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              172 Dokumente results for Dorf

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              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.

              Wakamba village
              ALMW_II._BA_A6_4(154) · Objekt · ohne Datum
              Teil von Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig

              Phototype: Photo. Format: 7,5 X 5,4 Description: in steppe landscape between rocks 2 larger, 2 smaller trad. approx. m. Grass-covered houses. Reference: Cf. print templates sample book, No IXd/262 (11,0 X 7,9).

              Leipziger Missionswerk
              Village in New Guinea, 1909
              291980 · Akt(e) · 1909
              Teil von Süddeutsche Zeitung Photo

              New Guinea: Village of the middle Wussi plain on New Summer, one of the last visited by the murdered German Dammköhler. / Photographer: Scherl

              Village in East Africa
              Whm.N.Jo-794 · Akt(e) · 1913
              Teil von Archive Office for Westphalia

              Persons / entities involved: Graf zu Stolberg-Stolberg, Josef - Photographer Location: East Africa. Type: Paper print. Format: 13x18. Colour: black and white.