agriculture

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      agriculture

      • UF farming
      • UF cultivation
      • UF Agrarwesen
      • UF Agrarwirtschaft
      • UF Agrikultur

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      agriculture

        2537 Archival description results for agriculture

        1473 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
        Rice planting in the steppe
        ALMW_II._BA_A3_867 · Item · 1927-1938
        Part of Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig

        Phototype: Photo. Format: 10,9 X 8,0. Description: hacking persons in line, on way Europeans (Guth?). Reference: Plate and cardboard No. 63a in negative box ( 1 trigger). Cf. postcard box, no. P13a (13.9 X 9.0). See P13b (13.9 X 9.0). See P13c (14,1 X 9,2) "School lessons on the village square (outstation of Gonja, East Africa)" Series Africa II, No 9 "real photography".

        Leipziger Missionswerk
        Rice. - General information
        BArch, R 1001/7900 · File · Aug. 1910 - Jan. 1915
        Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

        Contains among other things: Research on growth conditions of rice C. Bachmann, The geographical distribution of rice cultivation and its intensity in the monsoon countries. O. D. Cultivation trials Trade with rice

        ALMW_II._MB_1900_14 · File · 1900
        Part of Francke's Foundations in Halle

        Author: Report by Miss. Hofmann in Ikutha. Scope: p. 219-224. Contains, among other things: - "First end of famine." (SW: harvest in March) - "2nd review of the time of the visitation 1898-1900" (SW: beginning in spring 1898; development and course of the famine; spread) - "3. the summit and the end of the need". (SW: admission of orphans; smallpox; food distribution)

        Leipziger Missionswerk
        Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Staatsarchiv Ludwigsburg, E 177 I · Fonds · 1817-1924 (Va ab 1717, Na bis 1936)
        Part of State Archives Baden-Württemberg, Dept. State Archives Ludwigsburg (Archivtektonik)

        The history of the district governments: The district governments were established by the 4th Edict of 18 Nov. 1817 at the same time as the district chambers of finance were revoked in 1849. Previously, the entire administration in Württemberg had been led by a central government college, in which sections had been formed for the various branches of the administration, in addition to the district governorates, which had only little competence and were called bailiwick bailiwicks from 1810 onwards, as well as the municipal and district authorities. The division of the country into districts and the creation of provincial colleges was modelled on the French Departmental Constitution of 1789, which also formed the basis for a new administrative organisation in other German states at the beginning of the 19th century. In 1818 it was put into effect, and at the same time the sections of internal administration, medicine, roads, bridges, hydraulic engineering, local government and the Commission for Municipal Use and Allodification of Farm Loans existing in the Ministry of the Interior, the section of crown domains, the section of state accounts, the section of agriculture, the section of state coffers in the Ministry of Finance, the section of foundations in the Ministry of Church and Education were abolished.After the instruction of Dec. 21. In 1819, the district governments were the supreme authorities in their area for all matters of state administration in the field of regimes (sovereign administration), the state police and the state economy, and for the administration of the property of municipalities, official bodies and foundations, insofar as these objects were not assigned to other district or central offices (Chambers of Finance as well as Protestant Consistory, Catholic Church Council, Academic Council, Superior Building Council, Provincial Stud Commission, Medical College, Superior Chamber of Accounts, Tax College, Forestry Council and Bergrat).The old 1819 directive was valid for 70 years, it was only replaced by the Decree of 15 Nov 1889 on the organisation of district governments and the course of their business. Their business was handled by a president as a member of the board, administrative councils and collegial assessors as well as the necessary office staff. For the technical consultation a county medical council was temporarily assigned to the health service, for the road, bridge and hydraulic engineering of the municipalities a construction council, another for the building industry of the municipalities and foundations an expert was assigned, for the permissions of steam boiler plants. Business was transacted partly through collegial consultation and decision-making, partly through the office.In the course of time, a number of important tasks were transferred from the original tasks of the district governments to other middle and central authorities, such as the Ministerial Department for Road and Water Construction (1848), the Central Office for Agriculture (1848), the Central Office for Trade and Commerce (1848), the Ministerial Department for Building Construction (1872), the Corporate Forestry Directorate (1875), the Medical College (1881) and the Higher Insurance Office (1912).After 1870, new tasks arose for the district governments through new Reich and state laws, namely the Industrial Code, the laws on the formation of district poor associations, on the administration of administrative justice, on the representation of Protestant church and Catholic parishes and on the compulsory expropriation of land. In addition, at the beginning of the 20th century, the water law was reorganized, social legislation was expanded and direct supervision of large and medium-sized cities and direct supervision of large and medium-sized cities was assigned. In the case of the tasks of the internal state administration to be carried out by the district governments, these were either the deciding or the decreing authority of the first instance, or the supervisory and complaints authority, or the evaluating and mediating authority. 1924, in the course of the removal of civil servants and offices, the district governments were replaced by a new ministerial department for district and corporate administration, subdivided into the Ministry of the Interior, for all competences which did not pass to the upper offices and the Ministry.Literature- Alfred Dehlinger, Württembergisches Staatswesen, 1951 - 1953 (esp. § 127)- Handwörterbuch der württembergischen Verwaltung, edited by Dr. Friedrich Haller 1915- Denkschrift über Vereinfachungen in der Staatsverwaltung vom 27.2.1911, in: Verhandlungen der Württ. Zweiten Kammer 1911/12, Beilage 28, S. 385ff. (Dep. of the Interior). To the district government of Reutlingen: The seat of the government of the Black Forest district, established at the end of 1817, was Reutlingen (Reutlingen district government), which was responsible for the upper offices of Balingen, Calw, Freudenstadt, Herrenberg, Horb, Nagold, Neuenbürg, Nürtingen, Oberndorf, Reutlingen, Rottenburg, Rottweil, Spaichingen, Sulz, Tübingen, Tuttlingen (with exclave Hohentwiel) and Urach. Furthermore, the workhouse for women in Rottenburg, which was affiliated to the prison for female prisoners in Gotteszell in 1907, was subordinated to her. While the number of senior offices in the district government of Reutlingen remained constant until 1938, the districts themselves experienced a decline in the number of senior offices in the district government of Reutlingen as a result of the law of 6 July 1938.1842 on the amendment in the delimitation of the administrative districts subsequent amendments:- from OA Herrenberg the municipality Hagelloch to OA Tübingen, - from OA Neuenbürg the municipalities Dennjächt, Ernstmühl, Liebenzell, Monakam, Unterhaugstett and Unterreichenbach to OA Calw- from OA Nürtingen the municipality Grabenstetten to OA Urach, Hausen am Tann and Roßwangen to OA Rottweil,- from OA Tübingen the municipality Altenriet to OA Nürtingen and- from OA Urach the municipality Pliezhausen to OA Tübingen and the municipality Eningen to OA Reutlingen.The above-mentioned places may therefore appear in the search book under different regional offices, which has to be taken into account in individual cases. Structure, order and distortion of the inventory: Present holdings E 177 I essentially contain the records handed over to the Ludwigsburg State Archives by the registry office of the district government in Reutlingen on December 3, 1924 - a torso in relation to the original records.A considerable number of the registry files had already been withdrawn and collected in 1823, 1835, 1848, 1853, 1863, 1872, 1889 and finally 1924, including the records until 1850, the business diaries until 1870 and the directorates until 1830 (cf. Further files had been handed over to the following offices for reasons of competence:- 1873 to the ministerial department for building construction (building files),- 1908 to the archive of the interior (files of the county Ober- und Niederhohenberg zu Rottenburg, the bailiwicks Black Forest, on the Alb, on the upper Neckar and on the middle Neckar, the Churfürstl. 1924 finally to the 17 upper offices of the district, to the ministerial department for district and corporate administration, to the ministerial department for building construction, to the regional trade office, to the trade and supervisory office, to the catholic high school council, to the ministerial department for higher schools and/or to the ministerial department for the higher schools. The files handed over to the Archive of the Interior as well as parts of the files handed over to the Ministerial Department for District and Corporation Administration and the Higher Offices (above all the Higher Offices Reutlingen and Urach) later came from these offices directly or via successor authorities (District Administrator's Offices) or the Ministerial Department for Technical Schools (see E 177 I Büschel 301 and 4393). In 1937, the State Archives Ludwigsburg, under the direction of the subsequent Director of the State Archives Prof. Grube, undertook a makeshift order and indexing of the holdings, which he described in the find book as follows: "The registry of the Reutlingen district government was handed over to the State Branch Archives in 1924 with an inadequate handover register of 5 pages. The older registry plan (with keyword register) and a keyword register of 1910 designated as "Repertorium", which was also handed over, were also not sufficient for the determination of the actually existing files. Since it is not possible in the foreseeable future to keep an internal order for the somewhat confused holdings and to separate the files that are not worthy of archiving, the present repertory was produced by Hausverwalter Isser in 1935 on the occasion of the external order of the holdings as a temporary auxiliary measure according to the fascicle inscriptions. As part of the revision of the holdings of the district governments in the Ludwigsburg State Archives from 1986 to 1990, the undersigned, together with the temporary employee Karin Steißlinger, who opened up the extensive administrative legal cases, made new title records for the various partial holdings of the Reutlingen district government (E 177 I, E 177 III and without signature). The registry was based on a simple systematic order introduced after 1863 by Registrator Bregizer and Chancellor List Wenz, according to which the files were divided into the main groups A Regiminal and B Police files with 19 and 13 rubrics respectively; the file bundles themselves were correspondingly provided with file signatures, i.e. with letters and numbers of the stands (boxes) and compartments. After the new indexing had been completed, the title records created using the numerus currens-procedure were sorted according to the old file plan, but the structure of the file groups in the finding aid book was made clearer and without the division into two parts of the Regiminal and Police Administration. Of these, 0.5 linear metres were allocated to the files available here (Kreisreg. Ludwigsburg, Ellwangen and Ulm, Commission for the Clean-up of the Official and Municipal Association, Ministerial Department for District and Corporation Administration). The Main State Archives received 0.6 linear metres (mainly old-valued files) and the State Archives Sigmaringen 1.6 linear metres (files of the higher offices), while 0.8 linear metres of files (slaughterhouse and meat inspection fees, office costs of the higher offices, examination of sports invoices) were collected.For 297, plans and cracks still attached to the files as well as 175 newspaper copies proof maps for the holdings JL 590 and JL 430 were produced. 4484 tufts were made for the holdings E 177 I. Ludwigsburg, in November 1990Hofer tufts 4485 to 4499, received from the State Archives Sigmaringen with access 2000/79, were incorporated into the holdings in July 2009. Retroconversion: This finding aid book is a repertory that was previously only available in handwritten or typewritten form and was converted into a database-supported and thus online-capable format according to a procedure developed by the "Retroconversion Working Group in the Ludwigsburg State Archives". This can lead to a certain discrepancy between the modern external appearance and the partly outdated design and formulation of the title recordings. Corrections, deletions and additions were verified and incorporated.

        BArch, R 26-I · Fonds · (1933-) 1936-1945
        Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

        History of the Inventory Designer: Based on a secret memorandum by Adolf Hitler from the summer of 1936 (handed down in R 3/1501), the new four-year plan was officially announced at the Reich Party Congress in September 1936. The Prussian Prime Minister Hermann Göring (RGBl. I 1936, p. 887) was appointed as the commissioner for the four-year plan on 18 October 1936; the Prussian State Ministry under Hermann Göring (office of the State Secretary Körner) acted as the central office. He was given the authority to centrally control all economic measures, in particular war economic measures, including the power to issue instructions to the Reich ministries and all levels of the party. The task of the (second) four-year plan was to focus the German economy on armament and war production and to reduce dependence on foreign imports (self-sufficiency efforts), above all in the raw materials and food sectors, in order to achieve the goals set by Hitler ("1. The German army must be operational in four years. 2. the German economy must be war-capable in four years"). The most important measures were, on the one hand, the quota system for important raw materials and their partly synthetic production in the Reich, and, on the other hand, the planning and control of labour input as well as the stabilization of wages and prices in order to channel investment into the capital goods industry and restrict private consumption. To carry out the tasks, numerous special representatives were appointed and various special authorities created, including for the economic exploitation of the occupied and annexed territories. In 1940, the four-year plan was extended by a further four years with the proviso that it was adapted to the needs of the war (RGBl. I 1940, p. 1395). From 1942, however, more and more powers were transferred to the Reich Minister for Armament and Ammunition (later for Armament and War Production). Inventory description: The four-year plan announced by Hitler in 1936 aimed to enable Germany to wage war economically and militarily within four years. The Prussian Prime Minister Hermann Göring, who was entrusted with this task, was given far-reaching powers in the economic and defence sectors, especially in the supply of raw materials. Inventory history: The registry of both the headquarters of the Commissioner for the Four-Year Plan and of the numerous subordinate institutions must be regarded as almost completely lost as a result of the war events. Only a few fragments of the tradition have survived. The greater part of it is in the special archive in Moscow (fund no. 700, 337 file units), while the smaller part is in the two central German archives in East and West. The Koblenz Federal Archives kept 55 files, which today bear the signatures no. 1-52 and originate from various acquisitions; among other things, some documents were transferred to the archive in 1964 by Salzgitter AG (today's signatures no. 29-39), others were copied from the Imperial War Museum in London in 1974 (today's signatures no. 40-41, 44). The Central State Archives of the GDR in Potsdam kept another 71 files of the Commissioner for the Four-Year Plan under the inventory signature 34.01, which begin today with the signature 101; this part contained almost 40 volumes of the Press Office in the Prussian State Ministry, which was also responsible for the Four-Year Plan, as well as seven files of the Research Centre for Defense Economics. The signature no. 177, which also contains documents of the press office, also originates from the dissolution of the so-called NS archive of the HA IX/11 of the Ministry for State Security of the GDR. Archival processing: After the unification of the two German states in 1990, the two parts of the tradition were brought together in the Federal Archives in Berlin under the inventory designation R 26 I, but without initially being subjected to a common system. In 2014, the indexing information from the 1960s was transferred to the database of the Federal Archives, the indexing was revised and a task-related structure was drawn up for the entire holdings. Characterisation of the contents: The few records of the headquarters of the Commissioner for the Four-Year Plan handed down in the Federal Archives contain only a few volumes of the Central Secretariat of Göring (mainly correspondence A-Z) and the office of the State Secretary Körner as well as various preliminary files on the tasks of the Four-Year Plan (files of the Commissioner of the Führer and Reich Chancellor for Economic Affairs Wilhelm Keppler). There are also some files on the supply of raw materials and on general (including foreign) economic issues, as well as the somewhat more extensive press office documents on the press and public relations work of the four-year plan authority. State of development: Findbuch (2014) Citation method: BArch, R 26-I/...

        Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, E 50/03 Bü 188 · File · 28. Januar - 17. Dezember 1894
        Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

        Contains among other things: Germany's relations with Great Britain, France and Russia, crisis in German agriculture, tax policy, colonial policy, German sugar exports, overturning bill, assessment of Holsteins

        BArch, R 58/148 · File · Febr. 1940
        Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

        Contains above all: No. 48-59 Disgruntlement about the stage ball in Hamburg Judgments in the film business - Colonial thought in the film Voices to current films - Campaign in Poland, mother's love Start of the activity of the Gaufilmstellen kitching of field postcards Situation of the universities in the 1st trimester 1940 Status of medical studies in the 1st trimester 1940 1940 trimester 1940 control of the scientific achievements of students by abbestate reorganization of the leave of absence of students at the Wehrmacht effects of the resignation of cantor's offices by the teaching staff retraining of work maids for the service of school assistants in the east self-help measures in the school system new attempts in the youth training situation of the study assessors sluggish appointment of headmasters of schools in eastern Mark school fees at higher schools cooperation of schools with the Hitler Youth difficulties in the procurement of school books transfer of pupils at Easter 1940 Presentation of the campaign to resettle ethnic Germans in Polish leaflets Winter aid collection in the reception camps of the Wolhyniendeutschen returnees Impairment of the trust of the ethnic Germans in the Protectorate in the Reich Economic Aid Possibilities of simplification in the care of the sick Informing the working population about health issues by company doctors Registration of drunkards called up by the Wehrmacht Health hazards of the ski championships of the young people Vitamin-richC Action Combating youth tooth damage Comparisons of the dental findings of the Wolhyniendeutschen in the Leipzig camp of the People's Republic of Germany and the Leipzig School Youth Dental care for the rural and civilian population Inadequate dental care for the members of the Social Insurance Institution in Warthegau due to low health insurance benefits Drug supply in the war Drug issues.- General collection and commentary of war laws Difficulties of the lower administrative authorities due to early publication of ordinances in the press District overlapping and organisational fragmentation of administrative authorities Compensation payments from business communities to residential communities Shortage of personnel at the district offices Simplification of judicial administrative activities Emergency situation of German families, Employees from the East recruited in the Eastern German territories of the Reich Recruitment of workers among the repatriated civil servants and employees of the public service Special admission for defence before a special court Difficulties in the legal care of the population in the Western operating areas due to the transfer of judicial authorities Difficulties in the legal application of the law in the associated Eastern territories Difficulties in the taking of oaths in the Ostmark Difficulties in the taking of evidence before the regional and higher regional courts Difficulties in the compulsory auction proceedings concerning the interpretation of the ordinances of 1 January 2004 Sept. and 31 Oct. 1939 Incorrect conduct of proceedings by tenants' associations Jurisdiction in divorce proceedings in the new Reich districts Increase in applications for divorce in the eastern territories Acceleration of the issuance of death certificates for martyrs Censorship of the publication of extracts from the commercial register Development of criminal law in war Jurisdiction in criminal matters Difficulties in the execution of prison sentences against workers of war-important enterprises Jurisdiction in the new Reich districts Abortion cases in the Sudetengau Recurrence of the stable-value clause Difficulties in small change transactions Uncertainty about the war savings campaign Inadequate supply of the operating area with goods without warrants Food consignments from abroad Allocation of food for blood donors Brewing industry's need for malting barley Inaccuracies in the release of tea u.a. Utilization of frozen potatoes. Coal shortage in potato steaming columns Introduction of clothing card for youngest children Inclusion of clothing regulations for children dismissed from school Complaints about the lack of workwear Workwear for women Effects of reorganization in the leather industry Establishment of shoe exchange offices and utilities Experiences with "material" in leather supply Complaints by the population about new detergents Decline in production in lignite mining Supply of domestic coal to the Berlin population Uneven situation in coal supply Effects of the coal shortage on the hollow glass industry and on the mood in the population Difficulties in switching from diesel propulsion to electricity supply in the industrial sector Joint ventures in the industrial sector Difficulties in payment as a result of operating restrictions or closures due to coal shortage Stagnations in The collection of used materials Production restrictions in industry Uneven distribution of orders in the textile industry Difficulties in the Thuringian thermometer industry Procurement difficulties in the textile trade in the eastern border regions Development of the insurance industry in the last months of the war Effects of service obligations from the craft trades Attracting the craft trades to carry out orders important to the war Allocation of raw materials in craft tanneries and industrial manufacturers Overloading of local public transport Restrictions on passenger transport.- Effects on commuter traffic Allocation of vehicle tyres.- Simplification of the procedure Votes from agriculture on a speech by Field Marshal Göring Support for the delivery of livestock from the south-east through additional fodder Exemption of farm managers Increase in prices for draught animals Lack of bags in agriculture Situation of nurseries Lack of skilled metal workers and inadequacies in retraining measures Difficulties in the employment of women Unclarities in the employment of women Paying construction workers during bad weather Wage differentiation in the employment of agricultural workers Home leave of soldiers.- Regulation of leave for their wives Extension of the competence of the Company Health Insurance Fund of the German Reich Family maintenance for illegitimate children of soldiers Crediting the military service allowance of the Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians of Germany to the family maintenance payments Czech minority, above all Arrest of enemies of the Reich and rumours in the Iserstraßen area, political dangers for German industrial and commercial enterprises in Troppau, War service School care for the Czech minority in Vienna Increase in linguistic minorities in Vienna Compensation of Polish agricultural workers Compensation of Polish workers in agriculture The dangers of the deployment of Polish workers in the German Reich for national and racial policy Discrimination and disenfranchisement of Jews Masterpieces of German art in Jewish private ownership Foot-and-mouth disease spread by Polish prisoners of war Blurring of the border between ethnic Germans and ethnic Poles, anda. Polish language usage in Upper Silesia and East Prussia Hitler Youth in the mixed-language region of Upper Silesia The mood of the ethnic Germans against the Germanization of "down-to-earth" Poles Attempts at camouflage by Poles Propaganda for the Croatian minority in Burgenland Activities of the Danish minority in South Schleswig Protectorate Bohemia and Moravia New Reichsgaua in the East and General Government German Ethnic Group in Hungary Development of crime (overviews), including serious crime Breach of a contract of employment Employment.- Illegal leaving of the workplace Treatment of war damage Restrictions in cultural events due to lack of coal Publications on economic difficulties of the enemy powers Press control and evacuation Official announcements in the press Imports of German national newspapers into the German Reich Paper restrictions in the press Rejection of advertising methods of the Nazi press in southern Germany Lack of anode batteries Radio audio sequence "Der Weg des Führers" Listening to foreign broadcasters Playing English and French records in restaurants