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        3565 Archival description results for religion

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        Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Staatsarchiv Ludwigsburg, E 203 I · Fonds · 1806-1945 (Vorakten ab 1800, Nachakten bis 1978)
        Part of State Archives Baden-Württemberg, Dept. State Archives Ludwigsburg (Archivtektonik)

        Preliminary remark: The present repertory essentially concludes the order and recording of the extensive files of the Ministerial Department for the Secondary Schools and its previous authorities (E 202 - E 203 IV), i.e. the files on the Secondary Schools in Württemberg from the foundation of the kingdom 1806 to 1945.While the extensive E 202 stock (1975 repertory) contains the general administrative files of the authorities, the E 203 I - E 203 IV stocks contain the files created by the personnel administration:E 203 I Personnel files of teachers in higher schoolsE 203 II Admission work for the teaching profession in higher schoolsE 203 III Personnel files of administrative officials and employeesE 203 IV Personnel file of teachers in higher schoolsAs Oberstudiendirektion was founded in 1806, renamed Studienrat in 1817 (with extended remit), the authority has since 1903 used the name Ministerialabteilung für die höhere Schulen. It was in charge of the supervision of the Protestant theological seminars, of all schools of scholars, namely the grammar schools, Lyceums and Latin schools, as well as of the educational institutions for trade education (the polytechnic school with the winter building trade school) and of the higher and lower secondary schools. The lower Latin and secondary schools, on the other hand, were directly under the control of the local school authorities and the community high schools. With the exception of the University of Tübingen, the Wilhelmstift and the elementary schools, it supervised all educational institutions, including the scientific and moral education of the pupils, the employment and dismissal of teachers and servants (by order or review), and the supervision of their official duties. She also tested the teacher candidates. The ministerial department was abolished in 1945; its tasks were now performed by the cult ministries in Württemberg-Baden and Württemberg-Hohenzollern. 1952 saw the establishment of the Oberschulämter as intermediate authorities, some of which were given corresponding responsibilities (for more details on the history of the authorities, see the preface to Repertorium E 202). the far-reaching and very comprehensive responsibility of the ministerial department may reveal the significance of the holdings of personnel files of teachers at secondary schools that were made accessible here. The individual personnel files often document the pedagogical freedom of movement (in)of the teachers as well as the supervision of the superior authority far beyond the personal life and career data. Not a few personalities who initially worked in the school service and whose personnel files are available here later achieved prestige and success in literary, cultural or political life.B. the writers Gustav Schwab and Dr. D.F. Weinland (author of the "Rulaman"), the folk and regional poet Hermann Otto Heuschele, the dignified president Johannes v. Hieber. During the final work of the listing the personnel files of the administrative officials and employees were taken out and spun off as inventory E 203 III. The files were handed over in 1949/1950 by the then Kultministerium Württemberg-Baden and in 1977 by the Oberschulamt Stuttgart.1977/1978 the files were ordered and indexed by the temporary employees Ute Radicke, Ingrid Hermann and Anita Hundsdörfer under the direction of the archive employee Erwin Biemann and the archive inspector, e.g. Heinrich Graf. After the two file deliveries (each comprising the letters A-Z) had been indexed according to numerus currens, they were merged and brought into a uniform alphabetical order. The final work was done by an archive inspector, Heinrich Graf. Ludwigsburg, March 1979Dr. Schmierer

        Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Staatsarchiv Ludwigsburg, E 202 · Fonds · 1806-1945 (Nachakten bis 1949)
        Part of State Archives Baden-Württemberg, Dept. State Archives Ludwigsburg (Archivtektonik)
        1. On the history of the authorities: In the Duchy of Württemberg the Latin schools were usually established by church offices and occupied by theologians as teachers. Local supervision was exercised by the respective "scholarchate", which was subordinate to the church convent and the consistory. It was not until the organisational manifesto of 1806 (Reyscher XI, 341) that a special secular secondary school authority was created for Württemberg, the upper directorate of studies or upper directorate of studies. The president of this authority, who was also chancellor of the University of Tübingen, was initially only in charge of the university, the Tübinger Stift, the evang theological seminars and the grammar schools. In 1817 the Oberstudiendirektion received the designation "Königl. Studienrat". He was now also entrusted with the supervision of the Latin schools, while the University of Tübingen was directly subordinated to the Ministry of Church and Education. With the exception of the university, the Wilhelmsstift and the elementary schools, the Studienrat was the supreme authority for all educational institutions. He was in charge of the district inspections of the Latin schools, the Lyceums and grammar schools with the associated secondary schools and institutions of the country. In addition to the supervision of all public secondary schools, he supervised the scientific and moral education of the students, their health care and the benefits. He determined the teachers and servants, hired them and dismissed them. The study council had the direct supervision over the grammar schools, Lyceums and the evang. seminars, for the lower Latin schools, the higher citizen schools and the secondary schools existed a middle place in the common upper offices and the district school inspectors, the since 1839 existing polytechnic school in Stuttgart, which 1829 as Gewerbeschule in connection with the secondary and art school created (Reg.Bl. 1829, p. 16), however 1832 (Reg.Bl. S. 395) was separated from these again and continued as an independent educational institution, was directly subordinated to the Ministry by order of the Ministry for Church and Education of 16 April 1862 § 52 (Reg.Bl.Bl. p. 109), which emerged from the "Geistliche Departement" created by King Frederick Friedrich, without any intermediate authority. The aim was to simplify the course of business and bring the ministry closer to the schools. As a secondary school authority, however, the ministerial department remained a state authority. The Minister brought important matters, which had previously had to be submitted in writing, mostly to the collegial consultations held under his chairmanship. The other, less important matters were dealt with by the departmental board in a collegial or office manner. The law of 1.7.1876 (Reg.Bl. p. 267) brought a reorganization in the local supervision: Institutions with upper classes were now subordinated to the upper study authority (ministerial department), the remaining schools were supervised by the local school authority. These local school commissions consisted of local heads and local chaplains. They were only abolished by the "small school law" of 1920 and their tasks were transferred to the school board. By announcement of the Ministry of Church and Education of 8.8.1903 (Reg.Bl. p. 456), the Ministerial Department for Schools and Real Schools received the designation "Royal Ministerial Department for Secondary Schools". Their duties remained the same. Its position vis-à-vis the secondary schools was twofold: 1. it was the highest authority in matters that fell within the competence of the Ministry; 2. it was the highest authority in matters that fell within the competence of the Ministry; 3. it was the highest authority in matters that fell within the competence of the Ministry. Important matters were dealt with through collegial consultations chaired by the Minister or his deputy. The other matters were dealt with through the rapporteurs' presentations. As an independent state college, it was the secondary school authority in all areas of higher education, insofar as they did not fall within the direct competence of the ministry itself. After the collapse in 1945, the ministerial department was abolished as a special office. Their tasks were taken over by the ministries of education and cultural affairs of the regions in northern and southern Württemberg, which were separated by the occupation authorities. With the reunification of the state of Baden-Württemberg and the founding of the southwestern state of Baden-Württemberg in 1952, high school offices were set up at the regional councils as middle instances, which took over individual subordinate administrative tasks from the ministry. 2. on the history of the collection: Most of the files on hand arrived from the Ministry of Culture in Stuttgart in 1949 and 1950 (Tgb.-No. 287 and 393/49 or 685/50). The files of the headmaster's office and the study council concerning the University of Tübingen and the Polytechnic School in Stuttgart had already been handed over to the State Archives by the Ministry of Culture in 1908. Both educational institutions were, as mentioned above, under the direct control of the ministry since 1817 and 1862 respectively. Finally, in 1953, after the reunification of the two parts of the state of North Württemberg and Südwürttemberg-Hohenzollern, which had been separated by the occupying powers after the collapse of 1945, the State Archives of Sigmaringen handed over to the State Archives the local records of the higher schools in their area, which had been transferred there in 1949. The reorganization of the holdings by the undersigned, with the help of the archive employee W. Böhm, began in 1960. It was interrupted several times by other work, even over a period of years, and was not completed until 1971. In addition to the files of the Oberstudiendirektion (1806-1817), the Studienrat (from 1817) and the Ministerialabteilung (from 1866), the collection also contains the files of the Konsistorium über die Lateinschulen for the years 1806-1817 as well as the files of the Kommission für die höhere Mädchenschulwesen (Commission for the Higher Schools for Girls) established in 1877-1905 (established by the law of 30 June 1876).12.1877, Reg.Bl. p. 294; repealed by law of 30.12.1877, Reg.Bl. p. 294; repealed by law of 27.7.1903, Reg.Bl. p. 254) were left here since their duties were later taken over by the Ministerial Department for the Secondary Schools. Finally, there are still isolated files of different provenance, mostly pre-files, which were left in the inventory for reasons of expediency, but were marked as such in the corresponding place. 1805 the inventory now comprises tufts = 42 linear metres. The holdings E 203 I (personal files of the teachers) and E 203 II (admission work for the teaching profession at secondary schools) contain files of the same provenance Ludwigsburg, August 1973W. Bürkle
        RMG 174 · File · 1907-1950
        Part of Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

        Correspondence, 1907-1950; Vom Missionsfest in Bünde, by H. Vedder, Dr., 1912; Statutes for the Ravensberger Missions-Hilfsverein, Dr., 1921; Beiträge z. Geschichte d. Missionslebens i. d. Wesergegend 1830-1845, by Lic. Delius, 1940; From 100 years of missionary service in Ravensberger Land, by P. Klein-Eckardtsheim, ca. 1941; The first Ravensberger Missionsfest in Bünde (5.7.1843), 1943; Zur Anfangsgeschichte des Rav. Missionshilfsvereins 1827-1845, S.-dr. a.d. Jahrbuch d. Verein f. Westf. Kirchengesch., by Lic. Delius, 1950

        Rhenish Missionary Society
        RMG 173 · File · 1832-1845
        Part of Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

        Correspondence, 1832-1845; Statutes for the Missionshilfsgesellschaft an der Weser, 1840; Statuten eines Hilfsvereins im Ravensberger Lande f.d. Bergische Bibel- und Rhein. Missionary Society, 1840; annual report on the effectiveness of the association in 1840, with statutes, Pastor Ahlemann, Petershagen, 1841

        Rhenish Missionary Society
        Milov
        BMW bmw 2/365 · File · 1906 - 1913
        Part of Protestant Regional Church Archive Berlin

        28 pictures with the following motives: Mission station; Mission life; Anabaptists; Mission church; Helpers; Askari; Mission garden; etc.; Contains photographs of the following persons: Neuberg; Axenfeld; Böttgen; Tramp; a.o.; Contains also 1 print.

        Berlin Missionary Society
        Milk, Otto (1911-1974)
        VEM 226 a · File · 1938, 1947-1952
        Part of Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

        1938-1947 Bethelmission, 1948-1966 in Keetmanshoop, Okahandja, Otjimbingue, 1967-1973 Landes-propst d. DELK in Southwest Africa; Letters and Reports, Corrrespondence; Inauguration of the. Peace Church in Okahandja, 7.12.1952; reports about the singing weeks in Okahandja; letters of local Christians, evangelists and pastors, among others by Andreas Kukuri, Hezekiah Kapembe, Adolf !Nowaseb

        Rhenish Missionary Society
        Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, M 660/037 · Fonds · 1914-1979
        Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

        Preliminary remark: Karl Ludwig Eugen Schall (born on 25 November 1885), died on 30 January 1980) joined the Grenadier Regiment of Queen Olga (1st Württembergische) No. 119 in 1904 as a junior flag officer, reached the rank of lieutenant general there until World War I, after the outbreak of the war took part as company officer in the battles of the regiment on the West and East Front and was wounded twice. From 1915 Schall worked as a captain and general staff officer, often occupying changing general staff positions at General Command XIII Army Corps, at the 26th Infantry Division, the 14th Infantry Division, General Command V, and at the General Command of the German Armed Forces. Army Corps, 18th Reserve Division, General Command IV Reserve Corps and 10th Reserve Corps. He participated in the fights in Flanders, in the Somme, in the Champagne, in the Ardennes and Argonne, in the Meuse and near Verdun until his demobilisation in 1918. He was mainly concerned with strength and loss reports, interrogation of prisoners, evaluation of aerial photographs, mapping, position building and pioneer questions. From 1933 he again held several changing positions in the General Staff of the V. Army Corps as a Major, in 1939 was Commander of the Stuttgart II Military District as Lieutenant Colonel, from 1940 as Lieutenant Colonel, later as Colonel General Staff Officer in the 554th Army Corps. Infantry Division, with the Army Group A, with the Commander-in-Chief in Serbia, then Chief of the Field Commandantur 747 in Nîmes and was last transferred in 1944 against his own wishes as a war history teacher to the Kriegsakademie. As a pensioner Schall still studied archaeology in Tübingen until his doctorate. Further information on Karl Schall's life can be found in a handwritten curriculum vitae in Bü. 182, in the diaries in Bü. 181 and in the personal file in stock M 430/2, Bü. 1804 with information on his military career until 1919.Parts of the estate of Karl Schall, above all written material from his military service and extensive collections, were offered to the Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart by his son Brigadegeneral a.D. Wolfgang Schall in March 1980 and, after an initial inspection at the estate's premises in April 1980, were handed over to the library of the Hauptstaatsarchiv and the archival records in Department IV (Military Archives) have since formed the M 660 estate of Karl Schall. Since the estate of Karl Schall got into complete disarray and no pre-archival classification scheme was recognizable, it was necessary to develop a classification scheme after the indexing, which should do justice to the multi-layered structures and most different documentation forms, particularly since in the Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart no uniform classification scheme for estates finds application. The documents from the officers' activities, correspondence and personal papers, which besides their general historical significance have a close personal connection to the deceased, were clearly separated from the multi-layered collections. The structure of the documents from the officer's activity reflects the military career of Schall. These are mostly personal copies of official documents in the form of hectographies, prints and other copies, as well as drafts and private documents. A document, which had been taken from the business transactions of the office, was reintegrated into the relevant holdings of the military unit in the Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart. There is a reference in this repertory. The private correspondence was sorted according to correspondent groups and correspondents. Posters and wall attacks, military maps and non-military maps were incorporated into the corresponding collections of the Main State Archives J 151, M 640 and M 650 mainly for conservation reasons. Nevertheless, these pieces have also been incorporated into the present repertory in the form of references, whereby the ordering scheme of the map holdings M 640 for military maps and M 65 0 for non-military maps has been adopted. Maps which have a recognisable connection to documents in Part A have been left there or reunited and have also been incorporated into the collections of the estate as references. For the collection of newspaper clippings, individual newspapers, printed publications and manuscripts from the fields of history, contemporary history, politics, religion, language, literature, science and technology, it seemed necessary to develop as finely structured a classification scheme as possible, since this collection, with approx. 500 numbers, represents the largest part of the collection and was previously only divided into the categories1. Military, 2nd Politics and Contemporary History, 3rd Science and within these categories only chronologically ordered, which made the chronological classification of the frequently undated newspaper clippings possible. It seemed appropriate to make the very multi-layered estate accessible by means of as comprehensive a list of subjects, places and persons as possible. Only a few small map sections from maps that are already available, sketches and notes that seemed to be no longer comprehensible individually and were not in any recognizable connection to other documents, file folders and packaging material were collected. The estate of Karl Schall contains above all informative material about the type of warfare in the First World War. Of particular importance is also the material on non-Württemberg units, most of whose records were destroyed in a bombing raid on Potsdam in April 1945. The drawings on the maps from World War I provide extensive information on the course of the front, combat directions, troop movements, position building and destruction in the front areas and thus complement the M 640 map holdings well. Also noteworthy is the extensive written material on the trials before the military tribunal in Nuremberg against the generals Curt Ritter von Geitner, Hubert Lanz, Karl von Roques and Eugen Wössner, which contains excerpts from the indictments and defence material. In the collections the history of the 20th century up to the 70s is reflected in an astonishingly comprehensive and descriptive way. The collection is not subject to any restrictions of use. In January and February 1984, the M 660 estate of Karl Schall was listed and arranged by Markus Baudisch, a candidate archive inspector, as a rehearsal work in the context of the state examination for the upper archive service and comprises 697 books in 1.55 metres.

        BArch, PH 32 · Fonds · 1850-1920
        Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

        Description: The Prussian military members were grouped together in military congregations, the pastoral care was carried out by a military clergy independent of the respective civil church. The military church order of 1832 established a Protestant field provost, to whom the military priests were subordinate in the army corps. The division, garrison and institution priests were in turn subordinate to them. Until 1839 the Prussian military community was looked after interdenominationally by Protestant military chaplains. Then by cabinet order the employment of Catholic military clergymen was ordered and in 1849 finally an army bishop was entrusted with the management of the Catholic military church system. 1868 followed the establishment of the office of a Catholic field provost. Characterisation of content: In addition to the written records of the Catholic military pastoral care, the present collection contains several copies of files in the Rottenburg Episcopal Ordinariat on the appointment and deployment of field chaplains as well as a volume of copies from the archives of the Protestant Church in Germany on Protestant military pastoral care of German and foreign prisoners of war. State of development: Findbuch Vorarchivische Ordnung: Almost exclusively the records of the Catholic military pastoral care are handed down, which were taken over in 1974 on the occasion of the handover of the former Catholic Garrison Church Berlin to the Greek Orthodox community from the Secret State Archives of Prussian Cultural Heritage in Berlin and handed over to the Federal Archives in 1978. Scope, explanation: 626 AU Citation method: BArch, PH 32/...

        RMG 1.543 · File · 1894-1958
        Part of Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

        1894-1933 in Kommaggas, Steinkopf, cf. RMG 1.372 Nachlaß in Teil Südafrika/Kapkolonie; letters and reports, (also station reports from Kommaggas until 1903); Memories from the life of a LIPPIC missionary, in "Unsere Kirche", Evang. Sonntagsblatt für Lippe, Jan./Febr. 1955;

        Rhenish Missionary Society
        Meyer, Freerk (1847-1923)
        RMG 1.618 a-c · File · 1877-1899
        Part of Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

        1877-1900 in Otjikango, Omaruru, Otjimbingue, housefather in the Mission House, 1903-1913; letters, station and quarterly reports, travel reports, 1877-1899; quarterly reports from 1897, also signed by Johannes Olpp; private letters to Inspectors d. RMG, 1882-1899; Invoices for building materials and municipal accounts; Letter from Hendrik Witbooi, Rooibank to Freerk Meyer, 1891; Police Ordinance on smallpox, 1891; Report from d. Commemoration of the 25th anniversary of the church in Otjimbingue, by H. Kleinschmidt, 1892; Description e. Begegnung mit Hendrik Witbooi (1. Quartalsbericht), 1892; Contract with the school board of the German mission school Otjimbingue, 1895; Question by Mr. von Lindequist about harmful influence of spiritual beverages on the natives, 1896;

        Rhenish Missionary Society
        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
        Menzel, Gustav (1908-1999)
        VEM 111 · File · 1929-1965
        Part of Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

        Missionary in Djandjimatogu and Padang Sidempuan 1937-1940, Seminar Teacher 1934-1935, Africa Officer 1948-1960, Director 1967-1974; Includes:; Correspondence; Correspondence with Paul Starke about the fate of his daughter Margarete, married Menzel; Circular; Memorandum "Questions about the future of the Mission Seminar" 1952

        Rhenish Missionary Society
        A.11-315 · File · 1924 - 1980
        Part of Central Archive of the Pallottine Province

        Contains:- "Meeting between Catholicism and the African nature religion in the Yaunde region", by Abbé Frédéric Essomba-Leschner, Liturgisches Institut, Trier, 1972- Regional overview of Cameroon- Cameroon: Yaunde - Eton. On the beginnings of Christianity in Yaoundé - Cameroon, on the 10th anniversary of the mission, by Fr. Johannes Baumann, 1971- Speech by Auxiliary Bishop Jean-Baptiste Ama on the evening of December 7, 1980 at the cemetery, where Bishop Vieter is buried; invitation of Archbishop Jean Zoa of Yaunde, 3. Dec. 1980 - Letter from a former Cameroonian from Togo to Father Eugen Weber, May 23, 1966- Letter from Father Schnitzler from London about the possibilities of our former Cameroon missionaries returning to their former mission area from Nov. 24, 1924 to Father Provincial.

        Pallottines
        RMG 1.572 · File · 1831, 1838
        Part of Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

        emerged from Jänicke's missionary seminar, 1811 in the service of the London Missionary Society to South Africa, initiated 1839 d. Aufnahme d. Mission in Südwestafrika seitens d. RMG, 1808-1848 in Bethanien u. Kommagas, single letters s.a. RMG 2.598; letter to deputation in German translation and by d. Hand Theobald von Wurmbs, 1831; letter to deputation in German language by Johann Heinrich Schmelens eigener Hand, 1838; transmissions of both letters, ms;

        Rhenish Missionary Society
        RMG 2.634 a-c · File · 1931-1939, 1947-1956, 1957-1963, 1964-1967
        Part of Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

        Draft e. Agreement between the NGK (Ring Gibeon), the Finnish Mission and the RMG on the mission under the contractovambos in the police zone, 1947; curriculum vitae (copy) of Hildegard Redecker, 1951; minutes of the extraordinary meeting with the Herero foremen and church elders of the Herero community in Omaruru, 1955;

        Rhenish Missionary Society
        (M)Barnots?. Arusha
        ALMW_II._BA_A19_393 · Item · ohne Datum
        Part of Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig

        Photographer: Blumer?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 10,8 X 8,2 Description: 8 young Arushaleute? or Maasai ( after circumcision?), spears, 1 person with plait hairstyle, other short hairs.

        Leipziger Missionswerk

        Correspondence, also with Clara Weiss, 1912-1967; instructions and service contract, 1913; "One day on the way from Bukoba to Rwanda, 1913; paper on a mission trading branch in Rwanda, c. 1914; "About the beginnings in Shangugu, 1914; annual account of the farm Kawalinda, owner Boos, 1959; death announcement for Matthias Weiss, 1967

        Evangelical Missionary Society for German East Africa
        Masama. Station Diary I.
        ALMW_II._32_148 · File · 1906-1909
        Part of Francke's Foundations in Halle

        Two fiches. Also includes: - Quarterly reports 3/1906, 4/1906, 1/1907, 4/1907, 1/1908, 2/1908, 3/1908, 4/1908. 1/1909, 3/1909, 4/1909 - Annual reports 1906, 1907, 1908, 1909 - Report "On the nature of victims and spirits in the Wajagga and the idea of representation in their sacrificial customs".

        Leipziger Missionswerk
        Masama Church
        ALMW_II._BA_A19_361 · Item · 1920-1925
        Part of Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig

        Photographer: Blumer?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 10,7 X 7,9. Description: white walls, double roof made of plant fibres, in front 4 African boys and 1 African man. Note: Quality poor, dark, surface damaged.

        Leipziger Missionswerk
        Masama Christians
        ALMW_II._BA_A10_3(123) · Item · 1909-1914
        Part of Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig

        Photographer: Hohlfeld?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 16,5 X 11,0 Description: 2 m. Kanzu dressed Africans in front of rectangle. House with mud walls and roof made of plant fibres, with carving (column?).

        Leipziger Missionswerk