nature

Elements area

Taxonomy

Code

Scope note(s)

    Source note(s)

    Display note(s)

      Equivalent terms

      nature

      • UF natürlich
      • UF natürliche Welt

      Associated terms

      nature

        3444 Archival description results for nature

        4 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
        ALMW_II._BA_A3_1043 · Item · 1927-1938
        Part of Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig

        Photographer: Guth?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 7,3 X 11,7 Description: 3 women under a tree, 2 sitting, calabash leaning against the tree. Reference: Plate and cardboard No. 72 in negative box ( 4 prints).

        Leipziger Missionswerk
        Masama, 1921
        ALMW_II._BA_A19_366 · Item · 1921
        Part of Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig

        Photographer: Blumer?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 10,6 X 8,0. Description: Mrs. Blumer on bench under a tree, 2 persons and 1 child (European) coming with a dog.

        Leipziger Missionswerk
        Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Staatsarchiv Ludwigsburg, E 162 I · Fonds · 1806-1920 (Vorakten ab 1720, Nachakten bis 1929)
        Part of State Archives Baden-Württemberg, Dept. State Archives Ludwigsburg (Archivtektonik)

        I. On the history of the medical administration in Württemberg: The health care system already received a comprehensive and thorough promotion through the Great Church Constitution of Duke Christopher of 1579 in Altwürttemberg. A special section on physicians and wound physicians dealt with their ability to practice internal and external medicine, with the support of pharmacies to strengthen and maintain the power of the people, and with the care of the poor. supervision of the health system was then entrusted to the ducal church council with the involvement of experts, namely the two Collegia medica (medical bodies), which consisted of the ducal physicians in Stuttgart and the professors of the medical faculty in Tübingen.Over the years, health promotion has been supplemented by a series of special regulations and all existing provisions on doctors, wound doctors, pharmacists and midwives have been combined into a whole by the two medical regulations of 30.10.1720 (Reyscher XIII p. 1185) and 16.10.1755 (Reyscher XIV p. 416). In 1734 a medical college was set up for the epidemic police, and from 1755 the medical deputation had to watch over the health of humans and animals. King Friedrich then put the promotion of the health service on a modern basis. Instead of the medical deputation, he set up a special directorate, the Royal Medical Department, in the organizational manifesto of 1806 for the administration of the "medical institutions and the medical service", which was transformed into the Section of the Medical Service in 1811. It consisted of two personal doctors and two junior doctors under the administration of the interior. According to an instruction dated 23.6.1806 (Reg.Bl. p. 32), its tasks included the supervision of all main and auxiliary health care personnel and all public hospitals as well as the prevention of human and animal diseases. In addition, the two Collegia medica continued to exist. The "Physio" were subordinated to the Medical Department. According to the general decree of June 3, 1808 (Reg. Bl. p. 313) they had to make sure that the medical persons belonging to their district complied with their duty. The health service in the countryside was then regulated in detail by the general decree of March 14/22, 1814 (Reg. Bl. p. 121), which adapted the medical constitution to the new division according to upper offices and bailiwicks. Each senior office received a public health officer under the name of Senior Medical Officer, who was to supervise all medical institutions and the other medical personnel, inspect the pharmacies and the wound doctors and their instruments, and instruct and inspect the midwives. In each bailiwick one of the senior physicians was also employed as a bailiff's doctor. He had the higher supervision over these institutions and persons and was obliged to check the medical conditions in his bailiwick's district every four years. The health care system was reorganised by King Wilhelm's decree of 6 June 1818 (Reg. Bl. p. 313). The section of the medical system was transformed into the Medical College, but only the purely technical objects were taken over by it: The health police and the management of the health police institutions were assigned partly to the Ministry of the Interior and partly to the new district governments, to which (until 1881) a practising doctor, the district medical doctor (the former bailiff's doctor), was assigned as an extraordinary member. Against the fear of being buried alive, the statutory post-mortem examination was introduced by decree of 20.6.1833 (Reyscher XV.2 p. 1016). The pharmacies were already under the supervision of the health administration according to the directive of 1807. A new task for the promotion of public health was brought by the decree of 14.3.1860 (Reg.Bl. p. 37) on the supervision of the traffic with meat. After the entry of Württemberg into the German Reich, the development of the Württtemberg health care system could continue without change for the time being. Through the Constitution of the Reich, the Reich had reserved to itself only the supervision and legislation on "measures of the medical and veterinary police" and had established the Reich Health Office for this purpose. The structure and tasks of the higher health authority in Württemberg were adapted to the development of the economy and medical science in recent years by ordinance of 21.10.1880 (Reg. Bl. 1881, p. 3) and decree of 21.6.1881 (Reg.Bl. p. 398). The Medical College was then "the central authority for the supervision and technical direction of medical and public health care". The district governments were thus eliminated. Accordingly, the county medical councils were abolished and their tasks were transferred partly to the senior physicians and partly to the medical college. Medical College, Department of State Hospitals" for the processing of objects via the State Hospitals, the State Midwifery School and the lunatic system, and a further department called "Royal Medical College, Veterinary Department" was established to handle all business in the field of veterinary medicine. The Medical College was repealed by law of 15.12.1919 (Reg.Bl. p. 41) on the reorganization of the health system with effect from 1.1.1920. Its tasks were transferred by decree of 17.12.1919 (Reg.Bl. p. 420) to the Ministry of the Interior and the authorities and institutions subordinated to it. TWO. On the history of the holdings: The files of the Medical College were delivered in four volumes (1911, 1921, 1930 and 1957) to the Ludwigsburg State Archives, partly directly and partly via the Ministry of the Interior, and have since been listed in the general overview as individual holdings. In the current reorganisation, they have been combined to form a single portfolio. In the course of this work, the files on the state hospitals - which until 1880 had not been directly subject to the Medical College - were excavated and combined into a special collection (now E 163, Administration of the State Hospitals). In addition to the files of the Medical College (1818-1920) and its previous authorities, the Medical Department (1806-1811) and the Section of Medical Science (1811-1817), the present holdings E 162 I also contain individual files of the ducal medical deputation, which were left in the holdings for reasons of expediency. In addition, the files on pharmacies that had grown up with the four district governments and had entered the registry of the Medical College in 1909 were retained. Occasionally there are also archives of the superior authority of the Ministry of the Interior. Diaries of the Supervisory Commission for State Hospitals were attached to the diaries of the Medical College. Since the incorporation of this commission into the Medical College, they have in any case been included in the diaries of the Medical College together with the veterinary department of the Medical College, which had also been newly formed, and the holdings were re-recorded in 1971-1977 by the archivist Erwin Biemann and the undersigned and brought into the present order. It was not possible to fall back on the old registry structure. The holdings E 162 II contains personal files of doctors, dentists, surgeons, obstetricians, veterinarians and pharmacists of the same provenance. Ludwigsburg, 15 December 1977W. Bürkle

        Meruberg
        ALMW_II._BA_A20_580 · Item · 1920-1930
        Part of Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig

        Photographer: Blumer?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 8,2 X 6,8 Description: 2 women with load on their head, Meru landscape in the background. Reference: Cf. album 20, no. 582.

        Leipziger Missionswerk
        Meruberg in the clouds
        ALMW_II._BA_A17_31 · Item · 3. Februar 1924
        Part of Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig

        Photographer: Mrs. or Mr. Blumer?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 10,7 X 8,2. Description: Landscape photograph with cultivated land in the foreground and church in the background. Reference: See Album 19, No. 502 (Nachlaß Blumer) (10,7 X 8,2).

        Leipziger Missionswerk
        Merufrau
        ALMW_II._BA_NMergner_247 · Item · 1932-1940
        Part of Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig

        Photographer: Mergner?. Type: Photo. Format: 11,8 X 15,8. Description: Back view, richly decorated hip apron (pearls?).

        Leipziger Missionswerk

        Order and Classification: The MfN holdings are listed in the University Archives under the name "Zoologisches Museum" and sorted by access number. The existing stock was presumably re-sorted several times over the years. At the end of 2017/beginning of 2018, the cartoned MfN inventory was entered into our Augias database system in autopsy, classified and a finding aid book created. The FB index is based on the page numbers. Foreword: The basis for the museum, initially known as the Zoological Museum, was formed by the zoological objects transferred to the University by the Royal Chamber of Art. The collections were housed on the second floor of the eastern wing of the university building. The museum was to be "the centre for the state's zoological collections and an educational institution for all the people". Soon after the foundation, however, the government withdrew all anatomical specimens and transferred them to Prof. Rudolphi (1771-1832) to establish his own collection. The museum, without a regular budget, was financed by donations. A registry was established in 1819. "In 1836, the museum was renamed a "collection" because the first title was intended for art museums only". After 1856 the institution was again called "Zoological Museum". The new building, intended to house the geological-paleontological, mineralogical-petrographical and zoological collections of the University, was given the name "Museum of Natural History" by ministerial decree of 7 May 1887. The building of the Museum für Naturkunde, ceremoniously opened on 2 December 1889, was erected on the site of the former Royal Iron Foundry in Berlin in the years 1883-1889. During the construction work, it was decided to separate the collections into a joint display collection of the three museums housed in the Museum für Naturkunde (ground floor) and several further separate main collections (1st and 2nd floors). The collections were open to the public several days a week. From 1911, official guided tours and lectures, led by a scientific official, took place. They were interrupted during the First World War. The collections each included their own institutes. In 1884, in connection with the appointment negotiations of Franz Eilhard Schulze (1840-1921), the Zoological Institute, which was also housed in the museum building, gained its independence as a special institution. The University Archive therefore has its own "Zoological Institute" collection with a separate index. The shops, which related to the museum as a whole, were managed by an administrative director for all parts of the tripartite Museum of Natural History. For the donors of more important gifts, donor boards were placed in the exhibition halls and in the atrium. In 1898 Möbius founded the "Mitteilungen aus dem zoologischen Museum in Berlin". In 1901 the building was connected to the municipal power stations. An extension of the museum building began on August 1, 1914. The building of the Museum für Naturkunde also housed the Institute for Genetics of the University of Berlin (H. Timofeeff-Ressowsky) and the "German Institute for Gem and Pearl Research at the University of Berlin" (German Gem Institute, Director: Ramdohr), which was founded on April 1, 1928. In the 2nd World War one wing of the building was completely destroyed and the entire building was severely damaged. When it reopened to the public on 16 September 1945, it was temporarily given the name Deutsches Zoologisches Museum (German Zoological Museum). Student education had already been resumed in the summer of 1945. From 10.01.-31.12.1947 the Museum für Naturkunde (or only the part Zoologisches Museum) belonged to the German Academy of Sciences. The files available here end around 1954, and are presumed to be located in the historical workroom of the Museum für Naturkunde. The current no. 075 - 082 were missing during the database entry on 07.11.2017 and probably already during the move in 2016. Claudia Hilse, 17.01.2018 Sources: - Chronicle of the FWU - Lenz, Max: History of the Royal FWU. - Third volume. - Hallle, 1910 - HU/UA, MfN: 178 Period to: 1954 Period from: 1812 Citation method: HU UA, Museum of Natural History.01, No. XXX. HU UA, MfN.01, No. XXX. State of development, extent: 193 files in 38 cartons: approx. 5.3 running meters

        BArch, RM 3/3043 · File · 1903-1915
        Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

        Contains among other things: S.M.S. "Cormoran": Economic development of the Marshall Islands (differences between Frigate Captain v. Burski and Berlin on the activities of the Jaluit Society) Nov. 1902 to Dec. 1903 S.M.S. "Loreley": Report on Turkey July 1903 Kreuzerdivision: Disputed behaviour of the German ambassador in Washington during an audience, June to July 1904 S.M.S. "Stein": Differences about statements concerning German lessons in German schools, which could be understood as propaganda, Jan. to Nov. 1903: "Loreley": Report on Turkey July 1903 Kreuzerdivision: Disputed behaviour of the German ambassador in Washington during an audience, June to July 1904 S.M.S. "Stein": Differences about statements concerning German lessons in German schools, which could be understood as propaganda, Jan. to Nov. 1903: "Loreley": Report on Turkey July 1903 Kreuzerdivision: Disputed behaviour of the German ambassador in Washington during an audience, June to July 1904 S.M.S. "Stein": Differences about statements concerning German lessons in German schools, which could be understood as propaganda, Jan. to Nov. 1904 Questionable indiscretions of German naval officers about the power positions of various nations in the West Indies, March to June 1904 Kreuzergeschwader: Berichte über den russisch-japanischen Krieg Aug. bis Dez. 1904 Report on China June 1906 S.M.S. "Habicht": accusations against the German consul Gebauer in Libreville, Nov. 1904 S.M.S. "Panther": "Berlin", "Eber": reports, statements, plans about the events during the 2nd Morocco crisis (Panther jump before Agadir), July to Sept. 1911 Turkish-Bulgarian war Feb. 1913 S.M.S. "Breslau": Situation in Albania June 1913 S.M.S. "Victoria Luise": Spezia, Naples Oct. 1913 S.M.S. "Vultures": Trieste Oct. 1913 Mediterranean Division: Mersina, Alexandrette, Constantinople, Nov. 1913 1913 audience with the king in Rome, Syracus, Messina, Maddalena, Malta, eastern Mediterranean, location of the Baghdad railway (with map), Jan. 1914 Spezia, Cartagena, Genoa, Rapallo, Feb. 1914 location in Albania Jan. and July 1914

        German Imperial Naval Office
        BArch, RM 3/3024 · File · 1908-1909
        Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

        Contains among other things: S. M. S. "Bremen": Philadelphia, New York, Bahia, Ilha Grande, Montevideo, Bahia, Blanca, Madrin S. M. S. "Sea Eagle": Benadir coast, Aden, Djibouti, Colombo, Mahé, Bombay (strike) S. M. S. "Loreley": Eastern Mediterranean Sea, Black Sea S. M. S. "Charlotte": Bergen, Balholm, Gudwangen, Lerwick, Greenock, Vigo, Cadiz, Reysertsbay, Madeira, Puerto de la Luz, Santiago de Cuba (election, American withdrawal), Havana, Kingston S.M.S. "Victoria Luise': Tenerife, Barcelona, Venice, Rapallo, Naples, Corfu, Cagliari, Alexandria S.M.S. 'Fatherland': Szetchuan S.M.S. 'Panther': Cape Town (political situation), Swakopmund, Lüderitz Bay (diamond find), St. Petersburg Helena, Grand Bassa, Freetown, Bissao, Boloma, South West Africa, Duala, Portuguese Guinea (Uprising) S.M.S. "Hertha": Queenstown, Palma, Cartagena, Madeira, Las Palmas, Palermo, Messina (earthquake relief), Naples S. M. S. "Sperber": Cape Town, Congo, Lüderitz Bay (diamond question), Swakopmund, Loanda, Cape Lopez, Bata, Victoria, Togo, Cameroon S. M.S. "Freya": Halifax, Charleston, Habana, Kingston, St. Thomas, Newport Cruise Wing: Dalmy, Port Arthur, Amoy, Kobe S.M.S. "Condor": Ponape, Samoa, Marshall Islands, Fije S.M.S. "Panther": Southwest Africa (Economic Situation Report)

        German Imperial Naval Office
        BArch, RM 3/3027 · File · 1910
        Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

        Contains among other things: S.M.S. "Hertha": Curacao, St. Thomas, Port of Spain, Bermuda, Ponta Delgada, Santiago de Cuba, Havana, Kingston, Vigo S.M.S. "Bremen": Port of Spain, Rio de Janeiro, Buenos Aires, Punta Arenas, Valdivia, Coronel, Chile, Valparaiso, Antofagasta, Tocopilla, Taltal, Coquimbo S. M. S. "Sea Eagle": Cape Town, Durban, Dar es Salaam S. M. S. "Victoria Luise": St. Thomas, San Juan de Portorico, Kingston, Havana, Haiti, Guantanamo, Ferrol, Horta, Bermuda S. M. S. "Hansa": Corfu, Palermo, Ferrol, Algiers S. M. S. "Corfu, Palermo, Ferrol, Algiers S. M. S.": S. Thomas, San Juan de Portorico, Havana, Haiti, Guantanamo, S. M. S. "Arcona": San Fancisco, Honolulu, Seattle, San Pedro, San Diego, Yokohama, Miyashima, Port Said, Cadiz, Colombo, Aden S. M. S. "Cormoran": Matupi, Herbertshöhe, Simpson Harbour, Empress Augusta River, Blanche Bay, Samoa, Suva S. M. S. "Buzzard": Mahé, Aden, Port Said, Malaga, Southampton S. M. S. "Freya": Port Said, Alexandria, Haifa, Beirut, Messina, Adana (consequences of the Armenian massacre), Naples, Algiers, Vigo S. M. S. "Panther": Duala, Cap Lopez, Loanda, Porto Alexandre, Southwest Africa S. M. S. "Condor": Samoa, Fiji Islands, Marshall Islands, Herbertshöhe, Caroline Islands, Japan, Palau, Admiralty Islands Squadrons of cruisers: Tientsin, Beijing, Hankau, Yangtze River, Situation in China, Hong Kong, Canton, Bangkok, Singapore S. M. S. "Sperber": Lome, Old Calabar, Sekondi, Axim, Greater Friedrichsburg, Liberia (uprising), Libreville, Belgian Congo, Angola, Southwest Africa S. M. S. "Nuremberg": Barcelona (political situation) S. M. S. "Iltis": Hong Kong

        German Imperial Naval Office
        BArch, RM 3/3028 · File · 1910
        Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

        Contains among other things: S. M. S. "Freya": Caligari, Genoa, Bermuda, Horta, Vera Cruz S. M. S. "Sperber": South West Africa, British South Africa, Madagascar S. M. S. "Bremen": Coronel, Puerto Montt, Chile, Buenos Aires, Montevideo, Taltal, Callao S. M. S. "Condor": New Guinea, Bongainville, Australia, Tasmania, S.M.S. Planet: Brisbane, Sydney, Nouméa, Port Villa, Singapore S.M.S. "Cormoran": Apia, Hong Kong, Nouméa, Matupi, Jap S.M.S. "Hertha": Gothenburg, Norway, Plymouth, San Sebastian, Tangier, Barcelona, Palma, Biserta S.M.S. "Hertha": Gothenburg, Norway, Plymouth, San Sebastian, Tangier, Palma, Biserta S.M.S. "Boars": Oporto, Madeira, Las Palmas, Bissao, Dakar, Freetown, Liberia (riots), Lome, Forcados, Warri, Duala, Libreville, Congo, Southwest Africa S. M. S. "Nuremberg": Colombo, Singapore, Yangtze River, Hankau, Pulo, Lant S. M. S. "Emden": Montevideo, Chile, Tahiti, Apia Cruiser Squadron: Japan, Hunan (riots), Yangtze River (riots), Padang, Batavia, Labuan, Manila, South Sea trip, East Asia S.M.S. "Sea Eagle": Zanzibar, Lorenco, Marques, Nossibé, Durban, Mozambique S.M.S. "Tiger": Hupeh, Hunan (riots), Shanghai, Yangtze River (flooding) S.M.S. "Polecat": Nanking, Yangtze River S. "Tiger": Hupeh, Hunan (riots), Shanghai, Yangtze River (flooding) S.M.S. "Polecat": Nanking, Yangtze River S. M.S. 'Victoria Luise': Norway, Madeira, Cartagena, Tunis, Malta S.M.S. 'Hansa': Norway, Lerwick, Edinburgh, Queenstown, Madeira, Santa Cruz, Tenerife, Las Palmas S.M.S. 'Panther': Cape Town, South West Africa, Lobito Bay, Cape Lopez, Cameroon, Togo, Monrovia S.M.S. 'Loreley': Therapia. Eastern Mediterranean, Black Sea, Athos, Thessaloniki S. M. S. "Lynx": Tsingtau S. M. S. "Tsingtau": Nanking S. M. S. "Leipzig": Yangtze River, Nanking, Korea (taken over by Japan), Port Arthur

        German Imperial Naval Office
        BArch, RM 3/3029 · File · 1910-1911
        Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

        Contains among other things: S. M. S. "Kurfürst Friedrich Wilhelm/Weissenburg": Dardanellen, Algiers, Constantinople (transfer of ships to Turkey) S. M. S. "Panther": Monrovia, Cameroon, Accra, Lagos, Duala, Banana, Swakopmund S. M. S. "Nuremberg": Hansa Bay, Hatzfeldhafen (punitive expedition S. M. S. "Hertha": Marmarice, Haifa, Port Said, Cattaro, Alexandria, Pola, Venice, Corfu, Vigo, Genoa, Livorno S. M. S. "Victoria Luise": Corfu, Cattaro, Venice, Marmarice, Beirut, Alexandria, Syracus, Cadiz, Naples, Vigo S. "Hertha": Marmarice, Haifa, Port Said, Cattaro, Alexandria, Pola, Venice, Corfu, Vigo, Livorno S. M. S. "Victoria Luise": Corfu, Cattaro, Venice, Marmarice, Beirut, Alexandria, Syracus, Cadiz, Naples, Vigo S. M. S. "Tiger": Nagasaki, Kobe, Shanghai S. M. S. "Loreley": Gulf of Corinth, Constantinople, Trieste Cruise Wing: New Guinea, South Seas, Samoa, East Asia S. M. S. "Condor": Samoa, Bismarck Archipelago, Kaiser-Wilhelms-Land S. M. S. "Condor": Samoa, Bismarck Archipelago, Kaiser-Wilhelms-Land S. M. S. "Cormoran": Samoa, Marshall Islands, East Caroline Islands, Bismarck Archipelago, Hong Kong, Apia, Helen Reef, Palau Islands, West Caroline Islands, Saipan, Ponape (Riots) S. M. S. "Sparrowhawk": Diego-Suarez, Durban, Cape Town S. M. S. "Bremen': Valparaiso, Callao, Guayaquille, Panama, Amapalla, Corintu, San José de Guatemala, Callao S.M.S. 'Planet': Singapore, Makassar, Amboina, Friedrich-Wilhelmshafen (punitive expedition) S.M.S. 'Freya': Charleston, Havana, Kingston, Curacao, Puerto Cabello, Trinidad S.M.S. 'Gneisenau': Colombo S. M.S. "Hansa": Barbados, Trinidad, Kingston, Pensacola, Las Palmas, Vigo. Plymouth S. M. S. "Eber": Cape Town, German Southwest Africa, Cameroon, Old Calabar, Lome, Liberia S. M. S. "Bremen": La Libertad, Puntarenas

        German Imperial Naval Office
        BArch, RM 3/3030 · File · 1911
        Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

        Contains among other things: S. M. S. "Freya": Tenerife, Southampton S. M. S. "Bremen": Valparaiso,Coronel, Punta Arenas, Panama, Bahia, Blanca, Pernambuco, St. Lucia, St. Lucia, St. Lucia Thomas, Montreal, Halifax, Charlottetown, Rio de Janeiro, Baltimore, Newport News S. M. S. "Sea Eagle": Colombo, Bombay, Aden, Durban, Port Victoria S. M. S. "Gneisenau": Bombay, Cochin, Colombo, Diamond Harbour S. M. S. "Jaguar": Hankau (riots) S. M. S. "Loreley": Trieste, Constantinople, Eastern Mediterranean S. M. S. "Condor": Auckland, Brisbane, Samoa Cruise Wing: China, Japan S. M. S. "Von der Tann": St. M. S. "Loreley": Trieste, Constantinople, Eastern Mediterranean S. M. S. "Condor": Auckland, Brisbane, Samoa Cruise Wing: China, Japan S. M. S. "Von der Tann": St. M. S. "Von der Tann": St. M. S. "St. Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, Bahia Blanca, Itajahy, Blumenau, Buenos Aires S. M. S. "Panther": Southwest Africa, Cape Town, Monrovia S. M. S. "Nuremberg": Truk S. M. S. "Sperber": Dar es Salaam, Alexandria, Palermo, Cadiz, Torquay S. M. S. "Emden": Ponape S. M. S. "Eber": Freetown, Bathurst, Las Palmas, Santa Cruz, Cadiz, Casablanca, Dakar, Conakry S. M. S. "Iltis": Canton (riots), Shanghai S. M. S. "Geier": Cadiz, Palermo, Port Said, Aden, Port Victoria S. M. S. "Cormoran": Matupi, Brisbane, Sydney S. M. S. "Planet": Brisbane, Samarai S. M. S. "Seagull": Ferrol, Cadiz S. M. S. "Hansa": Edinburh, Norway S. M. S. "Hertha": Stockholm, Norway S. M. S. "Vineta": Norway S.M.S. "Lynx": Hong Kong S.M.S. "Scharnhost": Hong Kong, Saigon, Singapore, Batavia Brochures about school in Hampton

        German Imperial Naval Office
        BArch, RM 3/3031 · File · 1911
        Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

        Contains among other things: S.M.S. "Panther": Monrovia, Freetown, Dakar, Santa Cruz, Agadir, Cadiz, Vigo S.M.S. "Cormoran": Sydney, Brisbane, Matupi, Rabaul (Riots), Solomon Islands, East Caroline, Bismarck Archipelago, Admiralty Islands, Emperor Wilhelmsland, Moeve Port, Witu Islands S.M.S. "Bremen': Montreal, Haiti (unrest), Newport News, Kingston, Newport, Philadelphia S.M.S. 'Planet': Sydney, Brisbane S.M.S. 'Loreley': Black Sea, Therapia Italian-Turkish War), Thessaloniki S.M.S. 'Victoria Luise': Norway, Iceland, Newport, Halifax, Pensacola S. M. S. "Seagull": Santa Cruz, Dakar, Freetown, Lome, Lagos, Accra, Duala, Banana, Swakopmund, Lüderitz Bay S. M. S. "Hertha": Greenock, Rotterdam, Falmouth, Bilbao, (strike), Cadiz, Gibraltar, Las Palmas, Tenerife S. M. S. "Zieten": Iceland S. M. S. "Hansa": Cowes, Vigo, Queenstown, Horta, Philadelphia S. M. S. "Tiger": Bangkok, Batavia, Soerabaya, Pulo Lant, Macassar, Menado, Manila, Yangtze River (Flooding) S. M. S. "Vineta": Palma, Tangier, Dartmouth, Tenerife, Las Palmas, St. Vincent Cruiser Wing. China, Japan S. M. S. "Eber": Liberia, Gold Coast, Lome, Cotona, Lagos, Duala, Fernando Poo, Cameroon S. M. S. "Vaterland": Hankau (unrest) S. M. S. "Geier": Aden, Port Suice (Italian-Turkish war) S.M.S. "Otter": Szechuan (unrest)

        German Imperial Naval Office