Lomie (zuvor : Station am Ngoko). - Agreement with the South Cameroon Company to supply the station's officials with European foodstuffs (with price list) - Order of the Foreign Office, 12 October 1900 [fol. 20 - 22] Flotilla. - Procurement of a steamboat for the administration at Ngoko. - Application by First Lieutenant Stein-Lausnitz, January 1901 [fol. 27 - 163] Expeditions by the head of the administration at Ngoko (First Lieutenant Freiherr von Stein-Lausnitz). - Ndsimu area (31.10.1900 - 20.1.1901), 1901 [fol. 30 - 38] Navigation conditions of the Ngoko and Dja. - Reconnaissance report by Ing. Williams on behalf of the South Cameroon Society, 1901 [fol. 39 - 85] Lomie (previously: station on the Ngoko). - Regulation of official business on the occasion of the north-west expedition beginning on 16 February 1901. - Order from Lieutenant von Stein-Lausnitz, 24 Feb. 1901 [fol. 46 - 47] Dispatch of a military expedition to the north and north-west of the concession area of the South Cameroon Company for the purpose of representing the German power behind the merchants. - Request from Director Langheld, 31 Dec. 1900 [fol. 48 - 49] Expeditions by the head of the administration at Ngoko (First Lieutenant Freiherr von Stein-Lausnitz). - Northwest Expedition (16 Feb. - 27 Dec. 1901), 1901 - 1902 [fol. 73 - 238] Lomie (previously: station at Ngoko). - Assaults by the agent Kalmar of the South Cameroon Society against Kunabembe people. - Investigation report by First Lieutenant von Stein-Lausnitz, 19 March 1901 [fol. 77 - 82] General political, military and economic conditions. - Bomabassa and Kunbanbe area. - Report of the deputy station chief of Lüdinghausen, station at Ngoko, August 1901 [fol. 115 - 116] Expeditions of the deputy chief of the station at Ngoko (from Lüdinghausen). - Bangandu expedition (30 Oct. - 17 Nov. 1901), 1901 [fol. 149 - 150] French customs clearance. - Complaints of the South Cameroon Company (report by First Lieutenant von Stein-Lausnitz, Station am Ngoko, January 1902 [fol. 159 - 160] Lomie (previously: Station am Ngoko). - Administration of the Ssanga-Ngoko area - renaming of the station (at Ngoko) to Puttkamerberg. - Report by Dr R. Plehn, May 1899 [fol. 161] French incursions against German trading companies on the southern border, 1902 - 1907 [fol. 166 - 176] Expeditions by the deputy head of the station at Ngoko (von Lüdinghausen). - Lobilos expedition (24 February - 10 March 1902) to protect the Boneduli factories, 1902 [fol. 182 - 192] Jokaduma. - Subsequent authorisation of the establishment of the post by Oberleutnant von Stein-Lausnitz at the end of March 1901. - Decree of the Foreign Office, 7 November 1901 [fol. 198 - 201] Reinforcement of the police force in Cameroon in the Ssanga-Ngoko area as a counterweight against the French advance on Bertua, 1901 - 1902 [fol. 203 - 216] Lomie (previously: station at Ngoko). - Relations of the station to the South Cameroon Company. - Report by First Lieutenant Stein-Lausnitz, 5 July 1902 [fol. 217 - 218] Expeditions of the head of the administration at Ngoko (First Lieutenant Freiherr von Stein-Lausnitz). - Bertua expedition (15 April - 12 August 1902), 1902 [fol. 219 - 226] Lomie (previously: station at Ngoko). - Relocation of the administration at Ngoko to a place to be determined. - Decree of the Foreign Office, 8 July 1902 [fol. 239 - 240] Regional border affairs. - Bertua Kunde [fol. 263] Station am Ngoko, decree of 1 April 1899 on the levying of import and export duties in the parts of the Cameroon Protectorate belonging to the western zone of the conventional Congo Basin. - Additional provisions of the station chief, 1 April 1902 [fol. 268 - 272]
Gouvernement von KamerunErlass
2 Archival description results for Erlass
History of the Inventor: On 21 March 1919, the Admiralty was established as the top authority of the Navy, whose chief stood on an equal footing with the chief of the army command. On 15.9. 1920 the Admiralty was renamed to Marineleitung (ML) and on 1.6. 1935 to Oberkommando der Kriegsmarine (OKM). At the head of the OKM was the commander-in-chief of the Kriegsmarine (ObdM). Inventory description: With the decree of the Reich President of 21 March 1919, the Admiralty, which was subordinate to the Reich Minister of Defence, was established as the top authority of the Navy. Since 1 October 1919, the Chief of the Admiralty stood on an equal footing with the Chief of the Army Command. It was renamed Marineleitung (ML) on 15 September 1920 and Oberkommando der Kriegsmarine (OKM) on 1 June 1935. At his head was the commander-in-chief of the Kriegsmarine (ObdM). Characterisation of the contents: From the hand files of the commander-in-chief of the Kriegsmarine, only those of the Grand Admiral Erich Raeder on leadership, personnel and shipbuilding issues have been fragmentarily archived in the Federal Archives. In addition, organisational documents, orders, operational files, documents on mobilization and attaché matters as well as on the Spanish Civil War have been handed down. A copy of the war diary from August 1939 to August 1944 has been preserved from the General of the Luftwaffe at the ObdM. Especially for the period immediately after the First World War, there are also documents on the handling of the Reichsmarineamt, documents on the armistice, files on claims for damages from other countries, prisoner of war and internment matters, and military political reports on internal unrest (November Revolution, Kapp Putsch). State of development: Invenio Scope, Explanation: Existing stock without increase 8.8 m 453 AE Citation method: BArch, RM 6/...