The files of the present holdings NW 223 were handed over to the Main State Archives on 13 October 1976 in 10 packages and 8 files and were accepted under No. III 82/76. These are documents of the Zoological Research Institute and Museum Alexander Koenig, Bonn, which document the emergence of the institute as a foundation and its work as a state institution. Numerous purchase contracts for the properties on which the construction of the Museum Koenig and the Villa Hammerschmidt, today's "House of the Federal President", are located, provide information about the development of the former rural property in this area in the second half of the 19th century. The construction of the museum building, a neo-Renaissance building, is documented, as is the transfer of the furnishings to the Reich as a result of unsuccessful efforts to complete the construction with Prussia's own funds or with the help of the Prussian government. The correspondences convey a vivid picture of the patriarchal character of the "Reichsinstitut" under the direction of its founder, Prof. Dr. Alexander Koenig. The scientific diaries as well as the documents belonging to the "Alexander Koenig Foundation" on the basis of testamentary provisions are still kept in the Koenig Museum. For the history of the institution and the Koenig family cf. Martin Eisentraut, Alexander Koenig und sein Werk, Bonn 1973. For the history of the Zoological Research Institute and Museum A. Koenig after 1945 cf. also the holdings NW 60. The holdings were recorded from December 1976 to January 1977 by the State Archives Council, Dr. Jürgen Rainer Wolf. Mrs. Angela Mauritz wrote the find book. The records must be quoted: NW 223 No. ... The stock is freely visible.
Grundstück
475 Archival description results for Grundstück
Contains: (The numbers refer to the issue numbers) Construction history and urban development: Many construction and land issues are dealt with in the meetings of the city councilors meeting, see administration. No.36: Commemoration of the construction of Ludwigsburg 200 years ago No.74The Marburger Str. is paved from the Ederstr. to the bridge Agriculture: The newspaper brings in every issue advice for farmers, reports on new researches and experiments, reflections on the weather, statistics of the seeds and the slaughtered animals, farmer's rules, lists of the approved bulls and goats and the prize winners of the Stünzelfest, requests for further training and to the agricultural winter school, advice concerning insurance and pensions for farmers (are published). No.13,15: Advantages of land consolidation No.16: General assembly of the agricultural trade association No.21: Report on the general assembly of the agricultural trade association No.48,49: Report on the journey of the agricultural association to the German Agricultural Exhibition in Düsseldorf No.62: The rural indebtedness in the Wittgenstein district Nature and environment: No.60: Agriculture and natural monument conservation No.98: Extermination of crows by interpretation of poisoned fish at the creeks Statistics: A maid gets 18,-M monthly. A ground worker earns 40 Pf./hour Nr.19: Extrablatt with the election results of the election of the Reichstag Nr.75: Criminal statistics of the district Wittgenstein Trade, crafts and trades: Nr.58: Report about the Westphalian journeyman craftsman Nr.62: Winkel looks for accommodation for girls from the country, who work in the factory Traffic: Nr.7Delay in the construction of the line Raumland-Berleburg No.58: Start of the construction of the line Raumland-Berleburg No.60,61: Railway project Berleburg-Gleidorf No.68: Railway construction Raumland-Berleburg No.74: Expropriation of land for railway construction No.80: Report on the meeting of the Railway Committee concerning the railway Berleburg-Oberes Lahntal No.95: Cessation of work on the line School and training: No.15: Compulsory schooling regulations No.17,19,20,21: Education and training of commercial youth No.45: An association for the establishment of a toddler school is established No.76: Report on a concert in the Stadtkirche zur Besten der Kleinkinderschule No.80New acquisitions of the Volksbibliothek Kirche: No.66,67: Missionsfest am Dödesberg No.101,103: Article on the history of the churches Schüllar and Odebornskirche, dedication of the new church on 20 December 1907 Fire brigade: No.13Report on the General Assembly of the Voluntary Fire Service Administration and Administration of Justice: Announcements of the District Administrator's Office, the Police and the Princely Administration, detailed reports on the meetings of the Court of Aldermen, the City Assembly, the District Committee and the District Council as well as appointments and announcements of the District Court are published regularly, as are the appeals of the Military Authority. On 25 January 1907 Reichtag elections Vote distribution in Berleburg: Christl. Soziale 95, National-Liberale 104, freisinige Volkspartei 183, Zentrum 15, Sozialisten 55 Nr.17: Obituary to chamber director Rotberg Nr.23,26,47,74,90: Report on meeting of the municipal council Nr.29: Report on district committee meeting Nr.72: Obituary to municipal council leader Kaufmann Fingerling Vereine: Vereinsnachrichten are found in every issue of the newspaper. To the already 1900 known associations come still in addition: Stenographer's Association ''Stolze'', Cyclist's Association , Innkeeper's Association , Shooting Association , Sauerland Mountain Association (SGV) Free Craftsmen's Guild, Saxo-Borussia Youth Association Local Group of the German Fleet Association Goat Breeding Association Orchestra Association ''Grines Hitchen'' (meets in ''Kaiser Friedrich'') District Teachers' Association Wittgenstein Fatherland Women's Association Singing Association Harmony Men's and Youth Association Volksbildungsverein Railway Association No.31SGV-Herrenkommers im Wittgensteiner Hof Nr-.101: Report about the local group of the German Fleet Association Nr.103The ski club Sauerland, seat Arnsberg, which has a local group in Berleburg, counts 200 members emigration: No.17: North America resists against the immigration No.32: Emil Wolff, a Berleburger, who emigrated to America, makes a donation of 1000 M. to the hospital, likewise 1910 of the infant school No.94From Sauerland miners go to South West Africa, work in the mine, commitment 14 months, 250 m. per month, free station, clothes and laundry Other: No.10,11: In the gym photos from the war 1870/71 are shown No.91: Complaint about burglary thefts, foreign workers (Croats, Italians) are suspected, who are employed in road and railway construction Darin:
- 1888, town archive Bad Berleburg, newspapers* Contains: (The numbers refer to the output numbers)<br /><br />house names:<br />Johannhermes (1880 and 1885 Hermann Schneider, Unterstadt)<br />Dilches ( master baker Heinrich Langenfeld<br />Kellers (Jakob Hackenbracht)<br />Pütze (Ludwig Bald)<br />Eckebald<br />Brachs (Heinrich Bald)<br />Langes (Schneider)<br />Pflügers (1888 Saßmannshausen)<br />Bartgörges (1889 Sauer)<br />Diele (1889 Klotz)<br />Granes (1889 Hackebracht)<br />Kämmerers (1889 Hardt)<br />Antonies (1889 Hackebracht)<br /><br />Building history:<br />No.3,4Building Accident Insurance Law<br />No.23Water supply<br />No.29: Water pipe, connection of houses<br />No.31: Water pipe, costs: annual fee 10,- M., connection in own contribution<br />No.32: Letter concerning water pipe in Berleburg<br />No.34: Water pipe, call for declaration of accession<br />No.45Water question completed <br />71 connections to the water pipe secured in front of the louse, further connections in prospect.<br />The water is chemically investigated <br /><br />Agriculture:<br />No.40: Report on the raffle at the Stünzelfest<br /><br />Trade and crafts:<br />Commercialists:<br />H. Matthey: From 1.Novemberg 1869 book, art and music shop, calendar, writing and drawing books, fretwork accessories, glue, cigars, view of Berleburg, candles, wallets, also lending library <br />Louis Cronau: salt, Stollwerk chocolate, very good sourland bread, mixed goods, Przellan <br />Fritz Cronau: roofing slate from Fredlar <br />C. Luhne: Indian herb bitter<br />Marcus Wolff, J. Wolff, Wolff-Wolff (later Salomon Wolff): Clothing, fabrics, jewellery, also colonial goods<br />F. Heinemann: Flour. Cloth, accordion <br />Joseph Rosenthal: Clothing, fabrics, flour <br />J.B. Becker, Christian Friedrich <br />Carl Schnieder: Cookers <br />G.Spieß: Ladies' and men's watches, Goldware <br />A. Nilasch: Ölkuchen, Sämereien<br />Ludwig Althaus<br />Franz Kiessler: Petroleum-Lampen<br />Carl Wilhelmi: Buchhandlung, Taschenkalender<br />Winkel und Böttger: Samenhandlung, Heringe, Sardellen, Käse, Honig, Kolonialwaren, Kerzen, Spielzeug, Schuhe, Kleidung Hüte, Mützen, Gluhe, Schirme, Strickgarn.<br />(The partners separated in 1869, Böttner continued to run the business, Winkel opened a shop for manufactured goods and haberdashery, colonial goods and country products)<br /><br />Restaurateurs:<br />Gasthof Bald ( in the black whale)<br />Utsch (Posthalterei)<br />Bodechrist ( Müsse, later Sauer, then Carl Winter): Auctions and theatre performances<br />Gasthof Sauer vor der Lause<br />Dickel am Stein<br />Elorin am Dödesberg<br />Georg Schneider<br />Gasthof zum Tiergarten<br />Carl Mengel, Wilhelm Mengel (dance courses take place there)<br />Carl Pletsch<br />Rossels Gasthaus<br />Fr. Kaiser<br />Franz Kießler<br />P. Müller, Nachf. v. Louis Cronau: Colonial goods shop with economy <br /><br />Craftsmen:<br />Master tailor:<br />Ambrosius,<br />Ludwig Spieß,<br />Sophie Beitzel,<br />Loos,<br />Ludwig Dörr,<br />Pletsch (Oberstadt),<br />W.Walter,<br /><br />Turning master:<br />Wilhelm Rompel (spinning wheels)<br /><br />Tile burner master:<br />Control nail ( stove stones for bakeries)<br /><br />Carpenter's master:<br />Gustav Wild (also brushes),<br />Heinrich Scheffel,<br />Heinrich Born (Berghausen)<br /><br />Master saddler:<br />W. Wüstenhöfer ( also upholsterer),<br />Heinrich Göbel ( Oberstadt)<br />Clockmaker:<br />G. Skewer<br />Painter and decorator:<br />Hermann Sasse<br />Master baker:<br />J. Wolf, Christian Schneider, W. Schneider<br />Shoemaker:<br />Weber, Schaefer, Louis Fischer<br />Glaser:<br />Ph. Weather<br />Fitters:<br />Augsut Schweitzer, Christian Rompel<br />Wagner:<br />Louis Jung, Friedrich Schneider<br />Metzger:<br />Fr. Bald<br />Eichmeister:<br />Krämer<br />Schornsteinfegermeister:<br />Gebhardt<br />Mülltr: Christian Kamm leases the princely grinding mill<br in 1873 />Schmied:<br />G. Beltz jun.<br />Bierbrauer:<br />Georg Schneider<br /><br />There were Hot-Sattlermeister, Hof-Glaser, etc.<br />No.14: Statute of the commercial advanced training school<br />No.55Reference to the ''Führer durch das Sauerland'' (Kneebusch) and ''Bäder und Sommerfrische Westfalens'', where Berleburg is not mentioned, therefore suggestions for Berleburg des<br />Tourism.<br />So far, Luete mainly come from the cities to collect blueberries in Sauerland<br />No.56The Hofapotheke closes in the evening at 9 o'clock, then only urgent things<br /><br />Traffic:<br />No.4: Railway construction Hilchenbach-Laasphe<br />No.10: Landslide on the line Hilchenbach-Laasphe<br />No.13: Railway construction planning Laasphe-Raumland<br />No.29Railway construction accident<br />No.31: Traffic routes of the Wittgenstein district<br />No.32: Via the new Hilchenbach-Erndtebrück railway line<br />No.48: Expropriation of land for construction of the Erndtebrück-Laasphe railway />No.51: From railway construction to Erndtebrück<br />No.53Report from the railway construction at Lützel<br /><br />Statistics:<br />Births: 50 (21 boys, 27 girls, 2 stillbirths)<br />Deaths: 29<br />Combinations: 9<br />No.29,30Statistics of the district Wittgenstein for the year 1887<br />No.31: One egg costs 4 Pf., one pound butter 95 Pf., one pound Limburger cheese 30 Pf<br />No.32,33,34Continuation of no. 29,30 - Status of the administration of the district:<br />Insured persons, savings banks, police, school system, taxes, state, provincial and district municipal affairs<br /><br />School:<br />Since about 1550 there were school lessons in Berleburg, the two pastors taught the older pupils, mainly preparation for confirmation, an under teacher taught the younger children, at times there was a teacher for the girls.<br />No.27.27Students (from abroad) are admitted to the Selekta<br />No.136: Construction of school desks<br />No.146: Volksschullastengesetz<br />No.153: Report on the commemoration of Emperor Friedrich at school. Lectures by Rector Florin, Lehrer Kapen, Lehrer Werthan, Selekta<br />><br />Emmigration:<br />Immigration intentions are published in the newspaper.<br />Often an auction of household goods or livestock is connected with this, sometimes also of houses and properties<br />No.31Warning of an agent who has undertaken to import (!) 6000 European immigrants to Brazil via Antwerp <br /><br />Vereine-Kunst:<br />The newspaper keeps you up to date on the clubs, invitations to meetings and events and reports about them.<br />The following clubs are mentioned:<br />Homrighäuser Bienenverein<br />Schützenverein<br />Wiesenverband ''Bürgeraue''<br />Armenverein<br />Spar- und Vorschussverein<br />Darlehnskassenverein ( the first in Westphalia, founded 1869)<br />branch association of the Gustav-Adolf-Stiftung<br />warriors' support association<br />warriors' association<br />association for the insurance of fallen pigs<br />botanical association<br />fencing school association<br />hospital association<br />snuff association (association for the care of the poor)<br />carnival society Na-Nu<br />Red Cross Branch Association<br />Turnverein<br />Governed Diet Box Office Association<br />Voluntary Fire Brigade<br />Gesangsverein ''Germania''<br />Gesangsverein ''Erholung''<br />Nr.40: Concert of the Schmallenberger chapel in the hall of the innkeeper Rossel<br />><br />Fire brigade:<br />No.7: Construction of a climbing scaffold on the cattle market at the Odeborn<br />Advertising for members<br /><br />Administration and administration of justice:<br />No.1: The district court has its own courthouse<br />No.17: Most important provisions of the military service law<br />No.21Stadtverordnetenversammlung, Tagesordnung<br />No.23: Report on the Stadtverordnetenversammlung<br />No.29: List of district taxes for the individual towns<br />No.31: Stadtverordnetenversammlung, Tagesordnung<br />No.38,54: Stadtverordnetenversammlung<br /><br />Health care:<br />Dr. Herrmann is practical. Doctor in Berleburg. In 1889 he goes to New Guinea in the service of the Colonial Society for three years.<br />Now Dr. Florin and Dr. Costers are doctors in Berleburg<br />No.9: Obituary to Dr. Völkel<br />No.34: A dentist comes to Berleburg at times, consultation days are announced in the newspaper<br />No.36: Wilhelm Springer is announced as practical. Doctor and obstetrician named in Berleburg.<br /><br />Darin:<br /><br />* description: Contains: (The numbers refer to the output numbers) - - House names: - Johannhermes (1880 and 1885 Hermann Schneider, Unterstadt) - Dilches (master baker Heinrich Langenfeld - Kellers (Jakob Hackenbracht) - Pütze (Ludwig Bald) - Eckebald - Brachs (Heinrich Bald) - Langes (tailor) - Pflügers (1888 Saßmannshausen) - Bartgörges (1889 Sauer) - Diele (1889 Klotz) - Granes (1889 Hackebracht) - Kämmerers (1889 Hardt) - Antonies (1889 Hackebracht) - - building history: - No.3,4Building accident insurance law - No.23: Water supply - No.29: Water pipe, connection of houses - No.31: Water pipe, costs: annual fee 10,- m., connection in own contribution - No.32: Writing concerning water pipe in Berleburg - No.34: Water pipe, call for declaration of membership - No.45: Conclusion of water question - 71 connections to water pipe in front of the Lause secured, further connections in prospect. - The water is chemically analyzed - - Agriculture: - No.40: Report about the raffle on the Stünzelfest - - Trade and crafts: - Merchants: - H. Matthey: From 1.Novemberg 1869 book, art, and music shop, calendar, writing and drawing booklets, fretsaw accessories, glue, cigars, view of Berleburg, candles, wallets, also borrowing library - Louis Cronau: salt, Stollwerk chocolate, very good sauerländisches bread, Gemischtwaren, Przellan - Fritz Cronau: roofing slate from Fredlar - C. Luhne: Indian Herb Bitter - Marcus Wolff, J. Wolff, Wolff-Wolff (later Salomon Wolff): Clothing, Fabrics, Jewellery, Colonial Goods - F. Heinemann: Flour. Cloths, accordions - Joseph Rosenthal: Clothing, fabrics, flour - J.B. Becker, Christian Friedrich - Carl Schnieder: Cook stoves - G.Spieß: Ladies' and men's watches, gold goods - A. Nilasch: Ölkuchen, Sämereien - Ludwig Althaus - Franz Kiessler: Petroleum-Lampen - Carl Wilhelmi: Buchhandlung, Taschenkalender - Winkel und Böttger: Samenhandlung, Heringe, Sardellen, Käse, Honig, Kolonialwaren, Kerzen, Spielzeug, Schuhe, Kleidung Hüte, Mützen, Gluhe, Schirme, Strickgarn. - (The partners separated in 1869, Böttner continued to run the business, Winkel opened a shop for manufactured goods and haberdashery, colonial goods and regional products) - - Innkeepers: - Gasthof Bald (in the black whale) - Utsch (post office) - Bodechrist (Müsse, later Sauer, then Carl Winter): Auctions and theatre performances - Gasthof Sauer vor der Lause - Dickel am Stein - Elorin am Dödesberg - Georg Schneider - Gasthof zum Tiergarten - Carl Mengel, Wilhelm Mengel (dance courses take place there) - Carl Pletsch - Rossels Gasthaus - Fr. Kaiser - Franz Kießler - P. Müller, Nachf. v. Louis Cronau: Colonial goods shop with economy - - Craftsmen: - Master tailor: - Ambrosius, - Ludwig Spieß, - Sophie Beitzel, - Loos, - Ludwig Dörr, - Pletsch (upper town), - W.Walter, - - Master woodturner: - Wilhelm Rompel (spinning wheels) - - Master bricklayer: - Control nail (stove stones for baking ovens) - - Master carpenter: - Gustav Wild (also brushes), - Heinrich Scheffel, - Heinrich Born (Berghausen) - - Master saddler: - W. Wüstenhöfer ( also upholsterer), - Heinrich Göbel ( Oberstadt) - Watchmaker: - G. Spieß - Painter and upholsterer: - Hermann Sasse - Master baker: - J. Wolf, Christian Schneider, W. Schneider - Shoemaker: - Weber, Schaefer, Louis Fischer - Glazier: - Ph. Weather - Schlosser: - Augsut Schweitzer, Christian Rompel - Wagner: - Louis Jung, Friedrich Schneider - Metzger: - Fr. Bald - Eichmeister: - Krämer - Schornsteinfegermeister: - Gebhardt - Mülletr: Christian Kamm leases the princely mill in 1873 - Schmied: - G. Beltz jun. - Bierbrauer: - Georg Schneider - - There were hot saddler masters, court glass makers, etc. - No.14: Statute of the commercial further training school - No.55: Reference to the ''Guide through the Sauerland'' (Kneebusch) and ''Baths and Summer Resorts of Westphalia'', where Berleburg is not mentioned, therefore proposals for the Berleburg des - Tourismus. - So far Luete mainly comes to collect blueberries from the cities to the Sauerland - No.56: The Hofapotheke closes in the evening 9 o'clock, then only urgent things - - Traffic: - No.4: Railway construction Hilchenbach-Laasphe - No.10: Landslide on the line Hilchenbach-Laasphe - No.13: Railway construction planning Laasphe-Raumland - No.29: Accident at the railway construction - No.31Traffic routes of the district Wittgenstein - No.32: About the new railway line Hilchenbach-Erndtebrück - No.48: Expropriations of land for the construction of the railway Erndtebrück-Laasphe - No.51: From railway construction to Erndtebrück - No.53: Report from railway construction at Lützel - - Statistics: - Births: 50 (21 boys, 27 girls, 2 stillborn) - Deaths: 29 - Marriages: 9 - No.29,30Statistics of the district Wittgenstein for the year 1887 - No.31: One egg costs 4 Pf., one pound butter 95 Pf., one pound Limburger cheese 30 Pf. - No.32,33,34Continuation of no. 29,30 - Status of the district administration: - Insurance, savings banks, police, school system, taxes, state, provincial and district municipal affairs - - School: - Since about 1550 there were school lessons in Berleburg, the two pastors taught the older pupils, mainly preparation for confirmation, a subteacher taught the younger children, at times there was a teacher for the girls. - No.27: Students (from abroad) are admitted to the Selekta - No.136: Construction of school desks - No.146: Volksschullastengesetz - No.153: Report on the commemoration of Emperor Friedrich in the school. Lectures by Rector Florin, Teacher Kapen, Teacher Werthan, Selekta - - Emigration: - Emigration intentions are announced in the newspaper. - No.31: Warning of an agent who has undertaken to import (!) 6000 European immigrants to Brazil, which he shipped via Antwerp - - Vereine-Kunst: - The newspaper constantly brings news about the associations, invitations to meetings and events and reports about them. - The following associations are mentioned: - Homrighäuser Bienenverein - Schützenverein - Wiesenverband ''Bürgeraue'' - Armenverein - Spar- und Vorschussverein - Darlehnskassenverein ( the first one in Westphalia, founded in 1869) - branch association of the Gustav Adolf Foundation - warrior support association - warrior association - association for the insurance of fallen pigs - botanical association - fencing school association - hospital association - Schnupfverein (association for the care of the poor) - carnival society Na-Nu - branch association of the Red Cross - gymnastics association - jury diets cashier association - volunteer fire brigade - singing association ''Germania'' - singing association ''Erholung'' - no.40Concert of the Schmallenberger chapel in the hall of the innkeeper Rossel - - Fire brigade: - No.7: Construction of a climbing scaffold on the cattle market at the Odeborn - Advertising for members - - Administration and administration of justice: - No.1: The local court has its own court house - No.17: Most important provisions of the military service law - No.21No.23: Report on the City Assembly - No.29: List of district levies for the individual towns - No.31: City Assembly, Agenda - No.38,54: City Assembly - - Health care: - Dr. Herrmann is practical. Doctor in Berleburg. In 1889 he went to New Guinea in the service of the Colonial Society for three years. - Now Dr. Florin and Dr. Costers are doctors in Berleburg - No.9: Obituary to Dr. Völkel - No.34: A dentist comes to Berleburg for a time, consultation days are announced in the newspaper - No.36: Wilhelm Springer is announced as practical. doctor and birth helper in Berleburg. - Darin: - - -
Contains among other things: Lease agreement for the land on the island of Mondolch leased to the English Consulate
- 1 The Dukes of Urach Counts of Württemberg: The Dukes of Urach Counts of Württemberg are a branch line of the House of Württemberg. In 1800 the fourth son of Duke Friedrich Eugen von Württemberg, Duke Wilhelm von Württemberg, married a court lady of his mother: twenty-three-year-old Wilhelmine von Tunderfeld-Rhodis. According to the house laws, this marriage with a woman who did not come from the high nobility was uneven; Duke Wilhelm therefore renounced the succession to the throne for his descendants on August 1, 1801. On 20 April 1801 the reigning Duke Friedrich, Duke Wilhelm's eldest brother, had already recognised the marriage as a full marriage to the right hand and determined that the descendants of Duke Wilhelm should bear the name Counts of Württemberg. Thus a new branch line of the House of Württemberg was created. The second son, Count Wilhelm, who also bore the name Wilhelm, was raised to the rank of first Duke of Urach by King Karl in 1867. The new ducal dignity was hereditary in the male tribe; the corresponding elevation of the younger children to the princedom was to underline the close connection of the branch line with the main line and determine its rank immediately after the royal house before all other class masters of the kingdom. Through the conversion of Wilhelm I to the Catholic denomination of his wife and children in 1862, the House of Urach became a consciously Catholic dynasty of princes from the very beginning. With the construction of the Lichtenstein Castle on the Albrand above the Echaztal in 1840/41, the Duke, who died in 1869, set himself a lasting monument. All further details about the House of Urach and its individual members can be found in the article by Wolfgang Schmierer, Die Seitenlinie der Herzöge von Urach (since 1867). In: The House of Württemberg - a biographical encyclopedia. Edited by Sönke Lorenz, Dieter Mertens and Volker Press. Stuttgart, Berlin, Cologne 1997 pp. 376 - 398. The genealogy reproduced after the preface is also taken from this. 2.1 The total holdings of the Archives of Duke of Urach Count of Württemberg: The holdings listed here, the estate of Wilhelm II Duke of Urach Count of Württemberg, represent part of the total archives of the family. This was kept at Schloss Lichtenstein until 1987. Due to a deposit agreement between H.S.H. Karl Anselm Duke of Urach Count of Württemberg as representative of the Herzog family of Urach Count of Württemberg and the State of Baden-Württemberg, represented by the Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, dated 14 July / 5 August 1987, it has been deposited in the Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart since then. Because of their literary references, parts of the documents of Wilhelm I and Count Alexander were simultaneously handed over to the German Literature Archive in Marbach, where they are stored under the signature D 88.6. The archive was completely unsorted when it was transferred to the Main State Archives. Nor were there any finding aids that could have been reused. Only a part of the documents is listed in a directory of 1927/28, which was included in the delivery; in addition, the order on which this directory is based was fundamentally destroyed at an unknown time. A large part of the material was unpacked or stored in open cartons. In 1995, Archive Director Dr. Wolfgang Schmierer carried out an initial inspection, tidying and preliminary packaging of the material. He subdivided the entire collection into partial collections, to which he assigned signatures corresponding to the numbering of the family members in his article on the Herzog von Urach Graf von Württemberg family, which was written parallel to the work on order. The GU 1 et seq. sub-funds to be structured in more detail comprise documents on real estate and asset management. The GU 100 sub-collection contains foreign archives and collections. The GU 101 - 134 partial holdings were created as personal estates of individual family members and GU 201 - 203 of related parties. Some overlaps were inevitable. If documents were kept throughout the period of activity of a single duke, they were assigned to the signatures GU 1 et seq. in the order An overview of the current status of the subdivision into partial holdings can be found below. It is possible that the structure will be modified in the course of further development work. An impressive record of Wolfgang Schmierer's work from February 10, 1995 to March 21, 1996 (Kanzleiakten 7511.5-2-D.1: Erschließung des Archivs der Herzöge von Urach) provides information on the orderly work carried out by Wolfgang Schmierer. 2.2 The subportfolio GU 117: The following subportfolio GU 117 Herzog Wilhelm II. von Urach comprises documents, which Wolfgang Schmierer has formed in the course of his order work Wolfgang Schmierers. Duke Wilhelm II (1864 - 1928) was born as the first son of Wilhelm I and his second wife Princess Florestine of Monaco in Monaco and already at the age of five the second Duke of Urach. He entered the traditional military career and was commander general of the Generalkommandos z.b.V. in the First World War. No. 64 and General of the Cavalry. In 1927 the volume Die 26. Infanterie-Division im Weltkrieg 1914 - 1918, Teil I 1914 -1915, edited by him, appeared in the series Württembergs Heer im Weltkrieg. Wilhelm II. ran several times for a vacant throne: 1910 for Monaco, 1913 for the new Kingdom of Albania, in the war for Poland and for a Grand Duchy of Alsace-Lorraine and 1918 for the planned Kingdom of Lithuania. Arnold Zweig used the episode of his election as King of Lithuania, in which he was given the name Mindaugas II, in his 1937 novel Einsetzung eines Königs. In 1922 Wilhelm, who devoted himself to scientific activities after the war, received his doctorate in philosophy from the University of Tübingen with a dissertation on the urban geography of Reutlingen. Wilhelm II married Amalie Herzogin in Bavaria in 1892 (1865 - 1912). The marriage produced four sons (Wilhelm III, Karl Gero, Albrecht, Eberhard) and five daughters (Maria Gabriela, Elisabeth, Carola Hilda, Margarethe, Mechthilde). In his second marriage he married Wiltrud, née Princess of Bavaria, in 1924, and since the partial holdings of Duke Wilhelm II are particularly extensive and of particular importance in many respects (applications for the throne, constitutional status of the House of Urach, World War I), Wolfgang Schmierer, in agreement with the Landesarchivdirektion Baden-Württemberg, made the decision to place his indexing at the beginning of the indexing of the entire holdings and to apply for third-party funding. Within the framework of a project of the Stiftung Kulturgut Baden-Württemberg, which we would like to take this opportunity to thank sincerely for its support, the temporary employee Hansjörg Oswald was able to demetalise, open up and package GU 117 in the period from November 1995 to July 1997. Wolfgang Schmierer was personally responsible for the support. Due to the serious illness, which he finally succumbed to on 7 October 1997, Wolfgang Schmierer was unable to complete the classification and final editing of the title recordings, which he had largely worked on. This was done by the undersigned in May 2000 with the support of Katharina Ernst, a trainee archivist. At the highest level, the holdings are divided into civil and military documents. The sequence of title recordings within the individual items corresponds to the chronology. This also applies to correspondence files; since these have been kept very differently over the years, they have not been formed into series. After development and packaging, the GU 117 subportfolio comprises 1354 tufts and volumes totalling 36.4 linear metres with a duration of 1864 to 1929. The use by third parties is regulated as follows in the Depositalvertrag: The consent of the head of the Herzog von Urach Graf von Württemberg family must be obtained before the archive can be used by third parties. Conditions may be imposed on consent. If consent is not refused or restricted, the management of the Main State Archives - within the framework of the regulations for use of the state archives of Baden-Württemberg - regulates the use. In any case the users are to be obligated to respect the personal rights. Stuttgart, 20 June 2000Dr. Robert Kretzschmar Ltd. Archive Director
among other things protocols of the Uha missionaries' oven borders 1930- 1937; correspondence with other missions in the area; sketches of properties
Untitled(call number uncertain)nExpropriation of land intended for the construction of an isolation wing for whites at the Government Hospital in Douala. - Compensation from the former owner, 1906 - 1913
Bezirksamt DualaPurchase contract for land for children's house, 1854; purchase contract, correspondence, replacement e. hereditary lease, construction plans, cost estimate for purchase and conversion of the old Loher School, 1858/59; Bauconsens, cost estimate, plans for the new Loher School, 1858/59. New building of a back house at the mission house, 1860; purchase contract for e. Wiese am Loh, 1861; cost estimates and craftsman contracts for e. extension of the mission house, 1861; sketch and explanation for a new mission house, 1873
Rhenish Missionary Society- description: - Preliminary remark - - History of institutions - The Secret Upper Tribunal was formed on 30 November 1782 in the course of the judicial reform of the Grand Chancellor v. Carmer. With extended jurisdiction and as an independent all-Prussian court, it continued the functions of the Higher Appellate Court (1703-1748) [see inventory "GStA PK, I. HA Rep. 97 A Higher Appellate Court"] and the Tribunal as the 4th Senate at the Court of Appeal (1748-1782) [see inventory "GStA PK, I. HA Rep. 97 Court of Appeal"]. This brought to a conclusion a development that had already been prepared in the increasingly autonomous jurisdictional functions and in the constantly growing territorial jurisdiction of the Tribunal. The Court of Justice ruled in the third instance and in the appeal instance and was directly subordinate to the Department of Justice and from 1808 to the Ministry of Justice. - The territorial competence of the Secret Upper Tribunal for all Prussian provinces was restricted only for a short time due to the autonomy claim of the Neumark. The appeal rulings in Neumark affairs were initially drawn up in the name of the Privy Council of State. The territorial expansion of Prussia's territory in the 19th century resulted in the temporary division of the appeal instance into several courts on several occasions. This division of territorial competence was accompanied by important organisational changes. At the beginning of the 19th century, for example, the expansion of tasks made it necessary to delegate the appeal proceedings to higher regional courts with a dispute value of less than 500 talers from 1803 or less than 2000 talers after 1815. Furthermore, since 1815 the Province of Neuvorpommern and the Province of Poznan had their own courts of appeal in the Court of Appeal in Greifswald and in the 2nd Senate of the Higher Court of Appeal in Poznan. An essential restriction of the territorial competence of the upper tribunal meant the secondary order of a Rhenish Court of Appeal and Cassation for the territories of French law since 1819. In order to reduce this fragmentation, the delegation of appeal proceedings to higher regional courts was abolished in 1833 and the appeal senate in Posen was dissolved in 1834. - The jurisdiction of the upper tribunal was considerably restricted by the fact that the appeal in political criminal cases had been transferred to the Privy Judicial Council at the Court of Appeal since the beginning of the trials against the bourgeois-democratic movement. - The revolution of 1848/49 partially enforced the bourgeois demand for state legal unity in Prussia. The Prussian National Assembly included a provision in its draft constitution to unite the supreme courts. The demand continued in the constitutional debate of the two chambers of the Landtag in March 1849 could be enforced against the resistance of the Rhenish jurists, so that the announcement of a uniform court also passed from the imposed to the agreed constitution. This constitutional principle was implemented according to the law of March 1852. Already after the January regulation of 1849 the upper tribunal had been declared the highest instance in cases also from the district of the appellate court Greifswald. On January 1, 1853, the upper tribunal was merged with the Rheinischer Revisions- und Kassationshof (Rhenish Court of Appeal and Cassation), which meant that the Geheimer Justizrat (Privy Judicial Council) was joined by a unified supreme court, whose name was changed from Geheimes Obertribunal to Obertribunal (Privy Upper Tribunal) as a result of the public nature of the court hearings introduced in 1849. Its territorial competence was extended in 1851 to the newly accrued Hohenzollern principalities. - A temporary change in the leadership of the Prussian court organization occurred once again as a result of the 1866 war. Of the annexed areas, only the courts of the city of Frankfurt (Main) were directly assigned to the upper tribunal as an appeal instance. For the provinces Schleswig-Holstein, Hannover, Hessen-Nassau as well as for the duchy Lauenburg and the principalities Waldeck and Pyrmont a new court of appeal was formed in Berlin in 1867. It was united with the Supreme Tribunal in February 1874, and from 1851 the Supreme Tribunal was joined by the Disciplinary Court and the Formally Independent Court for Church Affairs, established in 1873 as a result of the Kulturkampf. The institutional historical development of the Upper Tribunal is characteristic of the efforts to achieve formal legal unity in Prussia, which was documented in its Supreme Court. - The mostly erratic expansion of the task area is also reflected in the inner structure of the upper tribunal. The Court had begun its work in the 18th century with a Senate occupied by a chief president, nine tribunal councils and a protonotarius of the upper tribunal. After 1874 it was divided into eight senates, in which one president, five vice-presidents and 62 supreme tribunal councils were active as judges. This resulted in a subdivision into a Senate for Personal Law, two Senates for Property Law, one Senate for Obligatory Law, two Senates for Civil Law of the Rhineland and the territories annexed in 1866, one Senate for Criminal Matters and one Senate for Disciplinary Investigations against Judicial Officials. The highest body was the plenum, which united all senates. The Upper Tribunal received a considerable increase in personnel when one of the main demands of the Vormärz and the Revolution of 1848/49, namely the publicity of civil and criminal proceedings, was enforced. In 1852, a Prosecutor General's Office was formed as an independent structural part of the Upper Tribunal, consisting of one Prosecutor General and three Prosecutors General. In addition, there were the lawyers admitted to the upper tribunal, whose number rose to 19 after the takeover of the so-called Public Ministry of the Rhineland Court of Appeal and Cassation. Since 1856 there has also been an honorary council of lawyers at the upper tribunal, which was renewed every two years. An administrative office of the Upper Tribunal had been available since the 1930s and was eventually staffed by 15 officials. - The Upper Tribunal was personally connected to the Higher Censorship Court constituted in 1843, three of whose members belonged to the Upper Tribunal. The chief presidents of the upper tribunal, mostly former ministers of justice, were directly responsible to the king until 1857 and were subordinated to the minister of justice. Members of the upper tribunal included such important bourgeois jurists as Carl Gottlieb Suarez and Dr. Friedrich Wilhelm Ferdinand Bornemann. - The competence of the upper tribunal was comprehensive for the area of civil law. It extended to appeals and nullity appeals in civil trials, even when they concerned military personnel. It covered the following subjects: Personal law, professional and ethical law, rights and duties of companies, corporations, municipalities, schools and institutions for the poor, leasehold and tenancy matters, land, domains, regalia, jurisdiction, obligations, commercial and property matters. In criminal proceedings, on the other hand, only appeals for annulment belonged before the Supreme Tribunal in third instance. As stated above, the Supreme Tribunal was not responsible for political criminal cases. Additional areas of responsibility of the upper tribunal were conflicts of jurisdiction between courts of appeal and lower courts, complaints against court orders in procedural matters and disciplinary matters of all judicial officials, including military judges. In addition, on the basis of special treaties, the Obertribunal acted as supreme court for some German states, namely for the principalities Waldeck and Pyrmont in criminal cases and for the Duchy of Anhalt-Bernburg in criminal cases and disciplinary cases of the judges. Finally, the Obertribunal was also elected several times as Austrägalgericht for the decision of disputes between German princes. - The plenum of the Supreme Tribunal heard decisions of a Senate which deviated from a principle of law or a statutory provision, as well as all legislative matters, important disciplinary inquiries and judgments of general interest. Influence on contemporary jurisprudence was exerted by the publication of about 500 important decisions from the years 1836 to 1879 in a state publication series. - After the foundation of the North German Confederation and the German Reich, jurisdictional powers were increasingly transferred to the Reich. Initially, the last instance in commercial and bill of exchange matters was transferred to the Bundesoberhandelsgericht, the later Reichsoberhandelsgericht, founded in August 1870 in Leipzig. In the context of the Reichsjustizreform the national liberals with support of the Prussian Minister of Justice Leonhardt enforced the court constitution law from January 1877 against the Bavarian separatism. The Reichsgericht (Imperial Court) ordered in this law commenced its activities in Leipzig on 1 October 1879. At the same time the Prussian upper tribunal was abolished, 25 of its employees were appointed to the Reichsgericht, while 19 judges were retired. - Presidents of the upper tribunal: - 1782 - 1784 Münchhausen, Ernst Ferdinand Freiherr v. - 1784, 1788 - 1802 Reck, Eberhard Friedrich Rudolph Ludwig Freiherr v. d. - 1785 - 1788 Doernberg, Wolfgang Ferdinand v. - 1802 - 1805 Könen, Johann v. (since 1802) - 1805 - 1833 Grolman, Heinrich Dietrich v. - 1833 - 1844 Sack, Dr. Wilhelm Friedrich - 1844 - 1854 Mühler, Heinrich Gottlob v. - 1854 - 1878 Uhden, Carl Albrecht Alexander v. (since 1871) - - - - - - History and Inventory - After the dissolution of the Upper Tribunal in 1879, the organisational and administrative files were initially handed over to the Court of Appeal, the trial files to the Prussian Ministry of Justice. It is likely that the majority of the case files were collected by the Court of Appeal after 1880. The transfer of files from the Upper Tribunal to the Secret State Archives took place in 1880, 1911 and 1927, so that in 1928 the archiving of the only incompletely preserved holdings was largely completed. From 1932 to 1939, the order was mainly based on fundamental judgments and organizational acts. A motive report from 1939 on the archival evaluation of the files can be found in the file "I. HA Rep. 178 Generaldirektion der Staatsarchive, Nr. 604". The preserved files on proceedings in third instance until 1786 were simultaneously made available for use by old administrative repertories. The tradition of the Upper Tribunal, together with that of the old Higher Appeal Court and that of the Tribunal (4th Senate) at the Court of Appeal, formed the combined holdings of Rep. 97a. - After the Second World War, the holdings were transferred to the Central State Archives of the GDR in Merseburg without any losses during the war, where they were initially restored to their old signatures. For the lost find book a new one was made. In 1973 a new inventory was established, which was based on the decisive organisational caesura of 1782 with the foundation of the independent upper tribunal. The holdings of the old Higher Appeal Court and the Tribunal of the Court of Appeal from 1703 to 1782 [now: "GStA PK, I. HA Rep. 97 A Oberappellationsgericht] were separated from the holdings of the Upper Tribunal from 1782 to 1879. The upper tribunal was subsequently restructured and listed anew. At the beginning of the nineties he was transferred to the care of the Geheimes Staatsarchiv PK zu Berlin and transferred there in 1993. - Scope of stock: 1093 file units (20 linear meters), 1704-1910 - - The files are to be ordered as: - I. HA Rep. 97a, No. ### - - - The files are to be quoted as: - I. HA Rep. 97a Obertribunal, Nr. ### - - - - The last assigned number is: 1075 - - - - - - Author of the present introduction from 1975: - Dräger, Diplomarchivar - - - Revision in March 2010 by: - Dr. Kober, Archivrat - - Findmittel: Database; Findbuch, 1 Vol.* Secret State Archive of Prussian Cultural Heritage, I. HA Rep. 97a
Nitsch (Neukirchen) to Bracker with thanks for Ginsberg's successful visit to Breklum. Demand for more information about land and buildings in Uha. Please send an official declaration of Breklum about the transfer of your property to Neukirchen as travel documents for Ginsberg.
UntitledLetters from other mission houses and mission friends] Nitsch (Neukirchen) to Piening about the property formerly owned by Bock.
Untitled[Personalakte Peter Jessen] Jessen (Kigoma) to Bracker with report about wife and child. The financial situation has improved, so Jessen has made preparations for the purchase of a plot of land on which to plant 'rewarding crops'. Health is good. No news from Germany for a long time. Note that letters may be sent via Stockholm, Copenhagen or America. But everyone is fine, the Breklumers should not worry. The baptism of the first African took place at Easter. Andersen is now in Shunga, the construction of the house is finished. A settlement exists, but cannot be sent.
UntitledNitsch (Neukirchen) to Bock with thanks for his answer concerning his Shamba in Kikangala, which Bock would like to leave to the Neukirchner Mission. It was problematic that the British had expropriated all German property (except mission property) on the basis of the Treaty of Versailles and that Bock therefore no longer legally owned the Shamba. Bock may please explain in a letter that he acquired the Shamba 'in your name at that time for special reasons, but for the purposes of missionary work, and that you agree that it is considered a missionary property'. In this way it might be possible to recover the property.
UntitledLetters from other mission houses and mission friends] Nitsch (Neukirchen) to Piening (new mission director in Breklum) about a letter from missionary Ginsberg. In it he mentioned the shamba [field, garden] of the misisonary Bock. Piening may now ask Bock 'whether this shamba was indeed his private property and has remained so? And what is to be done to get possibly this - as it seems, valuable - property for the mission work?
Untitled[Letters from Africa] Copy of a letter from missionary E. Ginsberg (Shunga) to 'Herr Inspektor' (Neukirchen) with a report on how the people of Neukirchen follow in the footsteps of the Breklumers in Uha. The station Shunga has been put back into operation, Kikangala and Kigoma are to follow. But the Catholics have also had an eye on the former Breklum site in Kikangala. Therefore Ginsberg asks that the property in Kikangala, which is apparently Bock's private property, be transferred to the Breklum Mission so that they can pass the property on to the Neukirchner.
Untitled[Disputes between Andersen and Bock] Bock to Andersen with the hint that an item is missing in the account sent to him for signature. The potatoes and onions grown on the Mission Staion Shunga property had been sold by Mrs Andersen, but the profit had not been included in the accounts. Since it is an amount of about 200 Rp (not a trifle), Bock would like to ask for this item to be included in the official cash report. Bock stresses that it is very difficult for him to draw attention to this point and hopes that Adersen is not angry with him. Jessen doesn't know anything about Bock's criticism of Andersen's cost accounting and asks Andersen to rewrite one page of the cash report. Jessen would also send his suggestions for improvement for the cash report to Andersen, then Andersen could incorporate all corrections as well as the item about the potatoes and onions. 'How I wanted to prevent another quarrel, but at the expense of truth I can't.'
UntitledPlans of the hospital property in Tsining, China, of the hospital and school property in Tsingtau, China, and of the property in Tokyo, Japan; correspondence by and with Wilhelm Seufert, Dr. Eyl, Ms. S. and Richard Wilhelm; minutes of the board of trustees meeting of the Faberhospital (23 Nov 1912, 1913, 31 March, 9 May, 9 Sept.); financial difficulties, statutes for the teachers of the schools of the Weimar Mission; minutes of the board of trustees meeting of the German-Chinese. School for girls (Schufanschule 13. Febr. 1913); minutes of the meeting of the Missionary College (22. March and 28. July 1913); plans for the construction and reconstruction of the Faberhospital; call for an "Office for German-Chinese Exchange" (against an English-American flooding); bills for a construction on the school building at Shanghai Street; expansion of the missionary work (Sept. 1913); plan of the hospital Kaumi; provisional statutes of the Jungung-Hua-Hospital Tsingtau; plans of the Faberhospital and the library for the Weimar Mission in Tsingtau; donations of teaching materials, especially physical apparatus, for the girls' school (1914)
Six fiches. Contains: FICHE NR. 42 1 - Leipzig 1937. Leipzig Mission to all staff in the home service of the Mission - 1937. Leipzig Mission to Knak (2 letters) - Berlin 1937. Berlin Mission Society to Ihmels - o.O. 1937. ? to Press - o.O. 1937. ? to Lenz - o.O. 1937. ? to Nicol - Shira 1937. Winkler to Mission Inspector - Moshi 1937. Gutmann (Circular No. 6) "To all mission brothers and sisters" - o.O. 1937. ? Certificate for Mission Inspector Küchler (concerning forthcoming visitation to East Africa) - Krummenhennersdorf 1937. Küchler to Mission Director - o.O. 1937. ? To Mission Inspector Küchler and Mission Inspector Weishaupt - 1937. Ihmels ("Urgenlichkeits-Bescheinigung" for Küchler's ticket) - 1937. To the Head of the German East Africa Line - 1937. To Mission Inspector Küchler - Draft "Instructions for the Visitation Journey of Mr. Mission Inspector Küchler." - 1937. "Instructions for Mr. Mission Inspector Küchler's visitation trip." - "Agenda for the collegial meeting... 1937." - 1937. to Superintendent of the City of Leipzig (Beurlaubung von Küchler) - Daressalaam 1932. Roehl to the Bethler-Mission (copy) - 1937. to the Superintendent Leipzig-Stadt - 1937. to Rendant Otto, D.E.M.R. Abt. für Devisenanforderungen - "Welcome Letter of the Church Committee for Mr. Mission Inspector Küchler to the Parishes". - Berlin 1937. German Evangelical Mission Council. Department of Foreign Exchange Requirements for Ihmels - Dar es Salaam 1937. Küchler an Ihmels bzw. Kollegium (2 letters) - "Statut des Missions-Kirchen-Bundes (MKB) auf Lutherischer Basis für Ostafrika. - Protocol: "African Council of the Missionary Church Federation on a Lutheran Basis for East Africa. 1st meeting" - "Minutes of the meeting of the Preparatory Commission of the MKB Dar es Salaam ... 1937" (copy) - Leipzig 1937. To Mission Inspector Küchler (6 letters) - Machame 1937. Küchler to Ihmels or Kollegium (3 letters; partly multiple copies) - Moshi 1937. Küchler to Ihmels (2 letters) - Mamba 1937. Küchler to Weishaupt - Marangu 1937. Küchler to Kollegium (original and copy) - Marangu 1937. Küchler to Ihmels. FICHE NO. 42 2 - Arusha 1937. Küchler an Ihmels - Moshi 1938. ? (illegible) to Küchler - Leipzig 1938. to Küchler (3 letters) - Gonja 1938. Küchler to Ihmels - Gonja 1938. Küchler to Kollegium (original and 2 copies) - Leipzig 1938. An Gutmann - Mamba 1938. Küchler an Ihmels (2 letters) - Leipzig 1938. An Fokken - 1938. An Küchler - 1938. An Missionsdirektor (illegible because of the copy on Fiche) - 1938. An Küchler - Tübingen 1938. Küchler an Ihmels - o.O., o.J. Ihmel's "What we experienced with Christianity in East Africa" (typewritten) - o.O., o.J. ? "Vom Dienst der Frau auf dem Missionsfeld" (typewritten) - "Allianz Lebensversicherungsbank A.G. Berlin" (printed) - Leipzig 1927. Allianz Lebensversicherungsbank an Ihmels (2 letters) - 1927. An Dekan der Theologischen Fakultät zu Leipzig (2 letters) - 1927. An Gibson - 1927. An Nellner (2 letters) - 1927. An Allianz Lebensversicherung - Programme of the journey of Mr. and Mrs. Missionsdirektor Dr. Ihmels in East Africa 1927. - o.O.., o.J. Paul. "A Promemoria for some Business Tasks in our East African Mission" - Schweta 1927. Paul to Mission Director - London 1927. Conference of Missionary Societies in Great Britain and Ireland - Leipzig 1927. Ihmels to Rector of the University of Leipzig - Old Moshi 1927. The Director of Education, Daressalaam. (concerning "Female Education"; 2 letters; English) - Machame 1927. Secretariat of the Leipzig Mission to Foster, Superintendent of Education - Dresden 1927. Ministry of Popular Education to Ihmels - Berlin 1927. Berlin Mission Society to Ihmels. FICHE NO 42 3 - 1927. An Knak - 1927. An Missionsinspektor Held, Wiesbaden. - 1927. An Egyptian Consulate (2 letters) - 1927. Kollegium certificate for Ihmels - Heimstatt 1927. Metz on "Friend" - 1927. An Hauptschriftleitung der Hamburger Nachrichten - Leipzig 1927. Leipziger Neueste Nachrichten an Ihmels - 1927. An Knak - 1927. An Gehring - 1927. An Gnanascharingam - Leipzig 1927. An Enderlein - Schreiben Enderleins (1. page missing) - Wang 1927. Knak on Ihmels - o.O. 1927. An Enderlein - Schreiben Enderlein (1. page missing) - Wang 1927. Knak on Ihmels - o.O, o.J. Ihmels(?) (already in Africa)?. (concerning finances) - On board the steamship Njassa 1927. To cathedral preacher (Körner) - On board the Njassa 1927. Himels on space - Schweta 1927. Paul on mission director (2 letters) - Machame 1927. Space on mission director (3 letters) - Bumbuli o.J. Gleiss on space - Nkoaranga 1927. Ittameier on mission inspector - Mayaveram 1927. Meyner to Mission Director (for India) - o.O. 1927. Rensch to Mission Director - Moshi 1927. Gutmann to Mission Director - Marangu 1927. Rother to Mission Director - Daressalaam 1927. The Secretariat Tanganyika Territory an Ihmels - On board the Njassa 1927. Ihmels to "Official Brother" - East-India 1927. Lehmann to mission director - Arusha 1927. Rißmann to mission director (concerning rejection of his marriage request by the college; illness; 4 letters) - telegram to Ihmels - telegram to Weishaupt - Müritz 1927. Weishaupt to Ihmels - Gonja 1927. Ihmels to mission inspector - Gonja 1927. Ihmels an Rißmann - Gonja 1927. Ihmels an Senior - Quote Albert Schweizers - Hospital Arusha 1927. Expert opinion of the "Medical Officer" on Rißmann (English) - Moshi 1927. Ihmels "Report No. 4. (Report 3 on Rißmann's Disease)" - Dresden 1927. Branch Mission Society to Mission Director. FICHE NO 42 4 - Leipzig 1927. Mission Inspector Gerber to Mission Director - Mayaveram 1927. Meyner to Mission Director (2 letters) - Schweta 1927. Paul to Mission Director - Machame 1927. Space to Mission Director - Mwika 1927. Ihmels an Weishaupt - Mwika 1927. Ihmels an Probst - Mwika 1927. Ihmels an Lehmann (concerning premature marriage) - Nkoaranga 1927. Ihmels (report no. 4; concerning seminar in Marangu) - 2 telegrams Ihmels - Arusha 1927. An Raum - Marangu 1927. Rother an Missionsdirektor - Memmingerberg in Swabia 1927. Editor of the Nürnberger Missionsblatt an Ihmels - Arusha 1927. Ihmels an Senior (Reg. Heimreise Rißmann) - Arusha 1927. Ihmels an Rother - Marangu 1927. Rother an Missionsdirektor - Shira 1927. Ihmels to Mission Inspector - Ruruma 1927. Bonander to Ihmels (English) - Machame 1927. An Fokken - Machame 1927. An Rother - Machame 1927. An Watt (refusal to purchase land) - Machame 1927. To Mission Inspector - Leipzig 1927. Ev. -luth. Mission to Ihmels - Shigatini 1927. ? [Ihmels] (Report No. 7: Moshi; Report No. 8: Mamba; Report No. 9: Mwika) - Shigatini 1927. Ihmels to Mission Inspector - o.O., o.J. ? "Medical Station" (handwritten) - Shigatini 1927. Ihmels to "Official Brother" (concerning stay in Egypt) - proof of 4 registered letters - Shigatini 1927. Ihmels to Oldham - Cairo 1927. Cecil House Hotel to Ihmels - Moshi 1927. Ihmels to Bonander (fiancée of Reusch). FICHE NR. 42 5 - 2 telegrams - Moshi 1927. Ihmels to "Official Brother" (2fold) - o.O. 1927. ? Machame 1927. Ihmels to Senior (circumcision) - Machame 1927. Ihmels to "Official Brother" - 1927. Transcript from a letter from Ihmels to Mr Oldham (circumcision) - 1927. School questions) - Machame 1927. Ihmels to Mitchell (3 letters; English) - Mombasa 1927. Ihmels to Fokken - Machame, Mombasa 1927. Ihmels to Rother - Mombasa 1927. Ihmels to Raum - Mombasa 1927. Ihmels to Ittameier - Mombasa 1927. Ihmels to "Doctor" - Hamburg 1927. Woermann Line, German East Africa Line to Ihmels - On board the Njassa (shortly before Cape Town) 1927. Ihmels to College (No. 1) - Steamship Njassa 1927. Ihmels to College (No. 2; original and copy) - Moshi 1927. Ihmels to College (Report No. 4: Usambara; Report No. 5: Südpare) - Nkoaranga 1927. Ihmels (Report No. 6: Seminar Marangu) - Shigatini 1927. Ihmels. (Report No 7: Moshi; Report No 8: Mamba; Report No 9: Mwika; Report No 11: Nkoaranga). FICHE No 42 6- - Continued - Report No ? (Arusha) - "Special discussion on circumcision" (handwritten) - "On safari in East Africa" (typewritten) - "In East Africa" (typewritten) - "On educational issues and the like".
Leipziger Missionswerk