'Note: Prints
Drucksachen
218 Archival description results for Drucksachen
Printed matter
Enth. et al: - 1935: LXII/Nr. 263 (among others the historical march to the Feldherrnhalle on 9.11.) - 1939: LXVI/Nr. 292 (among others Germany takes up battle - Ribbentrops general account with Chamberlain) - 1940: LXVII/Nr. 46, 62, 127 (including generous old-age provision - Germany's struggle for its right to life - Hitler's appeal to the Western Front on the occasion of the invasion of Belgium and Holland) - 1941: LXVIII/Nr. 93, 142, 159, 160, 162/278, 342 (among others) Tenno emissary from Rome departed - air landing on Crete - lightning attack of German Stukas on the oil silos of Haifa - large scale economy in the new Europe - Japan will give proof of loyalty - Ribbentrop in Venice - Tymoshenko sacrifices last armies; decision made in the East - Together against the world enemy) - 1942: LXIX/Nr. 147, 267, 270, 275, 309, 311 (et al. Attack in Africa; Stukas in the Kharkov Battle - Roosevelt's troop aid sunk into the sea - Hitler to WHW 42/43 - Space and time on the German side - Roosevelt's gangster raid on France's colonial empire - march through France) - 1943: LXX/Nr. 1, 30, 31, 33, 50, 56, 81/154, 250, 273, 278, 309, 329 (Fight until the clear victory - Göring: heroic Germany is invincible - home is equal to the heroes on the Volga - heroic struggle in Stalingrad - USA defeat in Africa - Japanese offensive in Central China - Wehrmacht becomes fighting nation - strength of the German situation - causes and follow of the Italian betrayal - Spwjet attacks in the south and middle section - Hitler: Standing through to the final victory - Great success of the Japanese Air Force - Goebbels to the German youth) - 1944: LXXI/Nr. 1, 175/176, 178/197, 199, 201/216, 218/237 (among others) usual perseverance slogans of the different ministers and Hitlers - reports of heroic fights around Cherbourg and at the north French invasion front - V 1 a dangerous weapon - total war employment of the German people - new close combat means - the large defense battle with Kowel - Italy's way into the Chos - the allied air attacks on German cities - Soviet offensive between Tarnopol and Luzk; new large-scale attack in Italy - Japan's fleet on its way to victory - the one-man torpedo - assassination attempt on Hitler failed - increased total deployment of all forces - mobile warfare in the East - attack on Florence collapsed - mass flight from London - chaos in occupied Italy - The Vistula barrier is held - Turkey breaks with the Reich - Now only a war of movement in the West - Front retraction to protect Florence - Battle of tanks off East Prussia's border - The German farmer in total use - Icy reception of the Canadians in Florence - Battle of Europe before its climax; Allied landings in southern France - The German press in total war - St. Malo fallen - With Chartres enemy advances - Moscow's fault in the Warsaw Uprising - Total war effort is carried out - Securing the Seine Line - Paris burns in many places - De Gaulle to ensure order - Red mob triumphs in Rome);
Drucksachen
Mickausch, WilhelmContains: Materials, incoming letters, notes and printed matter from the organization of the mission celebration.
Brief description: The poster collection Einzelverzeichnung contains the posters that were collected by the City Archive until 1971 as well as the posters that were subsequently purchased until today. The posters come from the city of Stuttgart, from companies, associations and other institutions based in Stuttgart or have been published on the occasion of events in Stuttgart. Extent: At present approx. 2600 posters, collection is constantly supplemented. Duration: 1849-2007 Notes on use: The posters up to No. 1-2390 are presented as microfiches, the following units as simple colour prints. They can be viewed directly in the reading room and do not have to be ordered via Findbuch.net. Copyright and rights of use must be observed.
- description: Contains, among other things: - Earth study student work sheet America, Africa, Asia Contains among other things: <br />- Earth Historical student work sheets America, Africa, Asia 1937 - 1939, Secret State Archive Prussian Cultural Heritage, I. HA Rep. 178 B Prussian Secret State Archive
Contains above all: Results of the fleet survey carried out by the "Allgemeine Zeitung" Memorials of the German Reichstag on the development of the Imperial Navy (printed matter)
German Colonial SocietyEssay "Die Werbearbeit der Bethel-Mission, (presumably 1920-er Jahre), 16 p., N. N.; advertising material of other mission societies; member card Bethel-Mission e. V.
Evangelical Missionary Society for German East AfricaHand-excerpts of his works, manuscripts, printed matter, photographs from New Guinea; chronicle of the Neuhaus family is missing
- Contains among other things:<br />Carl Grube, Auf Bothas Tod (Poem), 1919;<br />General Smuts in Lüderitzbucht (Newspaper Report, without author), 1920;<br />Programme Speech Hofmeyr (Newspaper Report, without author), 1920;<br />Imperial Defence (How England Prepared the War Against Germany's Colonies, Newspaper Excerpt without Author), 1923;<br />Superintendent Schowalter on Botha and England's war plans, with a letter from former governor Schnee on the subject, 1923;<br />Hans Sachs, Weltpolitik (newspaper clipping), 1923;<br />Botha and the Southwest Campaign (newspaper clipping without author), 1928;<br />Dr. Heinrich Schnee, New evidence against the war guilt lie. England, South Africa and the outbreak of the World War (newspaper clipping), 1930;<br />H.M. Gruber, Louis Botha, Auch ein Beitrag zur Kriegsschuldfrage (newspaper clipping), 1930;<br />Zeitungsausschnitt über Botha's Kriegsvorbereitungen 1907 (no author), 1934 1919-1934, Bundesarchiv, BArch N 1037 Hintrager, Oskar description: Contains a.o.: Carl Grube, Auf Bothas Tod (Poem), 1919; General Smuts in Lüderitzbucht (Newspaper Report, no author), 1920; Hofmeyr's Programme Speech (Newspaper Report, no author), 1920; Imperial Defense (How England prepared the War against Germany's Colonies, Newspaper Extract, no author), 1923; Superintendent Schowalter on Botha and England's war plans, including a letter from former Governor Schnee, 1923; Hans Sachs, Weltpolitik (newspaper clipping), 1923; Botha and the Southwest Campaign (newspaper clipping without author), 1928; Dr. Heinrich Schnee, New evidence against the war guilt lie. England, South Africa and the Outbreak of the World War (newspaper clipping), 1930; H.M. Gruber, Louis Botha, Auch ein Beitrag zur Kriegsschuldfrage (newspaper clipping), 1930; newspaper clipping about Botha's war preparations 1907 (without author), 1934
- Contains e.g.:<br />3. volume 1913, No. 8, 1. Aug. 1913;<br />4. volume 1914, No. 9, 1. July 1914 1913-1914, Bundesarchiv, BArch N 1037 Hintrager, Oskar description: Contains e.g..: Volume 3 1913, No. 8, Aug. 1 1913; Volume 4 1914, No. 9, July 1 1914
1915, Federal Archives, BArch N 1037 Hintrager, Oskar
History of the Inventor: On 7 November 1918, the Armistice Commission (WAKO) was formed to conduct armistice negotiations with the Interalied Permanent Armistice Commission (Commission interalliée permanente d'armistice); initially under the direct authority of the Reich Chancellor, since February / March 1919 under the auspices of the Federal Foreign Office; dissolved on 30 November 1918.9.1920. Inventory description: Inventory history The inventory was transferred from the Federal Foreign Office to the Reichsarchiv in 1929 and recorded in the sequence of registry signatures. After the files had been removed during the Second World War, the German Central Archive Potsdam (later the Central State Archive Potsdam) took over the armistice commission after 1945. Concrete information on war-related outsourcing losses could not be provided due to a lack of finding aids. It can be seen from the signatures of the individual volumes of records transferred to the Reich Archives that the losses were considerable in some cases. The first processing took place in the Reichsarchiv from Jan. 1932 to Apr. 1933 and again until Aug. 1934. Archival evaluation and processing As the Auswärtiges Amt announced at the time, the files were subjected to a review before they were handed over to the Reichsarchiv, albeit only an external one. The numerous duplicates and transcript collections, which each department had created separately for itself, were sorted out. The library of the Federal Foreign Office took over the collection of printed matter. Parts of the files had to be filed in the Reichsarchiv, since the Wako registry mainly used Leitz files, many of which contained only a few documents. On the basis of the list of files, the Federal Foreign Office often combined 4-5 documents that belonged together objectively and were laid out separately into one file volume. Both on the file and on its back the subjects were listed, so that the decomposition of the processes in the Reichsarchiv could be carried out effortlessly. Files that contained documents were bound, files that contained only copies without marginalia were filed in folders. Documents of general content, such as minutes of the Reichsministerien meetings, have not been handed down in the Wako files. The Wako received its instructions from the Imperial Ministries, where the corresponding file material might also be found. It acted only in special matters, which were seen as a kind of cooperation with the Interalliated Permanent Armistice Commission (Commission interalliée permanente d'armistice, Cipa). According to the Federal Foreign Office's statements, only the countless applications for entry to Alsace-Lorraine and the occupied territory in the West were segregated from the processed files. The latter were handed over to the Entente powers in lists, dealt with by them according to lists and later answered by the Wako on forms. In its short history, the Ceasefire Commission had not been able to find a truly stable organizational form. As a result, no longer valid registration scheme could be found. Without a substantial revision of the content, the titles of the files were entered into the database, largely in nominal form. The content of too many of the notes on contents was cut back. Based on the traditional list of files and the organisational structure of the Wako, the present classification was created, which underwent some changes through the creation of series and volume sequences in the archives. Due to the mixing of several processes within a file, it was not always possible to assign them unambiguously to the classification scheme. The currently valid continuous signatures of the Armistice Commission were issued in the Federal Archives in the 1990s. The necessary work and changes for the database-supported implementation and the creation of an online version took place in 2006. Content characterisation: Central registry and general department; subject area II Press; subject area III Information and passport matters; subject area VI Military matters; subject area VIII Affairs of the western occupied territory (except Alsace-Lorraine) and the neutral zone; subject area IX Poland; subject area S III Food import; interdisciplinary files 1918-1920; registration aids; printed matters; hand files of the financial expert of the WAKO, Dr. Carl Melchior. State of development: Findbuch 1935, 1970; Online-Findbuch 2006 Citation method: BArch, R 904/...
Citation style: BArch, RHD 4/...
Contains: - Brose: Kaiser Wilhelm II and the Army - Ferber: The German Sea and Colonial Power under Kaiser Wilhelm II - Schippang: The Emperor and Art - Photos, sw;
o. Dated, Federal Archives, BArch R 57 Deutsches Ausland-Institut
Printed matter; 18/1956, 1 2/1956
Drucksachen
Collection of newspaper clippings, pamphlets, printed matter, confessionals, green letters on the situation and correspondence on the dispute between German Christians and Confessing Church.
Rhenish Missionary SocietyCollection of newspaper cuttings, pamphlets, printed matter, confessional writings, green letters on the situation and correspondence on the dispute between German Christians and the Confessing Church
Rhenish Missionary SocietyCollection of newspaper clippings, pamphlets, printed matter, confessionals, circulars and correspondence for the exchange between German Christians and Confessing Church.
Rhenish Missionary SocietyCollection of newspaper clippings, pamphlets, printed matter, confessions, green letters on the situation and correspondence on the dispute between German Christians and Confessing Church; Die Deutsche Bekenntnis-Synode, S.-Dr., Barmer Zeitung, May 1934; Theological Declaration on the Barmer Confession Synod, 1934
Rhenish Missionary SocietyNote: One copy each of the publication, bound.
Note: One copy each of the publication, bound, loosely attached further single prints.