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            6 Archival description results for Luftschiff

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            BArch, RM 116 · Fonds · 1914-1918
            Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

            Inventory Description: The Naval Airship Department was established by Allerhöchste Kabinettsordre on 3 May 1913 from the "Aviation Personnel of the Imperial Navy" next to the Naval Airship Department as an independent department with the temporary location Johannisthal. (1) The commanders of the departments were given "judicial, disciplinary and leave powers". In all training and technical matters, both departments were under the control of the State Secretary of the Reichsmarineamt, in all others of the inspection of coastal artillery and mines, as well as the head of the "North Sea Naval Station". (1) The State Secretary of the Reich Naval Office, Grand Admiral Alfred von Tirpitz, established 1 June as the day of formation by order of 8 May 1913. (2) As early as April 1912, members of the navy, including Corvette Captain Friedrich Metzing, were commanded for training at Deutsche Luftschifffahrts-AG. The airship command was subordinated on 15 July 1912 under the designation "Luftschiff-Detachement" with the Johannisthal site near Berlin Metzing as commander. (3) After the death of the commander of the naval airship department Friedrich Metzing in the accident of "L 1" on 9 September 1913, Corvette Captain Peter Strasser became his successor. Responsibility for the airship sector in the navy lay with the BX "Luftschiff- und Fliegerwesen" department of the shipyard department of the Reichsmarineamt formed on 12 October 1912. On 1 April 1913 an organisational change followed: Department BX was restructured to become the "Aviation Section" (Section BX with Divisions BXa and BXb). (4) At the beginning of the First World War, the command structure of the Naval Airship Division changed. By the Most High Cabinet Order of 29 August 1914, the office "Commander of the Aviation Departments" was created as the highest central command post of the entire naval aviation. (5) The Naval Airship Department and the Naval Aircraft Department were subordinated to this. The cabinet order assigned the following tasks to the new commander: Provision and training of personnel, management of schooling outside departments, test drives and maintenance of aircraft operational capability. The Most High Cabinet Order of May 1, 1916 assigned the naval airship division Cuxhaven (Nordholz) as a new location and divided the division into airship troops. (6) On November 23, 1916, the Naval Aviation Departments were divided into the Airship and Aircraft divisions by the Most High Cabinet Order. (7) The post of Commander of the Naval Aviation Divisions was transformed into Commander of the Naval Aviation Division and the Commander of the Naval Airship Division was elevated to "Chief of Naval Airships". The newly appointed Naval Airship Leader was in charge of the Naval Airship Division and the Naval Airships. The newly created position was subordinate to the command of the high seas armed forces in "matters of use and training of the North Sea front airships, to the State Secretary of the R e i c h s m a r i n e a m t , in technical and experimental matters and in matters of the school and experimental airships, and in all other matters to the naval station command of the North Sea". (7) For the airships deployed in the Baltic Sea, a new "Airship Ladder East" was formed as division commander. (7) The latter acted independently or according to the orders of the Commander-in-Chief of the Baltic Sea, but remained subordinate to the Commander of the Naval Airships. (8) The post of Airship Manager East was vacated in November 1917 due to staff shortages and the cessation of airship operations in the Baltic Sea. (9) This structure remained in place until the end of the war. After Strasser's death in the "L 70" on 5 August 1918, the post of commander of the naval airships was not reoccupied. (10) Due to the conditions of the Treaty of Versailles to abandon military aviation in Germany, the Naval Airship Department was dissolved in Nordholz on 10 December 1920. (11) During the First World War, naval airships were used for reconnaissance in the North Sea and the Baltic Sea, securing and supporting mine search units, sighting and reporting of enemy naval forces and mine barriers, reports on merchant shipping and for offensive voyages, in particular on Great Britain. Commander of the Naval Aviation Departments 29 August 1914 - 23 November 1916 Rear Admiral Otto Philipp Leader of the Naval Airships 23 November 1916 - 5 August 1918 Frigate Captain Peter Strasser from 5 August 1918 August 1918 unmanned (representative: Hans-Paul Werther) Airship Leader East 23 November 1916 - November 1917 Corvette Captain Hans Wendt Naval Airship Troops Status: May 1916 (12) I. Nordholz II. Fuhlsbüttel III. Ahlhorn IV. Hage V. Tondern VI. Seerappen VII. Seddin VIII. Düren IX. Wainoden Status: November 1918 (13) I. Nordholz III. Ahlhorn IV. Wittmundhaven V. Tondern VI. Seerappen VII. Seddin-Jeseritz XI. Wainoden Characterisation of the contents: The collection covers the period 1914 to 1938, with a focus on the deployment of the naval airship department in the First World War from 1914 to 1918. The records also include other provenances based on circulars and forwarded communications from other or superior agencies such as the Navy Admiral Staff, the Commander of the Reconnaissance Ships of the Baltic Sea or the Commanding General of the Air Force, etc. The collection is also available in German. The operations of the naval airships are reflected in the tradition. The focus is on the operational and enterprise files for the reconnaissance voyages in the North Sea and Baltic Sea as well as the attack voyages, especially in Great Britain. War diaries and orders are available on a large scale for this purpose. The war diaries were created for individual airships or naval airship troops. Further few file complexes are found to the organization and to the personnel of the naval airship department. The structure of the documents mainly consists of war diaries, orders (daily and departmental orders) and so-called driving reports of the numerous reconnaissance and attack drives. The trip reports contain information on the trip task, names of crew members, weather conditions, technical data and square maps with the marked route. In addition, there are radio messages (some encrypted), spark telegraphy bearings, weather and barometer maps and telegrams. The collection also includes photographs, press articles, technical drawings, sketches and a large number of maps. The overdelivery is not complete. Only the war records have survived. Documents from the pre-war and post-war periods may have been destroyed in the air archives in 1945. State of development: Online-Findbuch Vorarchivische Ordnung: Bestandsgeschichte After the end of the First World War, the documents of the disbanded naval services, including the Naval Airship Department, were collected in the War History Department of the Admiral Staff of the Navy (established on 15 February 1916) for the purpose of setting up a new naval archive. From 1919 the name of the naval archive was changed to "Head of the Institute for Naval History and Chairman of the Naval Archive". A second renaming took place on 22 January 1936 in "Kriegswissenschaftliche Abteilung der Marine". However, this did not belong to the Reichsarchiv, but was subject until 31 March 1934 to the Inspectorate of Naval Education, then to the Chief of Naval Management, and later as a subordinate authority to the Commander-in-Chief of the Kriegsmarine. During the First World War some war diaries (RM 116/185-199) were already forwarded to the admiral's staff of the Navy for information and were thus integrated into his written material, but are handed down in this inventory. During the Second World War, naval records were moved to Tambach Castle near Coburg on 22 November 1943. (14 ) After the end of the war, the archives were confiscated by US troops and taken to London. There the files were filmed on a large scale, combined into bundles, provided with consecutive F-numbers ("Faszikel", "File" or "Fach") and partly with a seven-digit number with the prefixed letters "PG" ("pinched from the Germans"). The archives were then handed over to the British Admiralty. In the 1960s, the marine files were returned to the Federal Republic of Germany as part of the process of returning files and were transferred to the Document Centre of the Military History Research Office in Freiburg i.Br. With the transfer of the Document Centre in 1968, which is based on the 1968 interministerial agreement between the Federal Ministry of Defence and the Federal Ministry of the Interior, the documents were transferred to the Federal Archives and Military Archives moved from Koblenz to Freiburg. In 1977 an access with a photo album to the naval airships (access number 2005/77) took place, which was transferred under RM 116/200 into the inventory. An LL signature (LL 410) refers to a storage in the air archive. A note in English on the file cover indicates a seizure by British and/or US troops. During the file repatriations, the photo album was also handed over to the Document Centre at the Military History Research Office, where it received an I L signature (I L (B) 11). (15 ) The tradition is not complete. A large part of the documents may have been transferred to the Luftarchiv at that time and destroyed in 1945. In 1936, the Luftwaffe set up its own archive under the name "Kriegswissenschaftliche Abteilung der Luftwaffe" (War Science Department of the Air Force) and collected the entire archives of the Air Forces of the Army and the Navy Air Forces. (16) It may have included parts of the naval airship department files, which would justify the small size of the file delivery. Archivische Bearbeitung A rough list of files was available on the holdings, which contained only imprecise file titles and durations as well as old signatures. An evaluation of the documents was not carried out due to the loss of written records and the resulting gaps in the records before 1945. The existing rules of procedure were retained. The documents had already been formed; most of them were in Prussian thread stitching, a small part in archive folders. The file structure is uneven; thus, in part, uniformly formed and coherent files were found for a task or an assignment. On the other hand, there were also documents with heterogeneous contents, such as aerial reconnaissance and attack drives. The inventory of the stock was carried out with the archive management system of the Federal Archives BASYS-S-2. The files were recorded and classified on the basis of the specified overdelivery due to a lack of organisational documents. The old signatures F and PG numbers as well as the file numbers were recorded. The terms "Detachement" and "Trupp", for the units subordinated to the Naval Airship Department, were not used uniformly in the files despite the same meaning. The collection contains numerous photographs and maps, the content of which is linked to the files and have therefore been left in their context. Only the oversized maps which were not sewn in due to damaged files were removed for conservation reasons and are now stored together in a map folder in the inventory under RM 116/201. The files are in a poor state of conservation. The damage ranges from dissolved thread stitching, mechanical damage as a result of use, to paper decay and ink corrosion. The collection needs to be restored soon. The stock is not completely foliated. Scope, explanation: Holdings without increase 7.4 linear metres 198 AU Citation method: BArch, RM 116/...

            File · ohne Datum
            Part of Archive of Luftschiffbau Zeppelin GmbH
            • McAlister/McGlinn: The first flight [LZ 129];- A German aircraft squadron occupies the positions east of Warsaw with bombs (drawing) in order to complicate the Abmarch of the Russian crew;- Two zeppelins over Lake Constance. View from LZ 129 onto LZ 127 [after 1936] (photo);- A Swiss steerable airship Heinrich Suter;- Riesen-Luft xpress New York-London 1926 ? (picture);- Dr. Eckener 65 years old. 1933 (photo);- Plog, Karl: With the Zepplein on attack [L 49];- Colonel Breithaupt: Resumption of airship traffic with LZ 130 [photo] ;- Trip of a D-PN 28 from Seddin to Berlin [Parseval, photo], 1929?;- The Parsevalsche Luftschiff, Neues Tagblatt 1906-1920;- Four Zeppelins destroyed. A war memory. [Destruction Ahlhorn 1918];- Through desert heat and tropical thunderstorms. Listening scenes of Willi Ehmer's [LZ104] bold war flight of the L 59 to Africa;- Our Zeppelins originated from the Swabian Creator Spirit, works of persistent faith! Wille Ehmer, Our Swabia 1934-1939;- From Zeppelin ... and the first "Battle of Britain" (with photos);- Airship hovers for more cash (photos);- Ships in the sky. Comfort on the Transatlantic Route 2nd part (travel literature), books market (with photos);- The Zeppelin Museum (Zeppelinheim). Info sheet (with photos);- Samuel Johann Pauli(1766-1821) by Hans Rudolf Degen (with photos);- A costume for ladies airship (photo woman with uniform);- Weible, Raimund: Neues Luftschiffmuseum als Denkmal für Graf Zeppelin. Today the converted harbour station is opened to the public;- Aust, Siegfried: Derschwebende Hotelpalast. Zeppelin on great voyage /An airship goes on great voyage: Adventure Zeppelin /Flying and falling wants to be learned: Small flying machine;- He brought the ZR III with Hugo Eckener to the USA in 1923. Airship veteran Hans von Schiller died, Tübingen;- H.S.: Reference. Zeppelin - The name of the count who successfully built the steerable airships became the generic name for the huge aircraft ....;- Gerhard Widmann: Josef Braun -(k)a pensioner like any other: 40 years ago, a millionaire in air miles;- Germany in the air ahead! (article) The "Prince" Zeppelin (poem);- Stephenson and Zeppelin. Two new volumes in the Teubner-Verlag series (book reference);- Fairhall, David: Hopes rise for British airship. Old rivalry with Germans gets a newtwist, In: unknown, unknown publication date (with photos) [Original];s- Yes: In: unknown (with photo) [copy];- Scherl-R.: Ein historischer Tag: Der erste Astieg eines Zeppelin am 2. Juli 1900, In: unbekannt, Datierung unbekannt(mit Fotos) [Original];- Luftwaffenhelfer (ohne Dat/,smit mit Foto) [copy];- Detlev Heinrich: "Ich bin jetzt 19 Jahre", In: "Die Zukunft. Halbmonatsschrift junger Menschen" (without photos)[copy];- Der Bootsführer Sr. Exellenz/In der schwimmenden Halle von Manzell (with graphic)[copy];- Article about collections after the accident of Echterdingen, In: unbekannt (Stuttgart), 1908(?) (without photos) [copy];- newspaper clipping "Originalaufnahme des Kommandoraumes";- Der Sieg des Zeppelin-Luftschiffes, In: Süddeutsche Zeitung, without date (with photos, graphics)[Original];- Die "Hindenburg" - Post vom1. In: unknown, without date (without photo)[Original];- Zeppelin report, In: unknown, without date (without photo) [Original];- Dr. Be: helium instead of hydrogen. LZ 130 - constructed as a helium ship, In: Frankfurter Volksblatt, without date (with photos) [Original];- Ziegler, Klaus Peter: The Flying Cigars, In: unkenannt, ohne Datum (mit Fotos) [Original];- Jungeblodt, Albert: The Flying Hotel. A restaurant specialist about his Zeppelin journey, In: unknown, without date (without photos) [Original];- With the Zeppelin airship "Schwaben" through Germany's most beautiful Gauen. From a Pforzheim participant, In: unknown, without date (without photos) [Original];- memories of the world of yesterday awaken this picture of pre-war Pforzheim painted with the Zeppelin, then an attraction especially for schoolchildren, In: unknown, without date (with photo) [Original];- the man who saved Count Zeppelin. The "Zeppelin-Hoffmann" died - The night camp on the treetop", In: unknown, without date (without photos) [Original];- Stumpp, Emil: Graphik Dr.-Ing. Ludwig Dürr, In: Stuttgarter Neues Tagblatt (with graphic) [Original];- Die politische Wirkung des Zeppelinflugs, In: unknown, without date (without photo)[Original];- Stumpp, Emil: graphic Dr.Hugo Eckener, In: Stuttgarter Neues Tagblatt (with graphic)[Original];- Die Rückkehr Eckeners. Arrival of Dr. Eckeners in Bremerhaven, In: unknown, without date (with photo)[Original];- This is what the Zeppelin Hall looks like today! Therefore give to the Zeppelin donation, In: unknown, without date (with photo) [original];- German exploit and German timidity, In: unknown, without date (without photo) [original];- Stöhr, Lina: "Graf Zeppelins" Weltenflug (poem), In: unknown, without date (without photo) [original];- Holzapfel, Carl Maria: The broadcast of the LZ 127, In: unknown, without date (without photo) [Original];- Flying in Germany: from the "Kisten" to the "Jumbos", In: unknown, without date (with photos) [Original];- Langenber, Hans: Flugmusketiere über dem Atlantik. Pioneer lived only 37 years, In: unknown, without date (without photos) [Original];- LZ 129 is coming. Before the maiden voyage. Germany's new giant airship gets its final polish - Meisterwerk deutscher Technik, In: unknown, without date (no photos) [Original];- Das neue Heim: Flughafen Frankfurt, In: Das Illustrierte Blatt (No 9), without date (with photos) [Original];- Article about the interiors of the LZ 129, In: Das Illustrierte Blatt (No photos) [Original];- Article about the interiors of the LZ 129, In: Das Illustrierte Blatt (No photos) [Original]. 16), without date (with photos) [original];- Der majestätische Zeppelin, In: Landau (magazine), without date (with photo) [original];- Photo of a Zeppelin (LZ 127 or LZ 129) in der Halle, In: Berliner Illustrierte, without date (with photo) [original];- LZ 126 and LZ 127 at the anchor mast in Lakehurst, In: unknown, without date (with photo) [original];- 25 years Zeppelin. To the first ascent in July 1900, In: Berliner Illustrierte Zeitung, No. 28, without date (with photos)[original, 2 pages];- Zeppelins first ascent, In: unknown, without date (without photo) [original];- Alderson, Andrew: Welshairman beat Wrights to theskies, In: unknown, without date (with photos and graphics)[copy];- Eckener, Hugo: Im Zeppelin über Länder und Meeres. Experiences and memories of Dr. Hugo Eckener, In: Süddeutsche Sonntagspost (No.30, page 23/24), without date (with photos) [Original];- From all over the world. In Zeppelin to the Arctic, In: Unknown, no date (no photos) [Original];- Phil Liddle: When the mayoress was killed in airraid, In: Unknown, no date (no photos) [Copy];- Madeley, Howard: Zeppelin Over head! More light on the mysterious silver cigar over Darlaston, In: Unknown, no date (with photos) copy];- Zeppelin Raid, In: Unknown, no date (with photos) [copy];- Marburg in Alte Bildern. Thousands of Marburgers saw the Zeppelin, In: Unknown, without date (with photo) [copy];- "In the most beautiful Lucerne festival weather ...", In: unknown, without date (with photo) [original];- When Lucerne was still dreaming of flying, In: City of Lucerne, without date (with photo) [original];- What do you know about them?/Flying ships, In: unknown, without date (with photos/graphics) [original];- Petzoldt, Hans-Dieter, Hans-Dieter, In: unknown, without date (with photos/graphics) [original];- Petzoldt, Hans-Dieter, Hans-Dieter, who is the man of the world who saw the Zeppelin, In: unknown, without date (with photos/graphics) [unknown]: Graf Zeppelin about Söhre, In: Chronicle of Söhre, without date (without photo) [copy];- Festive reception in the Kaisersaal of the Frankfurt Römer, In: Unknown, without date (without photo) [Original];- Zeppelin bomb. Heinz Urbau from Meersburg has bought Zeppelin-Bombe at auction in London, In: unknown, without date (with photo) [Original];- Lima, Mike: Kulturdenkmal Zeppelindorf. eine Arbeitersiedlung der besonderen Art, In: Unsere Stadt im Wandel der Zeit, ohne Datum (with photos) [Original];- Graphik Gedränge im Luftraum. Air traffic continues to increase, In: Unknown, without date (with graphic) [Original];- Advertisement Deutsche Segelflugmuseum auf der Wasserkuppe sucht für den Ausbaupende Archiv und für seine Sammlung Bücher etc.. (German glider museum on the Wasserkuppe is looking for books for the archive to be expanded and for its collections), In: Unknown, without date (with graphic) [Original];- With the airship flying in the sky, In: Frankfurter Allgemeine Magazin, without date (with photos) [Original];- How big is the Zeppelin airship, In: Unknown, without date (with photo) [Original];- The new French steerable military airship "La Republique", In: Unknown, without date (with photo) [Original];- Accident of the airship Zeppelin II on the long endurance run on 31. January 2010, in: Frankfurter Allgemeine Magazin, without date (with photos) [Original];- The new French steerable military airship "La Republique", In: Unknown, without date (with photo) [Original];- Accident of the airship Zeppelin II on the long endurance run on 31. December 2010, in: "The airship Zeppelin II". May near Göppingen, In: Unknown (with photo) [Original];- Inventions and industrial. The steerable balloon at all and especially by Graf Zeppelin, In: Unknown, without date (with photos)[Original, 2 sheets];- Zeppelin about Königstein, In: unknown, without date (with photo) [Original];- The First Airship Flight around the World, In: The National Geographic Magazine, ohne Datum (mit Fotos)[Original];- Toys help war against vibration, In: Popular Mechanics, ohne Datum (mit Fotos und Zeichnung)[Original];- Een Luchtreus Stortte ter Aarde, In: Unknown, ohne Datum (mit Fotos) [Original];- Mierendorff, Heinz: Wir verproviantierten "Graf Zeppelin" auf See!, In: unknown, without date (without photos) [copy];- Ferdinand Graf von Zeppelin. Tausenfache Hilfe in der Not, In: Woman in mirror, without date (with graphics) [Original]