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              Stadtarchiv Mainz, Best. 60 · Bestand · (1761-1797) 1798-1814 (1815-1836)
              Teil von City Archive Mainz (Archivtektonik)

              The holdings 60 (Municipal Administration/Mairie of the City of Mainz, 1798-1814) have a complicated and eventful history of order and description. In the following, an attempt will be made to list the individual stages of this inventory in chronological order. Order of the registry in the French period (1798-1814) The archives 60/113 provide information about the administration of records of the Mainz city administration 1798-1814. The first part is a list of all files and official books created or kept since the establishment of the municipal administration, which was compiled on the 25th Prairial VIII. It also contains the civil status registers, which will not be taken into account in the following, as they are listed and described in section 50. The second part was built successively in the following years until 1814. In each year a file list of the yearly created and closed files was made. The division into two is undoubtedly a consequence of the Napoleonic administrative reform of 1800 (transition from municipal administration to Mairie). Year after year, the secretariat and the offices of the municipal administration/Mairie created a file volume on certain subjects, so that a kind of subject series register was created. At the end of the year the volumes were handed over to the "Archives" (= registry). Therefore, when the list was drawn up, only the current files of Year VIII were located in the individual offices. In addition to files, a large number of official registers were kept. They played a far greater role in the French administration than in the German administration, since they served on the one hand as the administration's most important auxiliary and finding aids, but on the other hand also reproduced contents, so that the actual subject files, in which the incoming and (initially also) outgoing letters were stored, probably only rarely had to be accessed. All incoming and outgoing letters have been registered in the official records referred to here. Among them the general register "Régistre Général" is to be mentioned first as letter (entrance) diary. A number was assigned to each incoming letter in the Secretariat. The number was noted on the received letter with the addition "R.G.". In addition, a brief summary, the sender, the date of the letter and the office to which it was assigned were recorded in the General Register. Where a reply to a letter received has been drawn up or a decision taken, its number has also been recorded in the General Register. The numbers of the "normal" letters ("lettres") were replaced by "corr." (=correspondance), those of the resolutions ("arrêtés") are marked "arr. The concepts of "lettres" and "arrêtés" are attached to the respective subject file volumes only until Vendémiaire VII/September 1798 (applies to Lettres) or until the end of Year VII beginning of Year VIII/October 1799 (applies to Arrêtés). In addition, they were recorded in fair copy in two other series of official registers also kept by the Secretariat, the Correspondence and Advisory Register. On this basis, the numbering of "lettres" and "arrêtés" already mentioned was also carried out. The letter received to which an outgoing letter referred can be seen on the one hand in the Registre Général and on the other hand in the letter received itself, on which, in addition to the 'R.G.' number, the 'Arr.-' number also appears. or "Corr." No. was noted. The Mairie continued to keep the General Register and the "répertoire", a kind of subject register, but decided not to keep the resolution and correspondence registers. This made the concepts of "lettres" and "arrêtés" the only evidence of the letters and regulations issued. In order to keep track of them, their drafts could no longer be filed in the subject file volumes together with the letters received in response to which they were initiated, but had to be organised separately. The concepts of the outgoing letters were thus numbered consecutively from September 1798 and October 1799 (see above) and formed two series in which the drafts of the "lettres" and "arrêtés" were filed chronologically and (mostly) summarised monthly. If one follows 60/113, a further change occurred with the establishment of the Mairie: The secretariat/police office and Bien Public office files are kept by the secretariat, while the financial office still seems to have its own registry. The files created and kept at the secretariat are usually stored in beige paper sheets - often printed forms that have been turned over. Until the year XI, the respective subject series file was held together with a glued-on paper strip, which was provided with the file title. They've been numbered since year X. There are about 60 subjects for the secretariat, whereby the number fluctuates, since new subjects were added from case to case or older subjects were omitted, thus there were series splits or series associations, over which 60/113 offers a good overview. The subject files of a year were most likely bundled and stored in these bundles (inscription: year) in the old registry/archive. Probably for this reason, part of the "French Archive" was only grouped together in file aprons before the new indexing. The Commissioner of the Executive Board of the Municipal Administration apparently also had his own registry. Subject files were also created for him. The files shall be numbered after the title of each file, preceded by the abbreviation "No." . Their duration often exceeds one year, often covers years VI to VIII and thus the entire term of office of the Commissioner. Also on the documents of these files one finds numbers of a general register, so that it can be assumed that the commissioner of the executive directorate had its own general register and thus its own document administration (a kind of own secretariat). The holdings also include files from the provenance of the Administrative Commission of the School Fund, which were left in the holdings because of their proximity to the city administration. In the case of these files, there was no longer a recognizable order of files or registries. The files of the negotiations of the municipal council are wrapped in blue cardboard and were apparently kept separately from the other files of the administration. Some files of the collection, especially those concerning accounting, are wrapped in light blue cardboard and have German lettering. Also the formulation of the titles of the acts indicates that they were written in Hessian time (after 1815). There is much to suggest that these were files that were needed by the city administration during the Hessian period. This, of course, required a review of the French files. At the beginning of the 20th century (around 1920?), the librarian Heinrich Heidenheimer presumably attempted to dissolve the old subject files, which had been laid out on a year-by-year basis, and to merge them according to new subject matters. From the documents which were not (or could not be?) assigned to a "large" subject, he tried to create individual files. Not affected by this reorganization were the official books, the Arrêtés and Lettres series, and (probably) 23 bundles, which only remained ordered by year. The result of this attempt at classification is documented in the old register "Französisches Archiv - Bestand 60". The bundles in which the new subjects were grouped were numbered from 1-148 (one number per subject, so several bundles could have the same number if the subject was supposed to be the same). In part, however, a number did not conceal a reference file, but rather a very thin - already mentioned - single case file containing only a few sheets or even only one printed matter. The number of this file was mostly completed with a Roman "II". At the time of the redrawing, the individual case files were often located within the beige file apron in orange, strongly acidic folders (60s?) with filler lettering. Inside the other file aprons, envelopes made of crumbled packing paper with a high acid content, which could date from around 1920, were used to structure the documents. These envelopes were often labelled with only one year and were irrelevant for the context of the file. Only summarily (without signature or numbering) are listed in the directory - as mentioned - Lettres and Arrêtés, official books, military matters, matters concerning the inhabitants, accounting (also printed matter), taxes (also printed matter), the port and schools/lessons. Eight bundles were only labeled with letters and sorted alphabetically. According to the register, these were "requests to the administration, sorted by personal names (e.g. passports)". This series, too, was first created at the beginning of the 20th century by the order works. An example of how it was done: In a bundle with the old signature 138 (138-subjects: medical police/138,1; midwives/138,2; vaccination/138,3; medicine/138,4 and 138,5) there were ONLY old file covers with the following titles and registry signatures: IX/...X/14, XI/14 : Police medicinale XI/12: Police medicinale, vaccine, Maison d'accouchement, pharmacie XII/14: Police médicinale, vaccine, accouchement XIII/14, XIV/15: Police médicinale, pharmacie, vaccine, accouchement, épidémie, épizootie, glacière 1807-1812/13, 1814/13: Police médicinale, pharmacie, vaccine, accouchement, épidémie, épizootie, enfants trouvés, glacière, quinquina The original subject files were thus dissolved according to the new subjects 138,1-138,5, the original file covers were separated. (In other cases, the file covers also remained in part of the closed file.) Where the documents on livestock epidemics, foundlings and glaciers remained is not apparent at first. Unfortunately, it must be noted that the content of the parts of the file which were among the various subjects did not always correspond to those subjects! It is probable that the "annual bundles" still found at the time of the new listing should also be dissolved. The order within these bundles was chaotic. This disorder has either already existed in the French old registry (the disordered documents would then never have been assigned to a subject file...) or has arisen from the attempts of archivists to organize them. Or both "procedures" come together. The main subjects in the unresolved annual bundles were: "Police civile en générale", "Affaires mixtes", "Certificat, renseignements sur des individus, "Pièces à communiquer", "Publication ...". These are therefore precisely those subjects which can hardly be assigned to other "large" subjects and which were probably not of great importance for the administration at the time either, so that no great attention and working time will have been devoted to the sorting of these documents. It is likely that archivists wanted to use these documents to create the alphabetical series "Requests to the administration, sorted by personal names (e.g. passports)". Ordnungs- und Verzeichnungsarbeiten Heiner Stauder (1991-1995) Heiner Stauder began in 1991 with the order and indexing of the official book series. After the completion of this work, the drawing of the militaria was started. Various attempts at order and sorting (registration of all numbers of the Registre Général; dissolution of the Lettres and Arrêtés series and assignment to the corresponding letters received; dissolution of individual subject series, including "service militaire", "police militaire", "affaires militaires"; formation of individual case files for submission) proved to be impracticable. The listing of the "Militaria" was interrupted in order to prefer the listing to the "Medicinalia" due to user requests. The following signatures were assigned: 001-136: Amtsbücher 150-186: Militaria 201-215: Bürgerannahmen (They were arranged alphabetically by Mr. Tautorat around 1991/92 and then entered in a card index of names, which is located in the finding aid cabinet of the user room). 300-349: Documents and series, mainly health and poor affairs concerning 350-508: "arrêtés"; 509-703: "lettres"; the no. 350-703 were recorded by Mr. Jung in autumn 1995. The development of a printed matter collection for the French period according to the model of the Landesherrlichen Verordnungssammlung (LVO) was started by leaving only one copy of printed ordinances or news, as far as they were present several times in the file volume, in the file. The rest have been separated. The documents of the Mainzer Veteranenverein found in the "French Archive" were spun off and assigned to the corresponding estate. Mr. Stauder also began with the separation of individual documents, which were only to be assigned to a file bundle after completion of the recording, and with the dissolution of the old FA60 bundles according to subject matter. The author has also continued his recording of subtitles and alto and registry signatures (see below). After the described experiences and on the basis of the peculiarities of the found stock, the author renounced to form (new) series - however it may have been - or to restore the old registry order - also only in rudimentary form. Instead, a numerus currens distortion was performed on the basis of the found condition. The merging of units that belonged together in terms of content thus took place only after the title listings had been completed - on the basis of the classification and the three - very detailed - indices. The subject file bundles listed in the old directory FA 60 were dissolved, since the file aprons contained a wide variety of subjects, which were often only roughly summarized under one catchword. The bundles were reviewed, units with related contents within the bundles - some of them still in the original file covers of the registry - were left together and newly recorded (the old archive signature is of course always indicated). The still unrecorded militaria had already been pre-ordered by Mr. Stauder and reassembled according to the facts. The signatures 269-273 and 284-285 were made by him, left so by me and listed. Individual documents within the various bundles, which differed completely in content from the otherwise found subjects, were first separated and, after completion of the indexing process, added to the archives to which they fitted in terms of content. The old small files, the individual files mentioned above, were left as they were and re-inserted. The bundles, which were only marked with a year (probably part of the original old registration), were also dissolved according to subject matter. Recognisable units (e.g. through labelled file envelopes) were of course retained. If possible, documents that had not been (pre-)sorted were either newly created according to subject (e.g. Militaria, Year VI) or first separated and, after completion of the indexing, added to suitable archival records. In total, the stock now comprises 60 1308 units of description or serial numbers. The last current number is 1319. The numbers 140-148, 882 and 944 were not assigned. Subtitles and registry signatures Subtitles are located in brackets below the titles of the files I have assigned. They are usually the original French title(s) of the subject file(s) found on an old envelope within the newly recorded archives. It is only indicated if there is such an original envelope in the file and if the title also matches the content of the documents it contains. Due to the old order work before 1991, the original connections were torn apart - as described above - so that the original file covers only remained in part of the original files, were separated or reappeared in completely different contexts. If it was clearly visible that only part of the original subject file was present in or near the original file cover, only the applicable part of the original file title is also indicated as a subtitle. On the original file covers, in most cases the year and the number from the list of subject series registries were indicated in addition to the file title (for example as year "an 14", as number "21", as title "Corps de metier"). As far as such a file cover was available and fitted to the content or partial content of the newly recorded archive, this registry signature was indicated as follows: XIV/21 (XIV for the year 14 of the French Republic, 21 for the number from 60/113). For years VI to IX, the year and the "heading" under which the subject in 60/113 is to be found have been indicated, where recognisable. The files more frequently contained a large number of documents from the Electoral period. If it was evident that these were pre-files to the events of the French period, they were left in the archives. If no connection was discernible, the events were passed on to Dr. Dobras for classification in electoral holdings. Nachprovenienzen The Lettres series does not end with the end of French rule in Mainz and the handover of the town to German troops on 4 May 1814, but continues until the end of 1814. For this reason, all files of the year 1814 under Lord Mayor Freiherr von Jungenfeld were left in this inventory, since the registry was at least partly continued for so long according to the French model. The following volumes with clear provenance or post-provenance Großherzogliche Bürgermeisterei were found in the holdings and were assigned to the holdings 70 (Hessisches Archiv): (order: Altsign. title runtime new signature) - ? Budgets Form, Instructions

              Cabinet orders, vol. 73
              Geheimes Staatsarchiv Preußischer Kulturbesitz, III. HA MdA, I Nr. 238/22 · Akt(e) · Jan. - Apr. 1889
              Teil von Secret State Archive of Prussian Cultural Heritage (Archivtektonik)

              84 sheets, Contains: - Awarding of orders and decorations: by the elderly (Chamberlain of Bückeburg); by Apell (Court Stable Master of Bückeburg); Don Julian del Arroyo (2nd Secretary of the Spanish Embassy); Barillas (Division General, President of the Free State of Guatemala); Berré (1. Public Prosecutor at Antwerp Regional Court); Osman Bey (Captain at sea, Sultan's Flight Adjutant); von Blücher (Mecklenburg-Schwerinscher Ministerialrat); Böversen (Bückeburg Accounting Council); Dr. Felix Boh (Dresden); Otto Freiherr von Bruck (former Director of the Austrian-Hungarian Lloyd, former Frigate Captain); Bucher (Colonel, Commander of the 2nd District Court of Antwerp); Bucher (former Commander of the Austrian-Hungarian Lloyd) Field Artillery Regiment No. 28); Gotthardus Buckvicka (subprior and senior physician in the convalescent house of the merciful brothers in Vienna-Hütteldorf); Burchard (mayor of Bückeburg); Dammert (Grand-Ducal-Badischer Gendarmenwachtmeister); Deppe (public prosecutor of Bückeburg); von Eisendecher (envoy at the Grand-Ducal-Badischen Hof); Franke (Major, personal adjutant of the Hereditary Prince of Schaumburg-Lippe); Franke (Chief Forester of Bruchhof); von Fuchs (Section Council in the Austro-Hungarian Foreign Ministry); Freiherr Genotte von Merkenfeld (Section Council in the Austro-Hungarian Foreign Ministry); Dr. med. O. Girgensohn (Russian State Councillor, Director of the Alexandershöhe Charity Institutions near Riga); Knight of The Hague (Colonel, Commander of the Royal Bavarian 11th Order); Knight of the Hague (Colonel, Commander of the Royal Bavarian 11th Order). Hassan Efendi Hares (Major of the Egyptian Gendarmerie); Julius Friedrich Arnold Hebbinghaus (Director of the Fire Insurance Company "Colonia" in Cologne); Franz Julian Hessler (Head Waiter of Cairo); Hingst (Lieutenant Colonel, Staff Officer of the 1st Division of the German Trade and Plantation Society of the South Seas Islands); Hassan (Geometer of the German Trade and Plantation Society of the South Seas Islands); Hansemann (Privy Councillor); Hassan Efendi Hares (Major of the Egyptian Gendarmerie); Hingst (Chief Lieutenant, Staff Officer of the 1st Division of the German Army). Grenadier Regimant No. 100); Hooghwinkel (Dutch Resident of Banka Island); Hufnagel (Administrator of the German Trade and Plantation Society of the South Sea Islands); Iffland (Real Secret Council of Bückeburg); King-in-thai (Interpreter-Secretary at the Chinese Embassy in Berlin); Ritter von Klyncharich (Chief of the expedition in the Austrian-Hungarian Foreign Ministry); Knipping (Chief Forester of Bückeburg); Kolossvary de Kolosvar (Captain in the Austrian General Staff); Dr. Krauel (Privy Legation Council, Lecturing Council in the Foreign Office); Le Clercq (Resident of the Archipelago of Rhio); Ludwig (Oberhofjäger zu Bückeburg); Mohamed Efendi Mahir (Major of the Egyptian Gendarmerie); Mansur Melhameh (interpreter in the residence in Tangiers); Gustav von Metzsch-Reichenbach zu Dresden (Royal Saxon Chamberlain); von Möller (castle governor in Bückeburg); Muzaffer-ed-din (Persian heir to the throne); Niesen (Resident of Palembang on Sumatra); Archduke Albrecht of Austria; Oheimb (Chamberlain of Bückeburg); Ahmed Aly Pascha (Turkish Division General, Adjutant General of the Sultan); Pierer (Lieutenant Colonel, Austrian General Staff); by Plato I (Russian Colonel of the Gendarmerie); by the Council (Legation Secretary); Reinemund (Belgian Major of Artillery); Richard (Baurat zu Bückeburg); R. Ringk (Captain of the North German Lloyd); Alessandro Riva (Counsellor at the Italian Embassy in Berlin); Hugo Sandkuhl (Merchant in London); Prince Otto zu Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg (Grand Duke of Saxony Major, Wing Adjutant of the Grand Duke of Saxony); Schäffer (Chief of the Egyptian Gendarmerie); Prince Adolf zu Schaumburg-Lippe; Hereditary Prince Georg zu Schaumburg-Lippe; Princes Hermann, Otto, and Adolf zu Schaumburg-Lippe; Count von Schlieffen on Schlieffenberg near Lalendorf (Grand Duke of Mecklenburg); Count von Schmettau (Captain, commanded to the legation in Brussels); von Schoen (Legation Councillor, 1st Senate). Secretary of the Embassy in Paris); Dr. Schulte (Grand Ducal Badischer Archivrat); Schumacher (Mecklenburg Economist Council on Zarchlin); Eiichi Shibusawa (Banker in Tokyo); Spring (President of the Government of Bückeburg); Thiele (Advisory Council in the Secret Chancellery of the Federal Foreign Office); Baron E. von Tröltsch (retired Württemberg major) in Stuttgart); Baron von Tucher (Legation Secretary at the Bavarian Embassy in Berlin, Legation Councillor, Treasurer); Volck (Captain of the Dutch warship Oenarang); von Waldthausen (Legation Secretary, Interim Carrier in Tangier); von Weech (Grand Ducal Badischer Kammerherr, Director of the General State Archives); Jonkheer de Weede (Legation Councillor of the Dutch Legation in Berlin); Weber (Advocate at the Appelhof in Paris); Wendt Pascha (Turkish Lieutenant General), Wenzing (Chief Forester at Baum); - Appointed to diplomatic posts: Graf von Tattenbach (Legation Councillor, previously first secretary of the Embassy in Madrid, now Prime Minister in Tangier) - Military rankings and remittances: from the elderly (Sekonde-Leutnant, commanding the legation in The Hague); from Blumenthal (Premierleutnant vom 1. Hanover Dragoon Regiment No. 9, commanded to the legation in Munich); Baron von Eckardstein (Seconde Lieutenant in the Brandenburg Cuirassier Regiment, commanded to the legation in Washington); von Falkenhayn (Captain; Military Governor of the Crown Prince and Prince Eitel-Friedrich); von François (Seconde Lieutenant of the Infantry Regiment No. 26, commanded to the Foreign Office); Baron von Heintze-Weißenrode (Seconde Lieutenant, commanded to the embassy in London); Hereditary Prince of Hohenlohe-Langenburg (Seconde Lieutenant, commanded to the embassy in London); Count von Kanitz (Captain, Company Chief in the 2nd World War); Count von Kanitz (Captain, Company Chief in the 2nd World War). Guard regiment on foot, accompanied by a Moroccan delegation); Kund (First Lieutenant in the 4th Westphalian Infantry Regiment no. 17, now Captain); Count von Lüttichau (Major, staff officer in the Guard-Kürassier Regiment; escort of a Moroccan delegation); Schröder (Captain at sea, commanded to the embassy in London, promoted to Rear Admiral); Baron von Süßkind (Lieutenant in Emperor Franz Garde-Grenadier-Regiment No. 2, commanded as captain to the embassy in Paris; ranked in the general staff of the army); of verses (commander of the cavalry division of the 15th century); of verses (commander of the cavalry division of the 15th century). Army Corps, sent to England for the funeral of the Duchess of Cambridge); Vogel von Falckenstein (Major General, Deputy Plenipotentiary in the Federal Council in place of Lieutenant General von Blume); Graf von Wedel (Second Lieutenant, commanded to the Embassy in Paris); Zeuner (First Lieutenant in the 4th Baden Infantry Regiment No. 112, now Captain) - Transfer to (temporary) retirement: Travers (Prime Minister and Consul General for Morocco) - Granting of support and foundations: Protestant congregation in Beirut; Wilhelm Duden (Council of Commerce in Brussels); Association of German Artists in Rome - Holiday permits: from Deines (Major, wing adjutant, commanded to Vienna Embassy); Baron von Hoiningen gen. Huene (Major, Wing Adjutant, commanded to Paris Embassy); von Rantzau (Major, commanded to Munich Embassy), Count von Schmettau (Captain, commanded to Brussels Embassy) - Permits: Supplementary Agreement with the Jaluit Society, 26-23.3.1889; expenses for the Moroccan delegation - appointment: Verdy du Vernois (Minister of War, authorised representative in the Federal Council in place of Bronsart von Schellendorff); Heusner (Counter-Admiral, State Secretary of the R e i c h s m a r i n e a m t , authorised representative in the Federal Council) - marriage consensus: Duke of Saxony-Meiningen (for the son Prince Friedrich); Count Yorck von Wartenburg (Captain of the Great General Staff); von Weise (Major, commanded to the Embassy in Bern) - Transfer of disciplinary penal power, authority to summary proceedings under war law with the police force in East Africa as well as assurance of pension entitlement for the Reich Commissioner for East Africa Wissmann. Aberle, 2018.

              Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, Q 2/48 Bü 35 · Akt(e) · 1886
              Teil von Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

              1886, Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, Q 2/48 bequests Rudolf von Gansser sen. and Rudolf Gansser jun.

              Geheimes Staatsarchiv Preußischer Kulturbesitz, VIII. HA, Slg. Schulz, E., Nr. 37 · Akt(e) · o.D.
              Teil von Secret State Archive of Prussian Cultural Heritage (Archivtektonik)

              Contains: - Born, geometer in Sonnenburg, deputy of the country Sternberg to the Prussian National Assembly, 1848 - Carl Herrlich (1822 - 1901), rendant of the Ballei Brandenburg of the Johanniterorden - Peter Joseph Lenné (1789 - 1866), designer of the garden at the Johanniterordenskrankenhaus in Sonnenburg 1856 - Karl Friedrich Schinkel (1781 - 1841), was involved in the new building of the tower of the Johanniterordenskirche in Sonnenburg 1816 - 1818 - Dr. Wilhelm Heinrich Solf (1862 - 1936), Governor of Deutsch-Samoa since 1900 - Wilhelm Voigt (1849 - 1922), alias "The Captain of Köpenick", convict in the Sonnenburg penitentiary - Heinrich Zille (1858 - 1929), draughtsman - Wilhelm Kube (1887 - 1943), Gauleiter and Commissioner General for White Ruthenia - Erich Schulz: Samoa - Governor with school years in Sonnenburg. In: Die neue Oder-Zeitung, Vol. 8, No. 2, May 1988 (printed) - Erich Schulz: Hauptmann von Köpenick 1867/79 in Sonnenburg. At that time he was young and not famous - Wilhelm Voigt "did many things" and died in 1922. In: Die neue Oder-Zeitung, Vol. 6, No. 4, November 1986 (printed) - Erich Schulz: Dr. Wilhelm Solf, last Imperial State Secretary of the R e i c h s k o l o n i a l a m t and first State Secretary of the Foreign Office of the Weimar Republic. April 1988 (manuscript, 3 p.) - Erich Schulz: Wilhelm Voigt, the "Captain of Köpenick" was also a "guest" at the Sonnenburg penitentiary. October 1986 (manuscript, 5 p.).