Finanzen

Elements area

Taxonomy

Code

Scope note(s)

    Source note(s)

      Display note(s)

        Equivalent terms

        Finanzen

          Associated terms

          Finanzen

            1818 Archival description results for Finanzen

            252 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
            BArch, R 4606 · Fonds · (1923-) 1937-1945 (-1948 )
            Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

            History of the Inventory Designer: Introduction Stones do not speak. Much less can or must entire buildings reveal the whole historical truth. National Socialism should work. Building under National Socialism also served this purpose, either directly on behalf of the system or indirectly at least by not opposing it. The enslavement of architecture by the regime was not limited to new buildings of the NS era. National Socialism also established itself in the stock, instrumentalised old buildings everywhere for its purposes. Not even all of the important command centers of the Nazi regime or the main sites of Nazi terror were housed throughout in buildings which, in historical retrospect, could be regarded as having their origin and function at the time. In the memory of the city and in the urban space, places of the perpetrators are handed down as places of the victims, whose role is only revealed in the explanation and commentary of their historical function in the "Third Reich". Prehistory until 1937 In the Third Reich, architecture served to express power and domination. This is particularly evident in the inner city of Berlin. The monumental new buildings in the imperial capital were intended to symbolize "German world standing". Adolf Hitler wanted to see "works created for eternity" in Berlin, "only comparable with ancient Egypt, Babylon or Rome," as he said in 1936. At the 1937 Reich Party Congress, Hitler announced: "... Therefore our buildings should not be thought for the year 1940, also not for the year 2000, but should project directly into the domes of our past into the millennia of the future." Soon after the seizure of power, propagandistically effective building projects were started. These included the Reich Aviation Ministry, Tempelhof Airport, which was to be expanded into a "world airport", and the Reich Sports Field, which was to be expanded and redesigned with a view to the Olympic Games. The powerful buildings were presented to the public with great journalistic effort. At the 1936 Reich Party Congress in Nuremberg, Hitler announced the "reconstruction of Berlin as the capital of the German Reich". Hitler had initially intended to have his plans for the reorganization of the inner-city area processed by the Berlin city administration. When he realised that the local authorities were reluctant to impose his far-reaching transformation fantasies, he changed the responsibilities for planning and building in the capital. On 30 January 1937, the young architect Albert Speer was appointed general building inspector for the redevelopment of the imperial capital (GBI), reporting directly to the "Führer". Organization and history from 1937 A few days after Speer's appointment, Hitler ordered the House of the Academy of Arts at Pariser Platz No. 4, which until then had belonged to the office of the Minister of Education, to be vacated for the office of the General Building Inspector. Within a year and a half, the GBI's planning staff alone grew to eighty-seven people, while the so-called implementing body employed the same number of staff. Speer appointed a number of equally competent and reliable people to the executive positions in the three main departments into which he divided the office: the head office, which administered the budget, was taken over by the financial expert Karl Maria Hettlage, the general site manager Walter Brugmann, who had got to know Speer in Nuremberg, and for the planning office, since it was objectively most important to him, he, in addition to Hans Stephan, called on two long-standing friends, Rudolf Wolters and Willi Schelkes, who had been associated with him since days of study. The Speers offices, which had been established successively since 1937, were not divided into three main offices until mid-1940 under the central management of the GBI. After his appointment to the GBI, Speer expanded his planning staff to the "office" of the GBI. This later Main Office I, Planning Office, was responsible for all planning matters, ordered more than one hundred areas of redesign by 1942 and set the respective clearance dates. From 1938, Jewish tenants were forced to cancel their tenancy agreements on the basis of the "Verordnung über den Einsatz des jüdischen Vermögens" (Ordinance on the Use of Jewish Property); they were admitted to Jewish houses and later to concentration camps. For the "resettlement" of Jews and the reassignment of the apartments, the GBI's "Implementation Office" had been set up under the direction of Karl Maria Hettlage. In this way about 18,000 apartments were requisitioned. Areas from which the Jews were completely expelled were described as "Jew-free". The number of buildings erected during the twelve years of National Socialist rule between 1933 and 1945 is surprisingly high, especially since it must be remembered that only six years were available during the Second World War. In November 1939, a ban on new construction was imposed due to the war, which was followed half a year later by the discontinuation of all construction measures not necessary for the war. The GBI was established by the Decree of 30 January 1937. The office itself was assigned to Albert Speer, who from 1934 was "the representative for construction in the staff of the deputy of the Führer" and as such had already established some Nazi party buildings, especially in Nuremberg. At first, the GBI's competence did not extend beyond Berlin and its immediate surroundings. The "Gesetz über die Neugestaltung deutscher Städte" of 4 Oct. 1937 does not yet contain a more detailed provision on the "agency commissioned" by Hitler himself to carry out these projects. Only in this way was it possible for a special "General Building Council for the Capital of the Movement" to be appointed to Munich by decree of 21 Dec. 1938 and for this office to be occupied by the NS party architect Paul Giesler; Giesler was also commissioned with the establishment of NS party buildings in Augsburg and Weimar. It was not until the third decree on the GBI of 18 Oct 1940 that the competence of the GBI was significantly extended. The latter was expressly declared a "commissioned body" within the meaning of the Act on the Redevelopment of German Cities. In the years 1938 to 1942, a total of 32 cities in the former Reich territory were included in the new planning on the basis of the law of 4 Oct. 1937 by decrees and ordinances promulgated in the Reichsgesetzblatt. As of the end of 1942, the progress of all urban development plans of a peace-related nature was completely halted, since tasks important to the war awaited solution and Speer himself had been largely involved in them since his appointment as Reich Minister for Armament and Munitions on 15 February 1942 and on 2 September 1943 as Reich Minister for Armament and War Production. With the decree of 11 Oct. 1943 on the preparation of the reconstruction of bomb-damaged cities, Speer was entrusted with the necessary tasks in his capacity as GBI. He had to determine the framework for the future design of the cities and the right to decide on urban development issues of the reconstruction cities in place of the Reich Minister of Labour. The elimination of the Reich Labour Minister, to whom Speer had previously been bound as GBI despite his direct subordination under Hitler, was above all a consequence of Speer's present position as Reich Minister. Inventory description: Inventory history In Germany, the General Building Inspector's collection for the imperial capital is divided into three archives: the Bundesarchiv, the Landesarchiv Berlin and the Bayerische Hauptstaatsarchiv Munich. A total of three finding aids were available in the Federal Archives for the inventory R 4606 General Building Inspector for the Imperial Capital. The holdings were brought together from Potsdam and Koblenz at the beginning of the 1990s and have since been known as R 4606 General Building Inspector for the Imperial Capital. In the Landesarchiv Berlin there are 1016 files as well as in the planning chamber there 1,000 sheets of the GBI under the signature A Pr.Br.Rep. 107 from the years (1935) 1937 to 1945. In addition there are files of the grave commissioner active since July 1932 and last on his behalf, the former social democratic government president Ernst von Harnack. The card index of the graves of important personalities, arranged according to city districts and cemeteries, was intended to prepare the construction of an honorary cemetery "to express the spiritual significance of the imperial capital" (148 vols., 1941-1943). With the provenance indication "Baubüro Speer", the Hauptstaatsarchiv Munich contains more than 3,000 plans for buildings mainly in Berlin (including the Reich Chancellery, Reichstag, "Haus des Führers", "Große Halle"), the party congress grounds in Nuremberg and others. Furthermore, the special archive in Moscow contains a collection of 86 files of various contents from the years 1920 to 1944 under the title Fond 1409 General Building Inspector for the Reich Capital, e.g. on the use of prisoners of war at the GBI or correspondence between Speers and authorities and private individuals. Archival evaluation and processing Before 1990, the holdings were processed both in Potsdam with the inventory designation R 46.06 and in Koblenz (R 120) up to the preparation of the finding aid book. With the merging of the holdings mentioned above, the Koblenz files received new signatures. In view of the great public interest in information from this archive stock, it was decided in 2008 to retro-convert the finding aids with the aim of publishing them on the Internet. 177 files from a transfer of files from the Bamberg State Archives from the 1980s, which deal with the construction of the High Command of the Army and the Soldiers' Hall, were indexed and subsequently recorded. In 2008, the 29 files of the head of department at GBI, Schelkes' estate documents under the previous name "Kleine Erwerbungen Nr. 864" were also added. A further takeover included the "Art in the Third Reich" component, which had been incorporated into the archives, from which 38 index units of maps and plans were allocated to the holdings and listed. The archives were already taken over by the GDR Department in 1997. However, they have not been added to the portfolio due to equal signatures, but have been managed as an extra bundle without a direct reference to the portfolio. The classifications found were largely adopted and summarised in a factual manner. The development data available up to then were partly modified and series and volume sequences formed. The internal order of the files has been maintained. The inventory has already been moved from standing folders to folders. The maps are stored in specially designed folders and cabinets. Characterization of content: Office Speer 1937-1944 (111); files of leading employees (as far as not objectively assigned) 1937-1944 (59); Main Office Administration and Economy: General Administration: Administration of services 1937-1945 (99), General administration 1932-1945 (442), Land and building matters 1937-1945 (71), Procurement and inventory management 1937-1945 (4), Budget matters 1937-1945 (299), Accounting 1938-1944 (17), Secret files (chronological) 1938-1945 (34), Examination office 1940-1945 (56), Treasury 1938-1945 (91), Other financial and administrative matters 1939-1945 (11). Personnel 1938-1943 (152), Law 1937-1945 (51), Housing issues (evacuation and resettlement), 1937-1945 (50), Quota administration 1939-1945 (80); Planning office: Plankammer 1937-1943 (15), Competitions exhibitions and collections 1934-1942 (44), Area declarations 1938-1944 (64), Individual construction planning areas: General 1937-1945 (133), armament expansion 1939-1943 (43), Wehrmacht installations 1937-1944 (98), Reich Air Ministry Airports 1937-1940 (31), traffic 1934-1943 (402), buildings and installations 1935-1944 (567), Authorities and organisations 1936-1944 (428), industrial buildings 1936-1944 (402), residential buildings in individual administrative districts of Berlin and the surrounding area 1936-1944 (405), other planning projects 1938-1944 (7), construction projects outside Berlin 1936-1943 (164); Implementation office for the redesign of the imperial capital 1938-1944(19); general construction management: Supervision of the army high command: General 1939-1945 (38), individual projects (building blocks) 1939-1945 (150). Construction management 1939-1945 (10), maps plans schematics: General 1938-1942 (11), development planning of settlements and peripheral communities 1938-1942 (20), streets and squares green and open spaces 1937-1943 (50), authorities and institutions 1938-1943 (36), Wehrmacht facilities of the Reich Aviation Ministry 1937-1940 (7), University and teaching facilities 1938-1943 (11), industrial and office buildings 1939-1943 (28), residential buildings 1939-1944 (46), Reichsbahnbaudirektion Berlin 1939-1941 (18), theatre buildings 1936-1943 (260), buildings outside Berlin 1923-1948 (44). Settlement agency: 1946-1948 (1). Citation style: BArch, R 4606/...

            Geheimes Staatsarchiv Preußischer Kulturbesitz, I. HA Rep. 146 · Fonds
            Part of Secret State Archive of Prussian Cultural Heritage (Archivtektonik)

            I. Introduction 1 History of the authorities The existence of the General Civil Commissions is due to the Napoleonic Wars and the Stein-Hardenbergschen administrative reforms. After the military collapse of Prussia in 1806 and the Tilsiter peace of 7-9 July 1807, the question of civil and military reorganization of the state arose. Prussia had suffered great territorial losses in the peace of Tilsit, including those areas which it had only gained in the second and third Polish partition of 1793 and 1795. From these areas Emperor Napoleon formed the Grand Duchy of Warsaw. The territory of Pomerania and the Neumark, on the other hand, was preserved and the network district was divided. The Immediate Commission for the Enforcement of the Tilsit Peace was established to implement the peace provisions. For Pomerania and the Neumark as well as for East and West Prussia, general civil commissionariats were established, which were subordinated to the Immediate Commission (Kabinettsordre of July 31, 1807). The General Civil Commission for Pomerania and the Neumark was headed by a proven financial specialist: It was August Heinrich von Borgstede (1757 - 1824) who was appointed to this post by King Frederick William III. After studying camera science and law at the University of Halle, Borgstede first worked in the Justice Department of the Kurmärkische Kriegs- und Domänenkammer before being appointed to the General Directorate, where he had been employed in various territorial departments since 1795. One of the decisive factors for his later appointment was probably the fact that he had been chairman of the department for the Kur- and Neumark and in the Pomeranian department since 1800. At the time of his appointment, Borgstede held the title of Privy Supreme Finance Council, War Council and Domain Council. The task of the General Civil Commission was to implement the conditions of the peace treaty in the provinces occupied by the French army. To this end, they had to maintain close contacts with the middle administrative level, which already included the newly established governments in addition to the war and domain chambers. In addition, interim chambers for the unoccupied regions of Kolberg and Treptow an der Rega have existed since 1807. They were dissolved after the withdrawal of French troops in September 1808. At the central level, the Civil Commissioners not only worked with their superior authority, but also with the corresponding territorial departments in the Directorate-General. They also had to cooperate with the French military and civil administration in their blasting operations. In addition, Lieutenant General Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher was appointed Governor General for Pomerania and the Neumark and moved into this capacity, first to Treptow an der Rega and later to Szczecin. The demarcation district, which is repeatedly mentioned in the document titles, are the areas in which Blücher's troops were accommodated. The border villages of the demarcation district are listed in the file GStA PK, I. HA Rep. 146 No. 141. Within this structure, the General Civil Commissioners' offices probably functioned primarily as'postmen', but also as a clearing house for financial issues and questions arising from the military occupation of their bloc. Accordingly, the documents of this authority reflect almost the entire range of tasks of the war and domain chambers: they were concerned not only with contribution and excise matters and with catering for the army, but also with customs, commercial and manufacturing matters, with the affairs of offices and cities, with salt and mill matters, with sovereign matters and with questions of good policey'. Time and again, the General Civil Commission offices also became the focal point for applications from subjects, with one group, namely the officials who had fled the ceded territories and were seeking reinstatement, standing out in particular. In general, personnel decisions as well as the supply of inactive soldiers and military personnel were the main tasks of the General Civil Commissionariats. Nothing is known about the internal organization of the General Civil Commission offices. Those who go through the archival records received get the impression that it was a small authority with a few officials, which perhaps did not need a strong internal structure. In the case of the General Commissariat for Pomerania and the Neumark, all business transactions obviously ran via Borgstede's desk. Together with the Immediate Commission for the Enforcement of the Tilsit Peace, the General Civil Commissionariats were abolished on 16.12.1808. As far as Borgstede was concerned as head of the General Civil Commission for Pomerania and the Neumark, he was put into retirement and retired to his estates. Towards the end of his life (1823), however, he was reactivated once again and appointed to the Prussian Council of State. 2. inventory history The files were originally listed by title in a file index from the 19th century. During a revision in the German Central Archives, Merseburg Department, serial numbers were assigned in 1962. U. transferred the titles to the archives database in 2010 (see also 3.) and reviewed the title formation of selected files in this context. 3) Instructions for use This reference book is not based on a re-listing of the holdings, but on the old reference book from the 19th century. The titles of the indexing units have been modernized and simplified in accordance with current archival standards. Source terms for old job titles and other special terms have been inserted in parentheses in normalized spelling. Place names were checked and reproduced in the current spelling. Place names that could not be identified were enclosed in quotation marks. 4th Literature Eberhard Lebender: August Heinrich von Borgstede. A Prussian official and his work in Pomerania, in: Gesellschaft für pommersche Geschichte und Altertumskunde (ed.): Baltische Studien N.F. 86 (2000), pp. 90 - 99. 5. Reference to other archives GStA PK: GStA PK, II. HA GD, Dept. 12 Pomerania GStA PK, II HA GD, Dept. 13 Neumark GStA PK, I. HA Rep. 72 Immediate Commission for the Enforcement of the Tilsiter Peace Other Archives: Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv, Rep. 3, Neumärkische Kriegs- und Domänenkammer Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv, Rep. 3 B Government Frankfurt (Oder) Archiwum Panstwowe w Szczecinie (State Archive Stettin), War and Domain Chamber Stettin State Archive Greifswald, Rep. 20 Interimistische Kriegs- und Domänenkammer Landesarchiv Greifswald, Rep. 65 a Government of Szczecin 6. notes, order signatures and citation Scope: 8 running metres (1310 UE) Duration: 1805 - 1818 The files are to be ordered: I. HA Rep. 146 No. (...) The files are to be quoted: GStA PK, I. HA Rep. 146 Generalzivilkommissariat für Pommern und die Neumark Berlin, 07.09.2010 Dr. Leibetseder (Archivrat) finding aids: database; collective finding book, 1 vol. (for I. HA Rep. 146 and 146 B)

            BArch, R 8135/1834 · File · 1930-1934
            Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

            Contains: Report and Notes on the Audit of the Financial Statements as at Dec. 31, 1930, 1931 Report and Notes 9 Appendices and 1 Appendix on the Audit of the Financial Statements as at Dec. 31, 1932 Report and Notes on the Audit of the Financial Statements as at Dec. 31, 1933 Report and Notes 2 Appendices on the Audit of the Financial Statements as at Dec. 31, 1934

            BArch, N 1231/14 · File · 1893-1927
            Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

            Contains among other things: Ganse, Georg, representative of the President of the Royal Settlement Commission Poznan, 1904-1917 activity of the Settlement Commission Poznan, 1906 establishment of workers' pension goods, 1907 Gayl, Freiherr Wilhelm v., 1917 Gebsattel, Konstantin v., 1917 Gelsenkirchener Bergwerks-AG, 1919-1927 "Die Preußische Wahlreform-Vorlage": elaboration of A. Giesebrecht (print), 1918 Gilsa, Erich v., Chief of the personal staff of the Reichswehr Minister Gustav Noske, 1919 flyer to 1 May with accusations against Noske and Severing, (1919) Glaser, Alexander, 1920 Gleichen, v. (Political College), 1921 Establishment of the Evangelisch-Sozialen Schule e. V. (Protestant Social School), 1921 Gramsch, president of the settlement commission for West Prussia and Posen, 1911 Grisebach, pastor (Evangelischer Hauptverein für deutsche Ansiedler und Auswanderer), (1909) 1911-1912 development, activity, statutes, finances of the main association, 1911-1912 Fabarius, Ernst Albert (German Colonial School in Witzenhausen), 1912 Guggenheimer, member of the board of the Maschinenfabrik Augsburg-Nürnberg AG, 1918 English-German peace proposal Gustav Adolf Foundation (Franz Rendtorff), 1918

            BArch, R 87/132 · File · 1940-1942
            Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

            Contains: "Zeitschrift der Akademie für Deutsches Recht" (Journal of the Academy for German Law), including: Treatment of Foreign Property in the USA during the 1942 War 1942 Situation of the Germans in East, South and Southwest Africa and Southern Rhodesia, 4th Bulletin of the Federal Foreign Office (print), Jan. 1942 the like in England, Canada, Australia and New Zealand (print), 1941 Administration of Enemy Property in Japan, 1941 - 1942

            General information: Vol. 1
            BArch, R 2/24751 · File · 1920-1921
            Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

            Contains among other things: Committees for the determination of war damages incurred in Alsace-Lorraine; Reichsentschädigungsamt and Spruchkommissionen; establishment plan; Compensation Office and Spruchkommissionen of the Colonial Central Administration; list of employees; establishment of branch offices of the Reichsentschädigungsamt; instructions for the Reichsentschädigungsamt

            Generalia
            StAWü, Forstamt Amorbach 3 · File · 1901 - 1909
            Part of State Archives Würzburg (Archivtektonik)

            Enthält: Grundbuchanlegung, Einführung des hundertteiligen Thermometers, Versicherungsgesetz, Schießvorräte, Bürgschaftsanträge, Verwaltungsetat, Forstfrevel, Liquidation ärztlicher Gebühren, Telefongebühren, ausländische Militärballons, militärische Übungen, Steuern, Pfründewaldaufsicht, Forstgesetz, Vergütung bei Dienstreisen, bayerische Beamten im Kolonialdienst, Eisenbahnsicherung, Steinlager, Forstdienstgebäude, Holzverwertung, Urlaub, Waldaufteilungen, Wildabschuss, Fällungs- und Kulturbetrieb, Forstpolizei

            Generalia
            StAWü, Forstamt Marktheidenfeld 7 · File · 1905 - 1911
            Part of State Archives Würzburg (Archivtektonik)

            Enthält auch: Schutz von Naturdenkmälern, Verpachtungen, Denkmalpflege, Forstrecht, Schutzdienst, Verwaltungsetat, Gebühren, Steinlager, Entschädigungen, Forstgesetz, Grundbuchanlegung, Gehälter, Schädlingsbeschädigungen, Personalqualifikationen, Arbeitsnachweise, Löhne, Forstgebäude, Fällungen, Entschädigungen, Staatsforstverwaltung, Verehelichungen, Etat, Finanzen, Kolonialdienst, Forstgesetz, Offizierdienst, Holzverwertung, Dienstbefreiungen, Forstpraktikanten, Beurlaubungen, Arbeiter und -schutz, Vogelschutz, Forstpolizei, Wildabschuss, Steuern, Beamtengesetz, Kiefersamen, Beschwerden, Eisenbahnbauten

            Geography.
            HZAN La 140a Bü 107 · File · 1875-1876, 1878-1881
            Part of State Archive Baden-Württemberg, Hohenlohe Central Archive Neuenstein (Archivtektonik)

            Contains: 1st Association for the German North Polar Tour in Bremen. 36th meeting of the Association on 13.03.1875. 2nd meeting of the Association for the German North Polar Flight in Bremen. Research trip to Western Siberia 1876 (III, V-IX). 1876. 3. statutes of the African Society in Germany, n.d. 4th Statutes of the Geographical Society in Bremen, Bremen (1876). 5. list of the members of the Geographical Society in Bremen on 15.02.1878. 6. annual report of the board of the Geographical Society in Bremen, Bremen (1878). 7. C. Lehmann, Verkehrskarte der Provinz Schlesien, Berlin 1878. 8th overview map of the Überseeischen Postdampfschiffslinien im Weltpostverkehr, Berlin 1881. 9th E. v. Weber, Der Unabhängigkeitskampf der Niederdeutschen Bauern in Süd-Afrika, Berlin 1881. 10th fifth annual report of the board of the Georgraphische Gesellschaft in Bremen, Bremen 1882. 11. A. Conze, Pergamon, Berlin 1880. 12. J. Chavanne, Explanations to the Wall Map of Africa, Vienna 1878. 13. A. Mueller, Map of the Countries on the Lower Danube, Weimar 1876. 14. Special Map of the Zulu Country, n. d. 15. Circumference of the Universal Postal Union, Berlin 1879.

            RMG 2.163 · File · 1901-1961
            Part of Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

            Vol. 1; Curriculum Vitae, Application and Testimonials, 1901-1903; Health Certificate, also for Bride Elfriede Quellenberg, 1903 and 1910; Letters and Reports from New Guinea and New Zealand. Australia, 1911-1930; Correspondence with Elfriede George in Germany, 1925-1930; Correspondence with Heinrich George in his Home Service, 1930-1936; Vol. 2; Correspondence with Heinrich George in his Home Service and Retired, 1936-1966; Correspondence with Daughter Elfriede Staa, née George, 1945; Letter of condolence to Elfriede George, 1967; Vol. 3; Correspondence of the Management in Financial Matters, 1946-1961

            Rhenish Missionary Society
            BArch, R 141 · Fonds · 1881-1945 (-1965)
            Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

            History of the Inventory Former: Federal-owned limited liability company founded in January 1951 under the name Industrieverwaltungsgesellschaft mbH to liquidate the interests of the Reich and Prussia in former Reich companies owned directly or indirectly by the Federal Government, in particular the so-called "Speergesellschaften": Rohstoffhandelgesellschaft mbH (ROGES), Rüstungskontor GmbH, Industriekontor GmbH and Rowak-Handelsgesellschaft mbH. In September 1951 the company was renamed Industriebeteiligungsgesellschaft mbH, which ceased operations at the end of 1963 after the completion of its liquidation tasks. Inventory description: Inventory history The inventory was formed from documents that the Federal Archives purchased in 1959 from Dr. Josef Trischler, the former president of the German Cooperatives Association in Yugoslavia. In addition to files of agricultural credit and economic cooperatives of the Batschka, these were also files of the German cooperatives in Hungary. The collection was supplemented by documents of the former authorized signatory of the Central Association and the Central Fund of German Cooperatives in Slovakia Anny Czech. Content characterization: The holdings consist of written remains of the German cooperatives in Hungary, files of agricultural credit and economic cooperatives in the Batschka as well as files of German cooperatives in Slovakia, among them business documents of the Central Association, the Central Cash Office and the Commodity Centre of the German Cooperatives in Slovakia as well as the Credit Cooperative of the Germans in Bratislava, the Purchasing Cooperative for Food and Drinks, Colonial and Mixed Goods in Bratislava and the Association of Agricultural Cooperatives - Raiffeisen - in Reichenberg (Sudetenland). State of development: Findbuch (1976) Citation method: BArch, R 141/...

            BArch, R 8073 · Fonds · 1873, 1877, 1900-1933
            Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

            History of the Inventory Designer: Created in 1872 as the top organisation of the central agricultural associations and entered in the register of associations in 1924. It consisted of delegates from the central agricultural associations and later from the chambers of agriculture. In autumn 1933 forcibly transferred to the Reichsnährstand. Content characterization: There are files on the organisation and activities of the German Agricultural Council and its institutions 1913-1933, on matters of the Chambers of Agriculture 1903-1933, on relations with other organisations, institutions and companies 1873, 1913-1933, on foreign relations 1921-1930, agricultural policy 1900-1933, agricultural technology 1907-1933 and agricultural products 1887, 1909, 1917-1935, foreign trade 1904-1905, 1914, 1924-1934, railways 1922-1932, few files on individual Chambers of Agriculture. State of development: Findbuch (o. Dat.) Citation method: BArch, R 8073/...

            BArch, R 8072 · Fonds · 1884-1934
            Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

            History of the Inventory Designer: Founded in 1885 by Max v. Eyth to promote agricultural science and technology. 1934 taken over by the Reichsnährstand. Content: Organisation and activity of the Deutsche Landwirtschaftsgesellschaft and its executive bodies: General 1886-1935, meetings of the executive bodies 1884-1933, participation in other agricultural organisations and enterprises 1910-1934, relations with foreign countries 1917-1920, 1927-1931, cash and accounting, tax matters 1893, 1918-1920, 1923-1937, activity of the departments, their committees and special committees: Fertiliser department 1889-1934, Seed breeding department 1886-1933, Arable farming department 1886-1933, Animal breeding department 1891-1933, Horse breeding department 1893-1895, 1922-1934, Sheep breeding department 1892-1934, Pig breeding department 1921-1934, Equipment Department 1888, 1901-1916, 1931-1933, Fruit and Wine Department 1897-1933, Operations Department 1901-1934, Colonial Department 1909-1933, Feed Department 1909-1934, Independent Special Committees 1890-1934. State of development: Findbuch (o.Dat.) Citation method: BArch, R 8072/...