling rules) and the adaptation of titles (often abbreviations) in accordance with the technical possibilities of the BASYS S database. Abbreviations a. D. out of service b. registered with BDM Bund Deutscher Mädel DAF Deutsche Arbeitsfront Dr. Doktor d. R. der Reserve e. V. association E. Z. Deposit number HJ Hitlerjugend HZD Hilfszug Bayern i. L. in Liquidation year born Krs. Kreis NSDAP Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei NSKK NS-Kraftfahrkorps o. Dat. ohne Datum OS Oberschlesien Prof. Professor RAD Reichsarbeitsdienst RJF Reichsjugendführung State of development: Online Findbuch (2011) Citation method: BArch, NS 1/...

          ALMW_II._32_80 · Akt(e) · 1912-1936
          Teil von Francke's Foundations in Halle

          Four fiches. Contains: FICHE No. 80 1 - 1912. Paul to "Official Brother" - "Hostile Measures against the Property of the Campaign Mission (and Missionaries)." (handwritten; 1 p.) - "Handover of the Campaign Mission and its provisional assumption by the Africa Inland Mission". (handwritten; 3 p.) - Memmingen 1913. Köberle to mission inspector - stenographic notes - Herrnsheim 1913. ? (2 letters) - Nuremberg 1913. The ev. -luth. Zentralmissionsverein für Bayern an Kollegium - 1913. ? an Missionsdirektor (2 p.; Maschinegeschrieben) - 1913. ? an Dekan (Köberle?) (2 p.; Maschinegeschrieben) - Ikusa 1913. Missionsrat der Kambamission an Kollegium (Nr. 32) (Maschinegeschrieben) - Briefwechsel zwischen Kambamission und Kollegium (gedruckt): Ikusa 1913 (Nr. 32); Leipzig 1913 (No. 96); Mulango 1913 (No. 34); Ikusa 1913 (No. 35); Leipzig 1913 (No. 99); Mulango 1914 (No. 39); Leipzig 1914 (No. 102) - Säuberlich: "Overview of the Mission Societies Working in Ukamba in British East Africa". (handwritten; 4 p.) - An Africa Inland Mission (English) - 1913. College to Campaign Mission Council (n. 96; typewritten; 3 p.) - Mulango 1913. Campaign Mission Council to College (n. 96; typewritten; 3 p.) - 1913. 34; typewritten; 6 p.; 2 copies; transcript) - Ikusa 1913. mission council of the Campaign mission to college (no. 35; typewritten; 1 p.) - Leipzig 1913. college to mission council of the Campaign mission to college (no. 35; typewritten; 1 p.) - Leipzig 1913. mission council to mission council of the Campaign mission to college (no. 35; typewritten; 1 p.) - Ikusa 1913. mission council to mission council of the Campaign mission to college (no. 35; typewritten; 1 p.) - Leipzig 1913. mission council to mission council of the Campaign mission to college (no. 35) 99; Machine scripts; 1 p.) - Mulango 1914. Missionaries of the Campaign Mission to College (No. 39; Machine scripts; 7 p.) - Leipzig 1914. College to American Council of the Africa Inland Mission (English; handwritten; 3 p.) - Leipzig 1914. Paul (concerning invitation to the annual festival; printed) - 1914. college to mission council of the Cambamission (copy; typewritten; 4 p.) - Ikusa 1914. Mission Council of the Campaign Mission to College (transcript; typed; 3 p.) - o.O. 1914. Africa Inland Mission to Hoffmann - Kijabe 1914. Africa Inland Mission to Hoffmann - Ikutha 1914. Mission Council of the Campaign Mission to College (no. 44; handwritten; 3 pages) - En route to India 1914. Hofmann to Field Director, Africa Inland Mission (transcript; English) - Leipzig 1915. Paul to Oldham - Ahmednagar 1915. Hofmann to General Director, Africa Inland Mission - Edinburgh 1915. Continuation Committee of the World Missionary Conference 1910 (Oldham) to Paul - Kijabe 1915. Africa Inland Mission (Hurlburt) to Hofmann - Ahmednagar 1915. Hofmann to Hurlburt (transcript; handwritten; English) - 1915. College to the Directorate of Africa Inland Mission (typed; 6 p.). FICHE No 80 2 - Continued - Ikutha 1915 Letters from Joseph and Benjamin - Edinburgh 1915 Continuation Committee of the ... (Oldham) to Paul (English) - Kijabe 1915. Africa Inland Mission to Hofmann - Ikutha, Kibwezi 1915. Waechter to Hofmann (English) - Leipzig 1915. Paul to Oldham; Hurlburt - 1915. An Hurlburt, Director of the African Inland Mission (English) - Leipzig 1915. Paul to Oldham (English) - Philadelphia 1915. Africa Inland Mission to Leipziger Mission (English original and translation) - Ikutha, Kibwezi 1916. Waechter an Hofmann (English) - 1916. Africa Inland Mission (Palmer) an Paul (English original and translation) - Excerpt from a letter by Palmer - 1916. Africa Inland Mission (Palmer) an Paul (English) - Mulango 1917. Africa Inland Mission (Wight) an Thermann (transcript; English) - "English measures against German mission property". (typewritten; ½ page) - 1917. "Communications of the Chamber of Commerce. Guidelines for the filing of foreign claims." (printed; 4 p.) - "Anmeldebogen" (Anmeldebogen) (Formular) (printed; 4 p.) - Leipzig 1917. Kollegium an Reichskommissar zur Erntung von Gewalttätigkeiten gegen deutsche Civilpersonen in Feindesland (betr. Kriegsschäden; transcript; Maschinegeschrieben; 5 p.) - Berlin 1917. State Secretary of the Reichs-Kolonialamt an Kollegium (3 letters) - Leipzig 1917. Kollegium an Staatssekretär der Reichs-Kolonialamtes - 1917. Auswärtiges Amt (concerning the alleged sale by the British authorities of private property of the Evangelical Church) 1917.Mulango 1917. Africa Inland Mission to Thermann (English; handwritten and typewritten) - Berlin 1918. Reichskanzler (Reich Economic Office) to "all federal governments, except Prussia, and the governor in Alsace-Lorraine". (copy) - Leipzig 1918. College to the Reichskommissar for the discussion of violence against German civilians in enemy territory - "Kamba - Mission" ; "German - East African Mission". (handwritten; 3 p.) - transcript "Public Auction of the Missionaries House of Myambani German Mission on 28th August 1918" - Machakos 1919. Wight an Pfitzinger (transcript; English) - 1920. secretariat of the Ev.-luth. Mission an Provincial Commissioner, Ukamba Province, Nairobi (English) - Verband der im Ausland Schadenigten Inlandsdeutschen e.V. "Ersatz von Schäden im Ausland für Inlandsdeutsche. Leaflet" (printed; 4 p.) - Mombasa 1920. Custodian of Enemy Property an Hoffmann (English) - London 1921. International Missionary Committee (Oldham) an Paul (English; 2 letters) - Leipzig 1921. Weishaupt / Paul an Oldham (2 letters) - "Possession of the Evangelical - Lutheran Mission to Leipzig in Ukamba, British - East Africa" (typewritten; 2 S´).) - Kitui 1921. translation from the Kamba "A Letter from Benjamin Mbathi to Missionary Hofmann"; "A Letter from Andreas Mbithuka attached to the above" (handwritten and typewritten; copy) - 1921. "Letter from Paul Koloboi to Miss. Pfitzinger" (translation from the Kamba; handwritten). FICHE NR. 80 3 - continuation (handwritten and copy with machine) - 1922. collegium to association of the inland Germans damaged abroad e.V. - Hamburg 1923. Bitter (managing director of the association "reconstruction in the foreign country" e.V.) to Schlunk (inspector of the North German mission society) (regarding compensation for war damages) - Leipzig 1923. Weishaupt to Schlunk - o.o., o.J. Kollegium an den Reichskommissar zur Verörterung von Gewalttätigkeiten gegen deutsche Civilpersonen in Feindesland (Betr. Kriegsschäden; Abschrift) - Berlin 1923-1928. Bitter an Mission zu Leipzig (16 letters) - Leipzig 1923. Kollegium Vollmacht für Bitter (2-fold) - 1923. "Lost property of the Evangelical Lutheran Mission to Leipzig in Ukamba, British - East Africa." (1923). (typewritten; 3 p.) - 1923-1928. Ev.-luth Mission to Leipzig to Bitter (11 letters) - Leipzig 1923. Mission Leipzig to the Federation of Domestic Germans Damaged Abroad - o.O., o.J. Ev.-luth. State Consistory to Paul - Berlin 1923. Deutscher Kolonialverein. Gesellschaft für nationale Siedlungs- und Auslandspolitik an Leipziger Mission - Leipzig 1923. Weishaupt an Kolonialverein (2 letters) - 1923. Kollegium "Wertangabe der auf den drei Stationen Jkutha, Mulango, und Myambani hinterlassenen ..."; "Gebäudewerte"- Vollmacht für Bittner - Berlin 1924. Verein Wiederaufbau im Auslande (Geschäftsführer Bitter) "Merkblatt über die Verwertung von E-Schatzanweisungen.". (Maschinegeschrieben; 2 p.) - Berlin 1924. Certified transcript of the settlement between the German Reich and the Leipzig Mission (Bevmächtigter Bitter) - Hamburg 1924. Bitter "An meine Mandanten" - Hamburg 1924. Association "Wiederaufbau im Auslande" e.V. "An unsere Mitglieder" - an unspecified newspaper clipping - Berlin 1925. The President of the Reichsentschädigungsamt für Kriegsschäden ("Nachentschädigungsbescheid") - Berlin 1927. Reichsausgleichsamt an Leipziger Mission - 1927. Leipziger Mission an Reichsausgleichsamt - Berlin 1928. President of the Reichsentschädigungsamt für Kriegsschäden an Paul - Tübingen 1928. Deutscher Evangelischer Missionsbund an Leipziger Mission - Berlin 1929. Reichsgleichsamt an Leipziger Mission - Vollmacht für Bitter (Vordruck) - Berlin 1929. Reichsentschädigungsamt für Kriegsschäden ("Final Compensation Notice"; "Property Damage"). FICHE NO. 80 4- - Continued - Transcript "Re: Evangelical Lutheran Mission High Court Cause No.44/16 Custodian of Enemy Property Cause No.23/16. Receipts" (typed, 1 p.) - Transcript "MEMO. Evangelical Lutheran Mission" (English) - 1929. Leipzig Mission to Bitter (3 letters) - 1929. College to Reich Equalization Office (3 letters) - Berlin and Hamburg 1929. Bitter to Leipzig Mission (4 letters) - Berlin 1929-1930. Reich Equalization Office to Leipzig Mission (4 letters) - 1929. Leipzig Mission to the Kreditbank für Ausland- und Kolonialdeutsche (2 letters) - Berlin 1929. Kreditbank für Auslands- und Kolonialdeutsche an Leipziger Mission (5 letters) - Berlin 1929. Reichsschuldenverwaltung an Leipziger Mission (2 letters) - 1929. ? an Reichsschuldenverwaltung - Hamburg-Leipzig 1929. Agreement between Leipziger Mission and Bitter - 1929. "Sales lists of the English government about sales of property in Ikutha, Mulango and Miambani during the war years". (handwritten; 3 p.; mostly English) - 1929. ? to Reichsausgleichsamt - London 1930. International Missionary Council to Ihmels (English; 2 letters) - 1930. International Missionary Council to Grimwood (English; copy) - stenographic notes - 1930-1931. "Re: Evangelical Lutheran Mission, Leipzig. Request for Cancellation List 4 Kenya Shs. 23000. an von Friedberg (English; 5 letters) - Berlin 1930-1931. remainder administration for Reich tasks at Leipziger mission (4 letters) - 1930 and 1932 and 1935. (Ihmels?) at Gibson; in Annex: Recording of Rev. Downing about a discussion between space, Downing and government representative (the latter in English; 3 letters) - o.o.., o.J. transcript "Friendly Agreement" between Africa Inland Mission (Downing) and Leipzig Mission (Raum) (English; 2-fold and translation) - 1931. ? to the Africa Inland Mission - 2 annexes "to the report of the Nairobi Consulate ... 1931" (English) - Berlin 1931. Foreign Office to Ihmels (2 letters) - Tübingen 1931. German Evangelical Mission Association to the mission societies working in the former D e u t s c h - O s t a f r i k a - Berlin 1931. Residual Administration for Reich Tasks to Leipzig Mission - o.O. 1924 "Colony and Protectorate of Kenya" (English; typed, 2 p.) - 1932. ? "On behalf of the Ev.-luth. Mission" to Restverwaltung für Reichsaufgaben - London 1932. International Missionary Council an Ihmels (English) - London 1934-1938. Goodman, Brown

          Leipziger Missionswerk
          Lamprecht Estate
          Nachlass Lamprecht · Bestand · 1856/1915
          Teil von Bonn University and State Library

          Karl Lamprecht (1856-1915) was one of the best-known and most distinguished German historians of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He studied history in Leipzig and Göttingen, habilitated in Bonn in 1880 and worked at the Rheinische-Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität first as a private lecturer and from 1888 as an extaordinarius. In 1890 he was called to Marburg and in 1891 to the University of Leipzig, where he worked until his death in 1915. In his research and publications, especially in his "Deutsche Geschichte" (German History) published between 1891 and 1909, Lamprecht stressed the importance of cultural history and the material prerequisites for the legal development of peoples and societies. In the course of this dispute, numerous historians took a stand against Lamprechts views and, in the tradition of Leopold von Rankes, emphasized the primacy of political and personal history. Today Karl Lamprecht is considered one of the founders of economic and social history. Other important fields of activity were the history of the country, university pedagogy and foreign cultural policy. 1915 Karl Lamprecht died leaving behind an extensive scientific legacy. In 1920 he was taken to Walbeck Castle (Geldern district), where his older daughter Marianne lived as the wife of the owner Walther Friedrich Klein-Walbeck since 1920. In 1931 and 1933, small parts of the estate were sent to the Leipzig Institute for Universal History, where they were either burned or badly damaged during the war. The remaining stock in Walbeck, or partially outsourced stock, also suffered damage from fire bombs and water during the Second World War. After the death of Marianne Klein-Walbeck (née Lamprecht) in 1946, the estate came into the possession of her younger sister Else Rose-Schütz (née Lamprecht). However, part of the estate was blasted off at that time and remained at Walbeck Castle, united with the Klein-Walbeck family archive. The Bonn University and State Library received the estate of Karl Lamprecht between 1957 and 2012 in a total of three tranches. The main estate remaining with Else Rose-Schütz (Tranche 1) was sold to the Bonn University Library in 1957. A very small part remained in family ownership. The part of the estate remaining on Klein-Walbeck (tranche 2) was deposited in the Kleve District Archive in 1996. In 2010, this part of the estate was transferred to the Bonn University and State Library. The positions that belonged to the Klein-Walbeck family archive in terms of cause and provenance remained in the district archive. In 2012, ULB Bonn received the letters still in family ownership (Tranche 3). In a project sponsored by the German Research Foundation (DFG), the entire estate in HANS was newly catalogued and verified in Kalliope. In addition, about two thirds of the documents have been digitised and are accessible online in the ULB's Digital Collections.

          Langenapel Manor Archive (holdings)
          Landesarchiv Sachsen-Anhalt, H 135 (Benutzungsort: Wernigerode) · Bestand · (1443, 1522) 1543 - 1933
          Teil von State Archive Saxony-Anhalt (Archivtektonik)

          Find aids: Find book from 1952 (online searchable) Filing form: Langenapel belongs to the Hanseatic city of Salzwedel, Altmarkkreis Salzwedel, Saxony-Anhalt. The Langenapel, founded in the course of the eastern colonisation of the 12th/13th century, was located in the Altmark, which developed into a territory in the 13th/14th century and finally came under the sovereignty of the Electors of Brandenburg in 1449. In 1816 the Altmark became part of the Prussian province of Saxony, which existed until 1945. For 1375 a Brandenburg castle in the possession of the von Crucemann family is documented in Langenapel. In the early 15th century, the castle fief of Salzwedel Castle passed to the Knesebeck family (black line), who, in 1425/33, brought the entire village to themselves through exchange contracts with the Schulenburg family. A storming by the citizens of Salzwedel in 1443 and an opening treaty of 1469 deprived the castle of its military significance. However, in the late 15th century the Chancellery of Kurbrandenburg counted the Knesebecks on Langenapel among the exclusive circle of the feudatories of the castle. The manor, which had been converted from a castle into a state manor, remained in family ownership until its expropriation in the course of the land reform in 1945. In 1842, the manor included patrimonial jurisdiction and the church patronage over Langenapel, which was parsed after Easter Sole. The property complex also included a manor in Dähre, acquired in 1544, and a fortification in Lagendorf that was documented in 1616. Around 1897, the Knesebeck family acquired the Deutschhorst manor from the von Meding family, the manor archive of which was incorporated into the collection. Inventory information: The archive of the Langenapel estate of Knesebeck was seized by the priest Dr. Nötzel in Osterwohle and taken over by the Saxony-Anhalt state archives in Magdeburg in 1948. As the holdings had signatures, the old structure was restored according to the signatures. The order and recording of the archive records as well as the creation of a register took place in 1952. The retroconversion of the present finding aid register was carried out in October 2013. On the basis of a contract concluded in 2008, the holdings will be deposited in the Saxony-Anhalt State Archives. Additional information: Literature: aristocratic archives in the Saxony-Anhalt state archives. Overview of the holdings, edited by Jörg Brückner, Andreas Erb and Christoph Volkmar (Sources on the History of Saxony-Anhalt; 20), Magdeburg 2012.

          Memories of Africa
          127/11 · Akt(e) · ca. 1890-1900
          Teil von State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

          Note: portrait size, 40 x 30,7 cm, approx. 2,5 cm thick, approx. 70 p. with 142 prints, mostly 9 x 12 cm or 13 x 18, one piece missing, in an individually designed leather binding with embossing. - From the possession of the missionary Gustav Härtter, acquired as a gift in 2005. Photos reproduced under the picture numbers 4509 to 4649.

          BBA 2212/014-015 + · Akt(e) · ohne Datum
          Teil von Archive of the Academy of Arts

          Version<br />Topic: [The copies of early poems listed under no. 21120-21156 are summarized in a hand-bound volume and presumably come from the possession of one of Brecht's youth friends. They were forwarded to the archive in xerography by Werner Frisch, Augsburg.]

          Olpp, Johannes (1837-1920)
          RMG 1.363 · Akt(e) · 1902-1906
          Teil von Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

          Estate:; Various documents in photocopy from the family's possession:; Mission Trips on Sailing Ships, 16 S., hs., o. J.; Wo u. wie ich nächtigte, 17 S., hs., 1902; Die äußeren Schwierigkeiten d. Missionufens, Referat, o. J.; Brief Lebensabriß von d. Rheinischen Missionar Johann Georg Krönlein, 4 S., hs.., 1903; Chronicle of Nama-Hereroland, 1858-1905, 7 p., hs., design, 1905; Short Chronicle of the Witboic concerning mission work, 3 p., hs, ca. 1905; contribution to the history of the Kurasi tribe, 1897, as supplement to Olpps March Report, 4 p., hs., 1906; [All manuscripts listed here are available only in photocopy. The originals are in the possession of Mrs Lucie Olpp (granddaughter), who left photocopies of the archive in January 1985].

          Rheinische Missionsgesellschaft
          Schweninger, Ernst (inventory)
          BArch, N 2281 · Bestand · 1866 - 1925
          Teil von Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

          Description of the holdings: The personal papers of Ernst Schweninger were transferred to the Reichsarchiv in July 1926 by his widow, Mrs. Lena Schweninger. In September 1936, numerous letters from the Bismarck family to Ernst Schweninger, owned by Mrs. Ingeborg Schulze, Stuttgart, were added. A single volume (N 2281/184) was handed over to the Federal Archives in 2001. In the Second World War, the estate was relocated to the Soviet Union and then transferred to the GDR in two parts - 1950 and 1959 - and transferred to the Central State Archives in Potsdam. There he received the stock signature 90 Schw 4 and was indexed in 1980 by a finding index. In accordance with the agreement, the documents were blocked for any use until December 1956. In the course of German reunification in October 1990, the documents finally reached the Federal Archives and have since been kept under the inventory signature N 2281. In the year 1997 a finding aid book was provided to the existence, which represented a to a large extent unchanged copy of the finding aid file at that time. During the current processing, the archive units were transferred to the archive database BASYS-S. The archive units are now stored in the archive database BASYS-S. Classification, title recordings, terms were checked and partially corrected. Dr. Ernst Schweninger, the personal physician of Reich Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, has conducted extensive correspondence with many well-known personalities of his time, such as Herbert von Bismarck, Bernhard von Bülow, Maximilian Harden, Alfred Krupp and others. The tradition therefore consists mainly of letters from friends, colleagues, patients and not least family members and covers the period 1866 - 1925. Reference: E. Espach: Beiträge zur Biografie Ernst Schweningers. Series of publications of the Munich Association for the History of Medicine, Munich 1979 Citation method: BArch, N 2281/...

          RMG 1.648 a · Akt(e) · 1929-1939
          Teil von Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

          Discount: [; Ms. Copies of letters from the Spellmeyer family, 1993 to d. Archiv übergeben]; Correspondenz mit Vorstandsmitgliedern u. Präses d. Missionars-Konferenz in Südwestafrika, 1929-1939; Feldinstruktion für Missionare in Südwestafrika, 1932; Correspondenz mit Pfarrer Theo Olpp, Levern, 1910-1953 s. RMG 1,487

          Rheinische Missionsgesellschaft
          Staatsarchiv Hamburg, 113-6 · Bestand · 27.09.1939-29.02.1952
          Teil von State Archives Hamburg (Archivtektonik)

          Administrative history: At the beginning of the war in 1939, following the passing of the Reichsleistungsgesetz (Reich Benefits Act) in the version of 1 September 1939 and of § 1911 of the BGB in the version of 11 October 1939 (cf. RGBl 1939 I, p. 2026 ff.), care and administration in absentia were ordered for Jewish property of all kinds, including stored goods, foreign holdings in German firms, real estate and stored stock. The property of Germans who were abroad at the time the law came into force could also be affected. These could be complete shiploads, e.g. from ships that were forced to turn back due to the danger of war. For example, the representatives of the Reich Office for Wood or the Reich Governor in Hamburg were charged with complete loads of wood that could not be assigned to owners or to the storage site of Hamburg at that time. The court-appointed caretakers and administrators were usually merchants and lawyers who were actually required to act for the benefit of their fosterlings. In the further course of the war, however, parts of the assets were transferred to the Reich or the "people's assets", so that not all caretakers took care of real clarification of the property situation or could not do so even in the absence of information, because documents were missing and could not be procured due to the war. The documents recorded in this inventory on the administration of assets of enemy foreigners, Germans staying abroad, and Jews who had fled abroad were first created in Dept. 5 of the State Administration in Hamburg (Economic, Agricultural, and Social Department), before they were transferred in the course of the war to the Joint Chiefs of Staff for Economic Affairs for the Wehrwirtschaftsbezirk X (Military Economic District X). It will not be possible to reconstruct in detail how they came from here to the office of the Great Criminal Chamber 8 (Economic Criminal Chamber) of the Regional Court. From here they were handed over to the State Archives in 1999 and - since they cannot be assigned to the Regional Court in accordance with the provenance - formed into the existing holdings. In addition to the individual care processes, there were also a few general administrative processes for the treatment of care. Archival history: The archive assistants Mr. Köppe and Mr. Nowak demetalized, relocated and recorded the mostly narrow individual processes under the guidance of the undersigned; Mr. Köppe subsequently recorded the archive records with "Findbuch"; they were revised and indexed by the undersigned. March 2006 Lorenzen-Schmidt

          ALMW_II._BA_DV_IVa/558 · Objekt · ohne Datum
          Teil von Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig

          Photographer: Hofmann?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 16,0 X 11,4 Description: Boys with Kanzu and Fez, girls with Kanga cloths. Remark: Place Ikutha? (one of the girls can also be seen on Hofmann's photo, which is in the possession of the Museum für Völkerkunde zu Leipzig).

          Leipziger Missionswerk
          Walbeck Manor Archive (holdings)
          Landesarchiv Sachsen-Anhalt, H 242 (Benutzungsort: Wernigerode) · Bestand · (985) 1495 - 2010
          Teil von State Archive Saxony-Anhalt (Archivtektonik)

          Find aids: Find book from 1990 (online searchable); partly unexcavated registry formers: Walbeck belongs to the city of Hettstedt, Lkr. Mansfeld-Südharz, Saxony-Anhalt. In 992 Otto III from Wittum transferred the royal court of Walbeck to Empress Adelheid of Quedlinburg to establish a Benedictine monastery consecrated in 997. In 1540/42 the Counts of Mansfeld secularised the monastery over which they had exercised the bailiwick since 1387. During the sequestration in 1570/73, Walbeck was placed under the administration of the Electorate of Saxony as part of the county of Mansfeld-Vorderort. In 1815, it passed to Prussia, where it was assigned to the province of Saxony in 1816-1945. In 1563 Count Hans Albrecht von Mansfeld-Vorderort pledged the Walbeck office, consisting of the monastery estate and the villages Ritterode and Meisberg, to Ludolf von Bortfeld. His descendants ceded the pledge in 1661 to Count Johann Albrecht von Ronoff, who in 1663 compared himself with the Mansfeldern on resale acquisition. In 1677 he sold it to Friedrich Casimir zu Eltz. In 1727 the estate passed from his descendants by inheritance to Philipp Wilhelm and Johann Clamor von dem Bussche. The latter acquired it in 1742 as a hereditary purchase, in 1745 achieved the status of a knight's manor with old written records, and in 1743/50 had the baroque palace built. In 1845 Walbeck fell to Friedrich August Tellemann, who had married Anna von dem Bussche, by buying out the remaining heirs. Through her daughter Anna's marriage to Heinrich Friedrich Remigius Bartels, the manor was transferred to his family, who owned it until it was expropriated in the course of the land reform in 1945. In 1827 the patrimonial jurisdiction over Walbeck, Ritterode, Meisberg (partly) and Quenstedt belonged to the manor called Rittergut. The Quenstedt manor, formed from several hereditary properties, was acquired in 1726/27 and separated again in 1843 when it was divided, and the Kupferberg manor, which had belonged to Walbeck since 1667, before Hettstedt, was temporarily co-administered. The church of Walbeck was supplied by the parish of Bräunrode. Inventory information: On the basis of a contract concluded in 2014, the holdings will be deposited in the Saxony-Anhalt State Archives. Additional information: Literature: aristocratic archives in the Saxony-Anhalt state archives. Overview of the holdings, edited by Jörg Brückner, Andreas Erb and Christoph Volkmar (Sources on the History of Saxony-Anhalt; 20), Magdeburg 2012.