History of the inventor: In 1884 the German Reich took over the protection of the Bremen merchant Franz Adolf Eduard Lüderitz by acquiring land; in 1885 the German administration was established; the German colonial society, founded in 1895, expanded the German sphere of influence; in 1915 the Schutztruppe surrendered to the armed forces of the South African Union and the German administration ended. Inventory description: Inventory history At the end of the 1930s, the Reichsarchiv took over the files of the Colonial Administration of D e u t s c h - S ü d w e s t a f r i k a, in some cases with considerable gaps in their transmission. After the relocation caused by the war, they were transferred to the Central State Archive in Potsdam in 1945. Here, the classification of the holdings into the central administration of Windhoek, the local administrations and the special administrations (justice, police, mining, railways) with their substructures, which had already been carried out in the Reich Archives, was preserved. The few volumes of files kept in the Federal Archives in Koblenz were assigned to the holdings after the reunification of Germany. Archive evaluation and processing In addition to the factual files of the most varied areas and administrative levels, the personnel files of the inspection of the state police as well as the railway administration and railway construction authorities form the most extensive groups of files with about 80 per cent of the transmission. The classification of the stock was carried out largely in accordance with the classification shown in the provisional finding aid, which was based on the registry scheme valid at the time. Only in a few individual cases were volumes assigned to a different classification. The order and titles of the volumes remained essentially unchanged. An index of persons, objects and places has been omitted, so that searches are only possible via the online version of this finding aid book. Content characterisation: Central administration; governorate in Windhoek; commissioner of the former governorate in Windhoek; local administration; district offices; district offices; administration of justice; high court in Windhoek; district courts; mountain authorities; registration aids. State of development: Findbuch 1942; Online-Findbuch 2002 Citation method: BArch, R 1002/...
- Contains: Composition of the examination boards for the medical preliminary examination and examination and the dental examination and preliminary examination. Internships in the Dar es Salaam and Tanga (East Africa) governorate hospitals. Practical year for doctors. Submissions concerning the consideration of dermatology and otorhinolaryngology in the medical examination, statements on this.n* University Archive Tübingen, UAT 125/ Medical Faculty (IV), Dean's Files
'* 1908
Teil 1'
Teil 2'
' Contains: Business cards; Haffner; Carlo Pietropaoli; Belopotocki; Bilczewski; Brennan; Carl Augustin; Ehrler; Fraknói; Franziskus Hennemann; Isaak Nicolaus Tsakowicz; Paul Wilhelm von Keppler; Ignaz Lobos; Severin von Moranski; Phillipus F. Nakić; Sigismund Felix Freiherr von Ow; Radini Tedeschi; Martin Josef Rika; Georgius Eppus; Joseph Stadler; Antonio Valbonesi; Fr. Pio Vidi; Weber; Michael Buchberger; Valerio Laspro; Filippo Castracane degli Antelminelli; Augusto Guidin 1880-1929
'* 1940-1942
'* 1918-1921
'* Contains
'* 1894-1899
'* Contains: letters from Professor Hans Delbrück
'* 1893-1941
'* Contains
'* 1890-1917
'* 1904-1940
' Bericht über die volkanischen Ereignisse der Jahre 1895 bis 1913<br />- Über Hornitos und verwandte Gebilde<br />- Nachruf auf Emil Rudolph<br />- Die vulkanische Tätigkeit in Mittelamerika im 20. Jhdt. Part 1<br />- A contribution to the pyroclastic cloud question<br />- The volcanic mountains of New Guinea<br />- The most active volcanic areas of the present<br />- Volcanic events. Stromboli on 20 April 1923n 1915-1928
- Contains: Repeal of the Jesuit Law 1917; essay 'Il n'y a pas d' 'internationale' catholique'; Italian mobilisation against the Vatican; 'Der Vatikan' for special issue of 'Süddeutsche Monatshefte'; Wir kommen einander näher; The French Protestants and German peace; Intensified submarine warfare and the world grain market; Submersibles and the French merchant navy; The grain supply of our enemies; England's daily bread; America's disappointed hopes; France's great internal suffering; Russia in France's judgement; 'For consideration' about the food shortage; Interesting facts from the enemy press; Parliamentarians and politicians from enemy countries at the negotiating table; The Zurich meeting of Catholic parliamentarians and politicians; The Poles against the Irredenta idea; French concessions; Important facts from the enemy press; Italy's economic prospects; Italy's economic situation; French financial worries; Effects of the English export ban on Italy; Gabriele d'Annunzio in new light; The political votes on the Briand Ministry; Birmingham versus Manchester; The growing French war costs; Japan's internal and external policy; Confessions from the enemy camps; Wilson's friendship for the German people; American ignorance; Democracy and autocracy; Futile incitement of the German people; French atrocities in Togo; Terrible suffering of German civilian and war prisoners in Africa; A judgement of the Belgian Court of Cassation; 'L'affaire Wolf' and other stories; Paris Chronicle; Gloomy French Chronicle; Lloyd George's Peace Speech and The Spectator; The Russian army conditions are colouring the French; They are beginning to tell the truth; From the Eternal City; Belgian cabinet crisis; France's serious Mediterranean worries; The Italian defeat in London; The truth about the Alsatian objection in 1871n* 1916-1917, University Archives Freiburg, C 0068 NL Paul Maria von Baumgarten, theologian (1860-1943)
- Contains: The Pope's neutrality; The holy places of Jerusalem under English bombardment; English bombs on Jerusalem; The Boselli ministry in Italy; Tobacco and war in France; General Pershing in France; The belt must be tightened; Coals, coals, coals!; What will cover a hundred French francs today?What is now possible in France and England; Jesuits; Terrible suffering of German civilian and war prisoners in Africa; French atrocities in Togo; Wilson's friendship for the German people; American ignorance; The growing French war costs; Italy's economic situation; France's realisation; Effects of the English export ban on Italy; News from the Roman Curia; Red Cross and the Roman Curia; Italy's trade balance; A pioneer of Germanism dies in Rome (Anton de Waal); The Poles against the Irredenta idea; Parliamentarians and politicians of enemy countries at the negotiating table; The Zurich meeting of Catholic parliamentarians and politicians; Russia in French judgement; America's disappointed hopes; England's daily bread; The grain supply of our enemies; The brutality of numbers; Intensified submarine warfare and the world grain market; Ruthlessly cut short; The abbreviation of the war; Monarchical thoughts; On 27 January 1917; The Kaiser's birthday; The Kaiser's birthday on 27 January 1917; The Kaiser's birthday on 27 January 1917; The Kaiser's birthday on 27 January 1917; The Kaiser's birthday on 27 January 1917; The Kaiser's birthday on 27 January 1917; The Kaiser's birthday on 27 January 1917; The Kaiser's birthday on 27 January 1917 January 1917; Kaiser's birthday; What is Kaiser Wilhelm worth to us?; Coal shortage in Italy; The hopelessness of voluntary civilian service in France; How the French treat their own countrymen; A new breach of international law. Retention of a Greek ship on account of friendliness to the Germans; International madness; Beasts; The moral position of our enemies; Political assassination; The atrocious mistreatment of our prisoners by our enemies; Insult and rape of the Curia; Italy and England against the Curia; The French Protestants and German peace; English warning against arming merchant ships; A French crime; Chamberlain von Gerlach; On Germany's renewal; Worries and plans; A cry of fear from the 'Temps'; Action!; The crack in the Duma block; French folly; The first Turkish munitions and army supplies factory; Yes, action!; The English loan in Japann* 1916-1917, University Archives Freiburg, C 0068 NL Paul Maria von Baumgarten, theologian (1860-1943)
Brief description: In October 1979, the local council decided to establish a collection of urban history with a special focus on the 20th century within the framework of a contract for work. The task of this institution should not only be a collection of material, but primarily the preparation and presentation of contemporary historical themes in exhibitions. In April 1980 the journalist and historian Dr. Karlheinz Fuchs was entrusted with this task. A public appeal by the then Lord Mayor Manfred Rommel in the spring of 1982 for the handing over of documents and objects from the Nazi era was met with great approval by the public, so that numerous objects could be handed over to the employees for their exhibitions. In addition, contemporary witnesses were available for interviews. Between August 1982 and December 1984, five exhibitions on the subject of "Stuttgart in the Third Reich" were shown. When the project was discontinued in 1984, an exhibition was still pending ("Stuttgart in War - the Years from 1939 to 1945"). Under the auspices of historian Dr. Marlene Hiller of the Library for Contemporary History, this was made up on the occasion of the 50th return of the outbreak of war in 1989. Scope: 1100 units / 6.1 linear metres Content: Documents: Documents on the establishment of the project Contemporary History and its staff; Planning and realisation of the exhibitions; Collection of exhibition objects; Loans, donations and purchases for the exhibitions; Interviews with contemporary witnesses Photographs: Photos from the exhibitions; photos, contact prints, negatives, slides and photo albums from the Nazi era, audio cassettes and tapes: interviews with contemporary witnesses, original recordings from the Nazi era, radio broadcasts, accompanying music in the exhibitions, videos and films: Interviews with contemporary witnesses, documentaries, feature films and television films, recordings of the project Zeitgeschichte Bücher: Bücher aus der NS-Zeit as well as books about the NS period Posters and plans from the NS period Duration: (1891-) 1979-1990 Instructions for use: Some units are still subject to a 30-year blocking period; three personal units are subject to special blocking periods; many photo units are subject to copyright; some units are blocked for conservation reasons. Foreword: History of the project In October 1979, the local council decided to build up a collection of urban history with a special focus on the 20th century. The task of this institution should not only be a collection of material, but first and foremost the preparation and presentation of contemporary historical themes in the form of exhibitions. In April 1980, a contract for work was signed with the historian and journalist Dr. Karlheinz Fuchs, according to which he was commissioned to develop a concept for the collection of urban history with a special focus on the 20th century ("collection of contemporary history") as well as to prepare and organise exhibitions on contemporary historical themes in agreement with and in cooperation with the cultural office of the city of Stuttgart. In addition, the two historians Bernd Burkhardt and Walter Nachtmann have also been working on the project since spring and autumn 1980, respectively. The graphic artist Michael Molnar was engaged in freelance collaboration for the exhibition design and realization. A secretariat was set up in April 1982. In August of the same year, two additional freelancers were hired on an hourly basis. Since the end of 1982, a pedagogical-didactic employee had been working on the project, whose position was financed by the Robert Bosch Foundation in the first year and then by the Cultural Office. In the spring of 1982, the press published an appeal by the then Lord Mayor Manfred Rommel to support the contemporary history project by surrendering documents and objects from the Nazi era. This appeal received a great response from the population, so that the employees were given numerous objects for their exhibitions. In addition, contemporary witnesses were available for interviews. The venue for all exhibitions was the Tagblatt Tower in Eberhardstraße (cultural centre "Kultur unterm Turm"). On 13 August 1982 the first exhibition "Prolog. Political Posters of the Late Weimar Republic" opened. The accompanying exhibition "Völkische Radikale in Stuttgart. On the Prehistory and Early Phase of the NSDAP 1890-1925" was shown from November 12, 1982. Both exhibitions ran until 12 January 1983. The second major exhibition "The Seizure of Power. From Republic to Brown City" was opened on 28 January 1983. The accompanying exhibition "Friedrich Wolf. The years in Stuttgart 1927-1933. An example" was shown from 9 July to 13 November 1983. From 23 March to 22 December 1984 the exhibition "Adaptation - Resistance - Persecution. The years from 1933 to 1939". This exhibition encompassed the themes "Everyday Life", "Resistance" and "Persecution of the Jews of Stuttgart", originally planned as individual complexes, each between 1933 and 1939, whereby views of the wartime period also showed the consequences of the National Socialist dictatorship for Stuttgart. Extensive catalogues were published for all exhibitions (see references). Dissolution of the project, exhibition "Stuttgart in the Second World War" Because of the amount of material, for financial reasons and also because the project broke new ground, the deadlines set for the individual exhibitions could not be met. When the fixed-term employment contracts of the project staff expired as planned at the end of March 1984 and the project was terminated, an exhibition was still pending ("Stuttgart in the War - the Years from 1939 to 1945"). This was made up for the 50th return of the outbreak of war in 1989 (1.9. - 22.7.). The specialist staff for this was provided by the Library for Contemporary History, money and premises were provided by the City of Stuttgart. The historian Dr. Marlene Hiller from the Library of Contemporary History was commissioned with the exhibition project. Further employees were Chris Glass, Dr. Benigna Schönhagen and Stefan Kley. A book accompanying the exhibition was also published here. Content of the inventory: On the one hand, the collection contains documents and files produced by the members of the contemporary history project as part of their work. This includes correspondence with lenders and interview partners, but also correspondence with the administration about the provision of office space, the collection of information material and the like. By far the largest part of the collection, however, consists of the collected objects, photos, sound and film cassettes as well as books, which were acquired for the individual exhibitions by donation, loan or purchase. A further focus are the numerous interviews with contemporary witnesses, some of which are available in the form of video cassettes, but most of which are in the form of audio cassettes, most of which have been digitized subsequently and can now be used in the form of mp3 or wav files. However, this only applies to audio cassettes with interviews with contemporary witnesses. Sound cassettes with other content (e.g. music, industrial noises, excerpts from speeches) or sound cassettes on which (today's) SWR programmes are recorded have not been digitised because they are also available elsewhere (e.g. in the radio archive). Some of the interviews were transcribed by the project staff (some, however, incomplete). The original plan to issue an extra volume with the interviews conducted could no longer be realized. . Further information on the inventory and its use: The inventory comprises a total of 1100 units. The written documents have a circumference of 6.1 linear metres. There are also seven photo albums, 297 photo folders, one framed photo, 665 slides, 107 units with negatives, four films, 58 postcards, 20 audio and magnetic tapes, 56 video cassettes, 331 audio cassettes and 59 books. The actual period of the collection runs from 1979 to 1990, with the collection containing pre-files or documents, books, photos, etc., which were taken before 1945 and date back to 1891. The documents were handed over to the City Archive by the Cultural Office in May 1987. Since there was no order or classification, this had to be done on the basis of the existing material itself. Some of the documents are still blocked due to the general 30-year blocking period for fact files. Copyrights must be respected for the numerous photos stored in the photo archive. Please order the desired units according to the following sample: Project Contemporary History - 1037 - Unit number Photos can be ordered using the signatures FM 132/1-297 or FM 132/1-297. FR 132/1 (framed photo), slides about the signatures FD 132/1-9, photo albums about the signatures FA 132/1-7, films about the signatures FF 132/1-4, negatives about the signatures FN 132/1-107, postcards about the signatures FP 132/1-14, digital copies about the signatures 1037_E_41-372, books about the signatures KE 12/1-59. The audio and video cassettes as well as the audio tapes cannot be ordered for conservation reasons. If you refer to documents from the inventory, please attach a reference according to the following model: Source: Stadtarchiv Stuttgart - 1037 - Number of the unit Further files and posters for the project Contemporary History are in stock 17/2, main file (no. 594-596), in stock 132/1, Kulturamt (no. 274, 302-305), in stock 2134, estate of Wilhelm Kohlhaas (no. 11), in stock 2154 estate of Karl-Heinz Gerhard (no. 5) as well as in stock 9401, poster collection (M 96 and M 828). Stuttgart, May 2007 Elke Machon References to literature: "Ausstellungsreihe Stuttgart im Dritten Reich - Prolog - Politische Plakate der späten Weimarer Republik", edited by the project Zeitgeschichte im Kulturamt der Landeshauptstadt Stuttgart, 1982 "Ausstellungsreihe Stuttgart im Dritten Reich - Völkische Radikale in Stuttgart, zur Vorgeschichte und Frühphase der NSDAP 1890-1925", accompanying exhibition to the Prolog - Politische Plakate der späten Weimarer Republik, edited by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, Stuttgart. from the project Zeitgeschichte im Kulturamt der Landeshauptstadt Stuttgart, 1982 "Exhibition Series Stuttgart in the Third Reich - The Seizure of Power, from the Republican to the Brown City", ed. from the project Zeitgeschichte im Kulturamt der Landeshauptstadt Stuttgart, 1983 "Ausstellungsreihe Stuttgart im Dritten Reich - Friedrich Wolf, Die Jahre in Stuttgart 1927-1933, ein Beispiel", edited by the project Zeitgeschichte im Kulturamt der Landeshauptstadt Stuttgart, 1983 "Ausstellungsreihe Stuttgart im Dritten Reich - Anpassung, Widerstand, Verfolgung, Die Jahre von 1933 bis 1939", edited by the German Federal Cultural Office Stuttgart, 1983. from the project Zeitgeschichte im Kulturamt der Landeshauptstadt Stuttgart, 1984 "Stuttgart im Dritten Reich", to the reception and resonance of the exhibition cycle, a report by Claudia Pachnicke, edited by the Kulturamt der Landeshauptstadt Stuttgart, 1986 "Stuttgart im Zweiten Weltkrieg", catalogue, edited by Marlene P. Hiller, Gerlingen 1989
1910, Secret State Archives of Prussian Cultural Heritage, VI. HA, Nl Becker, C. H. Becker, Carl Heinrich (Dep.)
Abbreviation: 2.01.1 Stock profile: Stock description: Faculty of Philosophy of the University of Rostock 1419-1945 Content: Faculty management, institutes and seminars Duration: 1419 - 1945 Scope: 11 running meters, more than 400 files Cataloguing: database, index, FINDBUCH.Net Citation method: University Archive Rostock, 2.01.1, signature Preface: The Faculty of Philosophy, formerly the Faculty of Artistics, was one of the traditional, classical founding faculties of the University of Rostock and can therefore look back on an eventful history that reaches back to the present. The holdings of the Faculty of Philosophy 1419-1945 include all the documents handed down by the head of the Faculty of Philosophy, the individual chairs, institutes and seminars from this period. Even though continuous documentation only began around 1789, some older faculty books have survived. The complete faculty register from 1419 to 1701 is a valuable source. The history of the Archive of the Faculty of Philosophy dates back to 1419. A first list of existing files is available from 1569. A preserved print from 1731 contains a list of the existing "books and things". In 1849 the university secretary of the Archive of the Faculty of Philosophy took over and ordered it. With the opening of the new main building of the University in 1870, the Archive of the Faculty of Philosophy was also given space in the rooms on the ground floor. In 1908 it had to be cleared and housed with the other faculty archives in the seminar building in the courtyard. By order of the Rector, the archives of the faculties were to be handed over to the newly formed Archives Commission in 1947. It was not until 1948 that the inventory was returned to the archive rooms of the main building on the ground floor. In the 1950s the order of the stock began. In 1951/52, an alphabetical index was completed, while the systematic indexing of the Dean's Archives of the Faculty of Philosophy lasted until 1962. The search books created were not used in the use. In later years, the order was interfered with, files dissolved or integrated into other holdings. In the 1990s, the collection was newly recorded, later added to the database and is now also accessible via FINDBUCH.net.