Preliminary remark in 1977: After the establishment of the Grand Duchy of Frankfurt, the Württemberg envoy in Kassel was also accredited at the court of the Grand Duke of Frankfurt from 30 September 1810. During the absence of the Westphalian king, the envoy could leave Kassel and go to the court in Frankfurt or Aschaffenburg, where the Prince Primate and Grand Duke Karl von Dalberg mostly resided. With the end of the Grand Duchy of Frankfurt in October 1813, the mission of the Württemberg envoy also expired. The representatives of Württemberg in Frankfurt were: Baron von Gemmingen, Extraordinary Minister and Plenipotentiary Minister, 30 September 1810 - 13 March 1813 Baron Friedrich August Gremp von Freudenstein, Chamberlain, Extraordinary Minister and Plenipotentiary Minister, 6 May 1813 - 5 May 1813. October 1813Besides the envoy accredited to the court in Frankfurt, the former resident of Plitt, as Privy Legation Councillor, was still in the service of Württemberg, wrote, without being certified, reports on the legations and carried out individual orders of the Württemberg court. After the takeover of the files by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, they were transferred with documents from the Ministry to the archive, where they were attached to the mixed holdings of E 70 "Gesandtschaftsakten". During the reorganization, the files were separated according to their provenance without regard to the previous state of order. Afterwards only a small remainder remained, which was arranged according to the scheme of the remaining legation holdings. The previously valid archive signatures E 70 Verz. 39 Fasz. 1-3 were included as presignatures with the abbreviation "Fasz". Further documents of the same subject can be found in the files of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The holdings were recorded in October 1975 as part of the training under the guidance of Senior State Archives Councilor Dr. Cordes von Walter Wannenwetsch and finally arranged in May 1977. It covers the period from 1810 - 1813 and consists of 12 tufts in 0.03 m. Stuttgart, in May 1977Walter Wannenwetsch Preliminary remark 1988: The completion of the present finding aid was made with the help of data processing on the basis of the program package MIDOSA of the Staatliche Archivverwaltung Baden-Württemberg in February 1988. At the same time as the inclusion of the title, the index terms were recorded, with a view to a later general index, separated into a place index, a person index and a subject index. The re-indexing as well as the input took place in the context of the training by the archive inspector candidate Corinna Pfisterer under guidance of the undersigned.Stuttgart, February 1988Kurt Hochstuhl
Kassel
12 Archival description results for Kassel
Contains: Mission film "Yülan, the daughter of the geomancer"; Statutes and communication of the Basel Mission
Correspondence, 1833-1844, 1905-1936; visit lists of the travel preachers Hippenstiel, Landgrebe and Probst; Hesse and Waldeck in the anniversary year of the Rhine. Mission, v. W. Paulus, Dr., 1928; lists of all affiliated villages and pastors
Rhenish Missionary SocietyHistory of the authorities The legation in Hamburg was one of the most important diplomatic representations of Prussia in Germany. Its importance lay above all in the field of trade and customs policy and shipping. Special emphasis was placed on the economic geographic location of the embassy's area of responsibility as the starting point for German overseas trade and as the end point of the important inland waterways Elbe and Weser. The legation gained an additional significance in the context of colonial politics. The development of the competence of the Hamburg legation is quite complicated, but it should be noted that the three Hanseatic cities of Hamburg, Bremen and Lübeck as well as the two Mecklenburg usually belonged to the legation area. From the Tilsit peace of 1807 until the annexation of the Hanseatic cities and Oldenburgs by France in December 1810, the competence of the mission extended to Mecklenburg-Schwerin and Mecklenburg-Strelitz in addition to the states mentioned. After the dissolution of the Hamburg legation in 1810 due to the French annexation of the German North Sea coast, the diplomatic contacts of Prussia to Mecklenburg, bound to the person of the previous legation in Hamburg, were essentially perceived by the legation in Dresden. After the Paris Peace of 30 May 1814, the legation was newly founded and was given a large area of responsibility, which extended not only to the Hanseatic cities and Mecklenburg but also to Hanover, Brunswick, Oldenburg, Schaumburg-Lippe and Lippe-Detmold. In 1832 the representatives near Hanover, Braunschweig, Schaumburg-Lippe and Lippe-Detmold were taken over by the Kassel legation. In 1837 Oldenburg was included in the newly founded mission in Hanover. The area of responsibility thus narrowed to the Hanseatic cities and Mecklenburg remained constant until the dissolution of the Hamburg legation, which took place on 31 March 1920. Heads of Mission 1804 - 1811 Grote, Count August Otto from 1814 - 1830 1830 - 1832 Maltzan, Mortimer from 1832 - 1848 Haenlein, Johann Christian Ferdinand Louis from 1848 - 1859 Kamptz, Carl Ludwig Georg Friedrich Ernst Albert from 1859 - 1867 Richthofen, Baron Emil Carl Heinrich from 1867 - 1869 Kamptz, Carl Ludwig Georg Friedrich Ernst Albert from 1869 - 1872 Magnus, Anton from 1872 - 1875 Rosenberg, Baron Adalbert from 1875 - 1885 Wentzel, Robert Albrecht Friedrich Otto from 1885 - 1890 Kusserow, Heinrich from 1890 - 1894 Thielmann, Baron Max from 1894 - 1895 Kiderlen-Waechter, Alfred from 1895 - 1898 Wallwitz, Count Nikolaus from 1898 - 1902 Metternich, Count Paul from 1902 - 1907 Tschirschky and Boegendorff, Heinrich Leonhard from 1907 - 1908 Heyking, Baron Edmund from 1908 - 1915 Bülow, Gustav Adolf from 1915 - 1920 Quadt von Wyckradt und Isny, Albert inventory description: Inventory history The inventory consisted of five registry or (A-E), which came into the archive between 1834 and 1940. In 1840 a find book was created for Group A, in which the other tax layers were also entered. Accessions No. 8042 to 8168 were combined into groups in January 1870, some of them classified as worthless (cf. VI. HA Nl. Friedländer, G., No. 13, fol. 33). During the Second World War, the Rep. 81 Hamburg stock was transferred to the salt mines in Staßfurt and Schönebeck and brought to the Soviet Union at the end of the war. In 1955 he was returned to the Central State Archives in Merseburg. The stock was divided into the part before 1807 and the part after 1807. The latter part was newly recorded in 1968 by Joachim Nossol and arranged in 1969 under the guidance of Dr. Joachim Lehmann and Roswitha Nagel according to factual aspects. The lowest level of classification is arranged chronologically - while preserving factual contexts. The editorial work was done by the archivist Maria Lehmann, the find book was written by Magdalena Sabor. The history of the institution was written by Dr. Joachim Lehman. In the course of the re-listing of the I. HA Rep. 81 Hanover legation, a file was found which belongs to the Hamburg legation in terms of provenance (old signature Rep. 81 Hanover B 4 a). The Hamburg legation comprises a total of 1,350 files from the period 1804 to 1920, Merseburg, signed in June 1981. Nagel revised Berlin, signed in February 2011 Dr. Puppel last assigned number: ____ to order: GStA PK, I. HA Rep. 81 Hamburg legation: GStA PK, I. HA Rep. 81 legations and consulates after 1807, Hamburg legation finding aids: database; find book, 1 vol.
After training soldier, from 1946 YMCA-Westbund, Kassel; curriculum vitae with photo, certificates, medical examination, 1931; diploma of mission seminar, 1939; curriculum vitae, certificates, medical examination of bride Erna Probst, 1940; correspondence, partly from the field
Rhenish Missionary SocietyCorrespondence; guidelines of the working group between the Diakonissen-Mutterhaus in Kassel and the Bethel-Mission, January 1929
Evangelical Missionary Society for German East AfricaContains among other things: Leaves of the Westphalian workers' colony Wilhelmsdorf, the Jerusalem Association Berlin, the Gustav-Adolf-Werk, the Oberhessische Bibelgesellschaft, the Evangelischer Missionsverein, the Evangelische Missionsgesellschaft für Deutsch-Ostakfrika, the Deutscher Herbergsverein, the Innere Mission in Hessen and the Deutscher Verein gegen Misbrauch geistiger Getränke; Hauskollekten für das Hessische Diakonissenhaus Kassel; collection of the reformed parish Gemünden for the partly burnt down town Hünfeld (1888); call for the foundation of the Evangelical Federation of 02.10.1889; Excerpt from the founding minutes of the press committee of the diocese Ziegenhain-Homberg of 11.03.1914; training as community nurses in the Diakonissenhaus Kassel
Description: from 1531(1537) 6 large Superintendenturen: Kassel (with Homberg), Rotenburg, Marburg, Alsfeld and St. Goar starting from 1585 office Homberg: forms the Superintendentur Kassel with 16 further offices beside the Superintendenturen (Rotenburg) - Allendorf, Lutherische Superintendentur Marburg, Reformierte Inspektur Hersfeld, Inspektur Hersfeld and from 1686 franz. Inspection from 1610 Convents (parish priests only): probably also Convent Homberg - at the head: Metropolitan from 1780 parish class Homberg (ecclesiastical district), Superintendententur Kassel - at the head: Metropolitan from 1886 Superintendententur Ziegenhain - Homberg with Superintendent in Ziegenhain 13 small Superintendententuren or Diöcesansynodalverbände - at the head: Superintendent with the parish classes: Ziegenhain, Neukirchen, Treysa, Homberg, the ref. communities of Marburg and the ref. Class Frankenberg - at the head of the parish class: Metropolitan from 1923 Church District Homberg - at the head: District Priest from 1945 Church District Homberg (Dean's Office) - at the head: Dean Classen, Wilhelm: Die kirchliche Organisation Alt-Hessens im Mittelalter During the restructuring of the Hessian church under Phillip, the old Catholic order had been completely abandoned and rebuilt on the secular, administrative structure of the country. The six superintendencies created in 1531 by the ecclesiastical ordinance were maintained to the same extent by the second order of 1537 and formed the basis of the entire administration for a long time. These are the following districts of 1st Kassel (Ämter Trendelburg, Sababurg, Grebenstein, Zierenberg, Wolfhagen, Hasungen, Gudensberg, Felsberg, Homberg, Borken, the three Kassel offices); 2. Rotenburg (offices Melsungen, Spangenberg, Lichtenau, Ludwigstein, Allendorf, Eschwege, Wanfried, Rotenburg, Sontra, Friedewald, Vacha, Herleshausen, Gleichen, Schmalkalden and the cities Hersfeld and Waldkappel); 3. Alsfeld (Alsfeld, Romrod, Kirtorf, Homberg-Ohm, Burggemünden, Grünberg, Ziegenhain, Neukirchen, Ulrichstein, Schotten, Nidda, Sturmfels and the cities of Treysa and Schwarzenborn) 5th St. Goar 6th Darmstadt This order remained undisturbed for a long time, initially even after the division of 1567/8 although the superintendencies and partial principalities overlapped. 1574 the first adaptation to the new political conditions took place: the offices of Ziegenhain and Neukirchen.
Contains: Visit of Cardinal Hlond from Polish Upper Silesia, travel program 1928 Ownership conditions at the former cadet institute Schloss Bensberg 1928 Claims for equipment of the parishes from the secularization against the Prussian state, legal actions 1928 Insufficient support for the borderland diocese Meissen by the borderland fund 1927, 1928 Missions-Verkehrs- Arbeitsgemeinschaft, expedition to southwest Africa 1930, activity report March - Dec. 1928, visit to the former cadet institute Schloß Bensberg 1928. 1927 1928, 1930 Reichstagung of the Friedensbund German Peace Association Katholiken, Munich; Report of the Representation of the Reich Government, Munich 1928 Nuntius Pacelli, denigration by the magazine "Die Front"; Initiation of a press release 1928 Spiritual care of Polish seasonal workers, Applications of the German Caritas Association for subsidies 1928 - 1930 Visit of Cardinal Faulhaber in Poznan, Report of the German Caritas Association, Report of the German Caritas Association, 1928 - 1930 Visit of Cardinal Faulhaber in Poznan, Report of the German Caritas Association, 1928 Consulate General in Posen 1929 Use of aircraft hangars to be demolished in French occupied territory as emergency churches; project 1930 Establishment of two tax offices on the grounds of the St. Pantaleons Abbey in Cologne 1930 Establishment of the Poor School Sisters in Bielitz/Polish Upper Silesia; intended polonization 1930 Church buildings, requests for subsidies: Châteauneuf-du-Rhône, Inden, Frankfurt/M., Heraclion, Kappelrodeck/Baden, Liebenthal/Lower Silesia, Maria Laach, Landau, Mainz, Marienburg, Kassel, Reinsbach/Saar, Zobten-Gorkau/Breslau 1928 - 1931
Correspondence on questions of the mission hinterland; correspondence on questions of the China missionaries; Insp. Delius (RMG), Das Hinterland der RMG im Gebiet der Landeskirchen Waldeck, Nassau, Hessen-Kassel, Hessen u. Frankfürt, Declaration of Principles m. 6 Annexes, 1933; appeal for donations: To the Pastors of the Evangelical Church of Kurhessen-Waldeck, Dr., 1936; Letter Report of Miss. who had been imprisoned in China. Ernst Fischle, with map sketch, 1940; Ernst Fischle: Report on the Japanese-Chinese War 1937-1940, 55 p., ms., 1941
Rhenish Missionary Society