Showing 7306 results

Archival description
Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, E 130 a Bü 896 · File · 1903 - 1911, 1916
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Contains among other things: Overview of expenditure and income of German postal institutions in the protectorates and abroad in the accounting year 1903 Qu. 26a; memorandums: on the construction of a railway from Lüderitzbucht to Kubub together with a map (Reichstag printed matter 1905 Beil I, p. 5 - 15) Qu. 39b, the continuation of the Usambarabahn from Buiko to Moschi (1909, 25 p.) Qu. 40

Staatsarchiv Bremen (STAB), 3-R.1.g. · Fonds · 1886 - 1955
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

Content: Colonial Policy - Colonial Legislation - Protectorate Act - Reichskolonialamt - Colonial Service - Colonial Procurement - Schutztruppe - Togo, Cameroon, D e u t s c h - S ü d w e s t a f r i k a, D e u t s c h - O s t a f r i k a - Herero Uprising - Railway Construction - Colonial and Settlement Societies - Kiautschou/Tsingtau - Caroline Islands, Palau Islands and Mariana Islands - Colonial Policy and Research under National Socialist Rule - Position of Bremen in the Colonial Movement, especially Institute of Colonial Research

Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, E 130 a Bü 895 · File · 1904 - 1913
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Contains among other things: Memorandum on the use of the fund of two million marks made available for the South West African protectorate, 1904, printed matter 3 p. qu. 19; coloured map of farm damage in the Herero area 1904 qu. 32a; Wehrgesetz für die Schutzgebiete 1913 qu. 60

BArch, R 1002 · Fonds · 1886-1924, 1936
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

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/...

* I.4.048 175 * I.4.048 - 175 · File · 1930 - 1931
Part of Stiftung Deutsches Technikmuseum Berlin, Historical Archive

Contains: among others "Memorandum of the Chairman of the Supervisory Board of the Deutsch-Atlantische Telegraphengesellschaft of 19 December 1930 on the takeover of Transradio A.G. for wireless overseas traffic by the Deutsche Reichspost and statement of the Reichspost Ministry" (23 p.)

Deutsch-Atlantische Telegraphengesellschaft
FA 1 / 2 · File · 1886 - 1888
Part of Cameroon National Archives

'The North German Missionary Society in Bremen avoids the mission territory in Togo. - Report by the Grade Secretary for the attention of the Foreign Office - Including: - Presentation of the situation by the German Missionary Society in West Africa by the Foreign Office according to information from Mission Inspector Zahn

Gouvernement von Kamerun

1st incoming letter, from Schede, Wyk, 27.05.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 1r 2nd incoming letter, from Kurt Scheele, Berlin, 27.06.1934 (1 sheet, hsl.); sheet 2r 3rd outgoing letter (carbon copy), to Kurt Scheele, Berlin, 05.07.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.), sheet 3r 4th incoming letter, by Alfred Scheer, Bleicherode, [28.08.1934] (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 4r 5 5th outgoing letter (carbon copy), to Alfred Scheer, Berlin, 11.09.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 5r 6th incoming letter, by Adolf Scheffbuch, Stuttgart, 24.01.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.), sheet 6r 7. letter of exit (copy), to Adolf Scheffbuch, Berlin, 27.01.1934 (1 sheet, copy); sheet 7r 8. letter of entry, from Helmut Scheffel, Volo, 11.07.1934 (1 sheet, copy); sheet 8r 9. letter of exit (copy), to Helmut Scheffel, Berlin, 20.07.1934 (1 sheet, copy), sheet 9r 10. incoming letter, by Herbert Scheffler, Wandsbek, 10.01.1934 (1 sheet, mschr. m. hsl. note by Paul Fechter); sheet 10r 11. outgoing letter (carbon copy), to Herbert Scheffler, Berlin, 16.01.1934 (1 sheet, mschr. m. hsl. note by Paul Fechter); sheet 9r 10. outgoing letter (carbon copy), to Herbert Scheffler, Berlin, 16.01.1934 (1 sheet, mschr. m. hsl. note by Paul Fechter), mschr.); sheet 11r 12. incoming letter, by Herbert Scheffler, Wandsbek, 17.01.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 12r 13. outgoing letter (copy), to Herbert Scheffler, Berlin, 23.01.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.), sheet 13r 14. letter of receipt, by Herbert Scheffler, Wandsbek, 18.07.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 14r 15. card (receipt), by Herbert Scheffler, Wandsbek, 13.08.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 15r-15v 16. card (receipt), by Herbert Scheffler, Wandsbek, 14.09.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 13r 15. card (receipt), by Herbert Scheffler, Wandsbek, 14.09.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.), hsl.); Bl. 16r-16v 17th outgoing letter (carbon copy), to Herbert Scheffler, Berlin, 21.09.1934 (1 Bl., mschr.); Bl. 17r 18th outgoing letter (carbon copy), to Herbert Scheffler, Berlin, 16.10.1934 (1 Bl., mschr.), mschr.); sheet 18r 19th incoming letter, by Albert Scheibe, Berlin, 12.03.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.; with: Albert Scheibe, "Dem Andenken eines grossen Deutschen [über Alfred von Tirpitz]" (copy), 2 sheets, mschr. m. hsl. correction); sheet 19r-21r 20. letter of exit (copy), on/for Scheiner, Berlin, 10.04.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 22r 21. letter of entry, from Eitelfritz Scheiner, Kronstadt, 16.01.1934 (1 sheet, sheet 23r 22. letter (carbon copy), from Eitelfritz Scheiner to Verlag Franz Eher Nachfolger GmbH, Berlin 14.04.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 24r 23. letter of receipt, from Hansjulius Schepers, Göttingen 08.11.1934 (1 sheet, hsl.); sheet 25r 24. letter of receipt, from Peter Scher, Munich, no. D. (1 sheet, hsl.); sheet 26r 25. letter of exit (carbon copy), to Peter Scher, Berlin, 20.08.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 27r-27v 26. letter of entry, from Lene Scher, Wasserburg, 21.09.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 28r 27. letter of entry, from Peter Scher, Wasserburg, 27.10.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.), mschr. m. hsl. note of the fee department); sheet 29r 28. outgoing letter (carbon copy), to Peter Scher, Berlin, 07.11.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 30r-30v 29. incoming letter, by Kurt von Scherff, Garmisch, 18.08.1934 (1 sheet, p. 31r 30. outgoing letter (carbon copy), to Kurt von Scherff, Berlin, 20.08.1934 (1 p., mschr.); p. 32r 31. incoming letter, from Verlag August Scherl - Juristische Abteilung, Berlin, 16.01.1934 (1 p..); p. 31r 30. outgoing letter (carbon copy), to Kurt von Scherff, Berlin, 20.08.1934 (1 p., mschr.); p. 32r 31. incoming letter, from Verlag August Scherl - Juristische Abteilung, Berlin, 16.01.1934 (1 p.) p. 33r 32. initial letter (carbon copy), to the publisher August Scherl - Juristische Abteilung, Berlin, 17.01.1934 (1 p., mschr.); p. 34r 33. invoice of the publisher August Scherl ("Berliner Lokal-Anzeiger"), Berlin, 31.05.1934 (1 p., printed, mschr., hsl. m. with sticked notice to the advertisers, 1 p., pp. 35r-36r 34th outgoing letter (copy), to the publisher August Scherl, Berlin, 08.06.1934 (1 pp., mschr.); pp. 37r 35th incoming letter, from the publisher August Scherl, Berlin, 07.07.1934 (1 pp., mschr.); pp. 38r 36th outgoing letter (copy), to the publisher August Scherl, Berlin, 09.07.1934 (1 pp., mschr.); pp. 38r 36th outgoing letter (copy), to the publisher August Scherl, Berlin, 09.07.1934 (1 pp., mschr.), sheet 39r 37. incoming letter, by Wilhelm Scheuermann, Freienbrink, 24.02.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 40r 38. outgoing letter (carbon copy), to Wilhelm Scheuermann, Berlin, 08.05.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 41r 39. incoming letter, by Martin Schian, Sibyllenort, 24.06.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.), hsl.); p. 42r-42v 40th outgoing letter (carbon copy), to Martin Schian, Berlin, 20.07.1934 (1 p., mschr.); p. 43r 41st incoming letter, by Adolf Schick, Berlin, 08.03.1934 (1 p., mschr.); p. 44r 42nd outgoing letter (carbon copy), to Adolf Schick, Berlin, 12.03.1934 (1 p., mschr.), sheet 45r 43. letter of receipt, by Klaus Schickert, Budapest, 28.02.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.) sheet 46r 44. letter of receipt, by Klaus Schickert, Budapest, 22.03.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.) sheet 47r 45. letter of receipt, by Klaus Schickert, Budapest, 06.11.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.) sheet 47r 43. letter of receipt, by Klaus Schickert, Budapest, 06.11.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.) sheet 46r 44. letter of receipt, by Klaus Schickert, Budapest, 22.03.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.) sheet 47r 45. letter of receipt, by Klaus Schickert, Budapest, 06.11.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.) sheet 47r 45. letter of receipt, by Klaus Schickert, Budapest, 06.11.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.) sheet sheet 48r 46. letter of receipt, from the Deutsch-Ostafrikanischen Gesellschaft (for Claus Schilling), o. O., 03.11.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 49r 47. letter of receipt (carbon copy), to Claus Schilling, Berlin, 07.11.1934 (1 sheet, sheet 50r 48. letter of receipt, by Werner Schilling, Rostock, 26.01.1934 (1 sheet, hsl.); sheet 51r-51v 49. letter of receipt (carbon copy), to Werner Schilling, Berlin, 31.01.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 52r 50. letter of receipt, by Karl-Ludwig Schimmelbusch, Emmerich, 30.12.1933 (1 sheet, hsl.); sheet 52r 50. letter of receipt, by Karl-Ludwig Schimmelbusch, Emmerich, 30.12.1933 (1 sheet, hsl.), mschr.); sheet 53r 51. letter of issue (carbon copy), to Karl-Ludwig Schimmelbusch, Berlin, 03.01.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 54r 52. letter of receipt, from Karl-Ludwig Schimmelbusch, Emmerich, 06.03.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 55r 53. letter of issue (carbon copy), to Karl-Ludwig Schimmelbusch, Berlin, 14.03.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.), mschr.); sheet 56r 54. letter of issue (carbon copy), on/for von Schimpff, Berlin, 18.12.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 57r 55. letter of issue, by Karl Schindler, Breslau, 03.10.1934 (1 sheet, hsl.); sheet 58r 56. letter of issue (carbon copy), to Karl Schindler, Berlin, 18.10.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.), mschr.); sheet 59r 57. incoming letter, by Hans-Joachim Schlamp, Berlin, 28.09.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 60r 58. outgoing letter (copy), to Hans-Joachim Schlamp, Berlin, 08.10.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 61r 59. card (incoming), by Clotilde Schlayer, Berlin, 01.02.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.), sheet 62r-62v 60. letter of receipt, by Oskar Schlemmer, Sihlbrugg, 02.03.1934 (1 sheet, mschr. m. hsl. note by Paul Fechter); sheet 63r 61. letter of receipt (copy), to Oskar Schlemmer, Berlin, 12.03.1934 (1 sheet, mschr. m. hsl. note by Paul Fechter), mschr.); sheet 64r 62nd New Year's card (entrance), from Schlesische Portland-Zement-Industrie AG, Oppeln, [05.01.1934] (2 sheets, sheet 65r-66r 63. letter of exit (copy), to the Schlesische Portland-Zement-Industrie AG, Berlin, 16.01.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.); sheet 67r 64. letter of receipt, from the "Schlesische Zeitung", Breslau, 11.05.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.), mschr.; with: order card, 1 sheet, printed).; sheet 68r-69v 65. letter of issue (copy), to the "Schlesische Zeitung", Berlin, 22.05.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.).; sheet 70r 66. letter of receipt, from the "Schlesische Zeitung", Breslau, 30.05.1934 (1 sheet, mschr.).; sheet 71R.

Stadtarchiv Lemgo, 01.01.01 A · Fonds · 1330 - 1934
Part of City Archive Lemgo (Archivtektonik)

The collection comprises the documents (files and official books) from the city of Lemgo before the formation of the administrative district of Lemgo in 1932 and the encirclement of Lemgo in 1934. Until then, Lemgo was a free city, i.e. it was directly subordinated to the sovereign government without an intermediate instance. In the Late Middle Ages, the constitution of the city of Lemgo was laid down in three documents, which subsequently documented the traditional constitutional reality: the so-called "Kerbschnittbrief" (mid 14th century, U 86), the so-called Regimentsnottel I (mid 15th century, U 763) and the Regimentsnottel II (1491, U 764). The political bodies were therefore organised in so-called four heaps. The New or Jury Council (12 members), the Old or Resting Council (12 members), the Meinheit (24 members) and the Dechen of the nine "councilable" offices (= guilds, guilds). Each of the two councils consisted of six councillors (without functional assignment), two chamberlains, an assessor, a council sealant and two mayors. The Old and New Councils alternated annually in the context of the Council change on 6 January. New members were selected on the basis of the co-optation principle, i.e. the "outgoing" Council elected the "dormant" Council again. Only when a councillor retired (due to death or other reasons) was a new councillor elected. Meinheit and Dechen had a say in this; they could reject a candidate. The members of the Meinheit were composed of the elected representatives of the six Lemgo building communities according to the principle of residence. In addition, there were six farmer masters who carried out police duties in the city quarters and six red masters, i.e. the former farmer masters who carried out the tax assessment in the residential districts. The two councils were responsible for the day-to-day political and legal business of the city. The other two piles represented the municipal community and were supposed to exercise a limited control function over the council bodies. In 1843, a uniform legal basis was created for the first time with the Lippe city order and the four-heap constitution in Lemgo, which had been valid until then, was abolished. The municipal bodies were now the magistrate and the city council. The magistrate headed the municipal administration and consisted of the mayor and other members of the magistrate. The city councillors were elected by the entire citizenry, i.e. those who also possessed citizenship. The City Council elected the Magistrate and exercised a control and oversight function over the Magistrate (with the exception of police matters). With the city order, a separation between administration and justice took place for the first time. The municipal jurisdiction was finally abolished only with the formation of the district courts in 1879. With the Lippe city order of 1886, the acquisition of citizenship was solved from house and land ownership, exercise of a trade and secure income. Every man who had lived in the city for more than two years and paid taxes was now a citizen. The election was conducted in accordance with the three-class system. The City Council and the Magistrate had to make their decisions separately in matters of self-government. In matters of statutes and budget, the magistrate could not decide without the city council. The provisional municipal constitution of 1919 granted the right to vote to women and men over the age of 20 who had lived in the municipality for more than three months. This was the first time that a universal and equal right to vote had been created at municipal level. In 1928 the separation between official municipalities and city municipalities was abolished (see also H-existing stocks). The magistrate or city council now needed the confidence of the city council. Stock A originally also included the documents after 1932/34, which were only later renumbered stock B. The documents were then transferred to stock A. The documents were then stored in the museum. The town archivist August Schacht ordered the files for the first time. He concentrated mainly on the trial records of the various Lemgo dishes. There was no separation by provenance here. In short: all files, which originated before 1932/34 in Lemgo, form the stock A. The classification is oriented after subject matter (pertinence principle), whereby the current classification represents a revision of the original classification. The current classification attempts to make the original provenances and contexts of origin more visible again. Nevertheless, many court acts are no longer filed under the respective court instance, but can be found under other classification points (e.g. under guild matters) according to the subject matter of the dispute or the parties to the dispute. This also applies to other classification points or archive materials. In the case of files from the A inventory which do not expire until after 1934, they are assigned to the B inventory (see there). In the opposite case, files with B signatures are included in the A inventory if their terms expire before 1934. The respective signatures are always retained. The court files of the two councils or the magistrate and the other court instances are summarized in the holdings 01.02.01 - 01.02.11 and 01.03.01 to 01.03.05. The witch trials can also be found there. The so-called Audience Protocols of inventory A 01.01.01 also contain court hearings, primarily in civil law. Court files of the Lemgo City Court (= magistrate of justice, as successor to the sovereign judge) are also found in the L 88 Lemgo holdings in the NRW State Archive, Detmold, OWL Department. The tradition of the schools (Gymnasium, Bürgerschule, Lyzeum, Technikum, Fortbildungsschule...) is also in the inventory A 01.01.01, independent of the formation of the independent school communities independent of the political communities 1849 (until 1937). This is mainly the tradition of the school boards, which were mostly composed of the local pastors and the mayor. Supplementary material can also be found in the T (school) holdings. The records of the Lemgo registry office (established throughout the Reich in 1876) in the form of birth, marriage and death certificates can be found in the holdings F 1 to F 3. In addition to the A holdings, personal documents / personal data can also be found in the holdings J - personal files. The old archive signatures (such as Gw 1, Gy 1, Ki 1...) have been retained and are searchable, so that a concordance is given when sources from literature are cited.