Sachakte

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            Sachakte

              855 Archival description results for Sachakte

              855 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
              Evangelische Kirche von Westfalen. Landeskirchliches Archiv, 3.55, 189 · File · 1903 - 1904, 1925, 1954 - 1960, 1972, 1990 - 2001
              Part of Regional Church Archive of the Evangelical Church of Westphalia
              • Contains, among other things: Report 'The latest from the Herero Mission', 1904; manuscript by A. Kuhlmann 'An African Easter', 1954; letter from a missionary to Brother Vedder on the situation in Africa, 1960<br /><br />Includes: Group picture of the missionary brothers and sisters from Namaland, ca. 1903; map of Southwest Africa, 1925; newspaper clipping '70 years of the Okahandja congregation', 1997; Joachim Zeller: Hundreds were driven to death and buried like cattle. Photo documents from the German concentration camp Swakopmund / Namibia 1904-1908, pp. 226-243, 2001n* 1903 - 1904, 1925, 1954 - 1960, 1972, 1990 - 2001, Evangelical Church of Westphalia. Landeskirchliches Archiv, 3.55 Baumann, Dr Julius; Pastor
              Universitätsarchiv Mainz, NL 47/32 · File · 1910-1929
              Part of Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz
              • 1910-1929, Universitätsarchiv Mainz, NL 47 Nachlass Karl Sapper (1866-1945)n* Clippings from:<br />- El Mundo elustrado<br />- Zeitschrift der Gesellschaft für Erdkunde<br />- Forschungen und Fortschritte<br />- Dresdner Anzeiger<br />- Nach Feierabend
              Zeitschriftenartikel
              Universitätsarchiv Mainz, NL 47/8 · File · 1892-1934
              Part of Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz
              • 1892-1934, Universitätsarchiv Mainz, NL 47 Nachlass Karl Sapper (1866-1945)n* Hydrography of the Maya Mountains in British Honduras (1934)<br />- Stromboli in September 1929 (1931)<br />- Review of Max Schmidt, Völkerkunde (1925)<br />- Am See von Yzabal, Guatemala (1892)<br />- Die Erhaltung der altindianischen Steindenkmäler (1928)
              Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, E 70 q · Fonds · 1852-1920
              Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

              Preliminary remark 1976: Already in 1807 King Friedrich had the intention to establish a Württemberg legation in Darmstadt due to the close relationship to the Grand Duchy of Hesse established by the Confederation of the Rhine and in an effort to deepen the friendly relations of the sovereigns. However, the position was not filled until 1818, with general justification. From 1825 it remained vacant until 1852, at the suggestion of the Grand Duke, envoys were exchanged again. Even after the foundation of the Reich in 1871, official diplomatic relations were maintained. The Württemberg representatives at the Darmstadt court were generally certified as envoys at the Bundestag in Frankfurt and at the Kurhessischer court in Kassel, with headquarters in Frankfurt am Main, until 1866, as envoys in Baden, with headquarters in Karlsruhe, from 1867 to 1872, and as envoys in Baden and Bavaria, with headquarters in Munich, from 1873. Until 1866, in the absence of the envoy, the Württemberg representative of the association at the Hessian customs office in Darmstadt was regarded as the official representative of his state.The representatives of Württemberg were:Karl August Freiherr von Wangenheim, Privy Council, Minister of State, extraordinary envoy and authorized minister, November 1818 - November 1823 Freiherr von Blomberg, Privy Legation Council, resident of the Free City of Frankfurt, chargé d'affaires, December 1820, December 1823 - June 1825 by Reinhard, Council of State, extraordinary envoy and authorized minister, November 1852 - November 1865 Freiherr von Linden, Minister of State, extraordinary envoy and authorized minister, December 1865 - September 1866 Oskar Freiherr von Soden, Chamberlain, Legation Councillor, Carrier, January 1867 - October 1868 von Baur-Breitenfeld, Chamberlain, Legation Councillor, Carrier, November 1868 - November 1872 Oskar Freiherr von Soden, Chamberlain, Privy Council, Extraordinary Minister and Plenipotentiary Minister, May 1873 - May 1906 Karl Moser von Filseck, Chamberlain, Privy Legation Council, Extraordinary Minister and Plenipotentiary Minister, June 1906 - 1920.The envoy had mainly formal tasks to fulfill and those of representation, since facts between Württemberg and Hessian authorities were usually conducted directly, not through the envoy. He was usually invited to Darmstadt once or twice a year on the occasion of court festivities. Correspondence, after 1873 between 50 and 70 diary numbers per year, was therefore largely limited to the provision of congratulations, the sending of official printed matter, some enquiries and occasional reporting. When these tasks were almost completely abolished with the end of the monarchy, the activities of the envoy ceased in 1920, and the representation in Hesse was therefore only a secondary function. The small amount of written material was initially incorporated into the registry of the Bundestag legation. Only in 1852 did a separate file under the file number H I (= Hessen I) begin. The tradition of the years 1852 - 1866 arrived in the archive around 1869 with the Bundestag legation about the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and became in the today's stock German Federation under the signature E 65 Verz. 57 Fasz. 414 in custody. The documents from the Karlsruhe period were delivered by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs before 1910 with other mixed files and in this association under the signature E 36 Verz. 58 Fasz. 39 No. 86 left. The files that had grown up since 1873 were probably handed over to the archives in 1933 together with the registry of the Embassy in Bavaria and incorporated into the holdings under the signature E 73 Verz. 61 Bü 20b (1873 - 1895), Bü 20c (1896 - 1905) and 20d (1905 - 1920). These parts were removed from their previous context in 1977 - 1979, listed and reorganized as correspondent and fact files according to the scheme used for other legations. This work was supervised by Udo Herkert (54 Bü in 0.1 running m., i.e. the years up to 1866), by Edgar Lersch (32 Bü in 0.05 running m.) and by Udo Herkert (54 Bü in 0.1 running m., i.e. the years up to 1866), the State Archives student Edgar Lersch (32 Bü in 0.05 running m.), The inventory provides an approximate picture of the official activity of the envoy for the years 1852 - 1920 under the aforementioned restrictions. There are narrow limits to the scientific usability, since only the correspondence of the court marshal of Westerweller with the envoy of Soden has a certain weight of its own. The parallel tradition on the Württemberg side is found mainly in the holdings of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The relevant Hessian written material should be kept by the State Archives Darmstadt. 239 Bü in 0.6 m. Stuttgart 1978gez. G. Cordes preliminary remark 1988: The completion of the present finding aid book took place with the help of the data processing on the basis of the program package MIDOSA of the national archive administration Baden-Wuerttemberg in the time from July to September 1988. the title photographs present on index cards were entered without substantial changes over screen into the system. At the same time as the inclusion of the title, the index terms were recorded, with a view to a later general index, broken down into a geographical index, a person index and a subject index. The re-indexing as well as the input was carried out within the framework of the training by the archive inspectors Corinna Pfisterer and Annette Prötzel under the guidance of the undersigned.Stuttgart, October 1988Kurt Hochstuhl

              Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, E 70 f · Fonds · 1806-1871, 1893-1933
              Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

              Preliminary remark: The legation of Württemberg at the Baden court, which existed before 1806, was retained after Württemberg was elevated to a kingdom and was occupied until 1848 by an envoy residing in Karlsruhe. During the revolutionary period, Württemberg was represented only temporarily by an official observer in Karlsruhe, since the resumption of relations in 1851 by a chargé d'affaires, until after the establishment of the German Reich in 1871 the legation was lifted. It was rebuilt in 1893 mainly for reasons of courtly representation. Until its final abolition on April 1, 1933, the Württemberg envoy at the Bavarian court, who was also accredited in Darmstadt, was also an envoy in Karlsruhe with headquarters in Munich. The representatives of Württemberg were in Baden:Carl August Ludwig Graf von Taube, Chief Postal Director, Privy Legation Council, Chamberlain, Extraordinary Plenipotentiary Minister (appointed 1806)Heinrich Levin Graf von Wintzingerode, District Governor of Öhringen, Chamberlain, Extraordinary Plenipotentiary Minister (1807)von Wimpfen, Major General, Chamberlain, Extraordinary Plenipotentiary Minister (1811)von Harmensen, Privy Council, Chamberlain, Extraordinary Plenipotentiary Minister (1812)Peter Graf von Gallatin, Privy Legation Council, Chamberlain, Extraordinary Minister and Plenipotentiary Minister (1812)Friedrich August Freiherr Gremp von Freudenstein, State Council, Extraordinary Minister and Plenipotentiary Minister (1817)Graf von Mülinen, Privy Legation Council, Chamberlain, Extraordinary Minister and Plenipotentiary Minister (1818)Graf von Bismarck, Lieutenant General, Extraordinary Minister and Plenipotentiary (1820) August Freiherr von Wächter, Privy Legation Council, Chargé d'Affaires (1847)Freiherr von Thumb-Neuburg, Legation Council, Chamberlain, Carrier (1851)Oskar Freiherr von Soden, Legation Council, Chamberlain, Carrier (1866)von Baur-Breitenfeld, Legation Council, Chamberlain, Carrier (1868)Oskar Freiherr von Soden, Privy Council, Chamberlain, Extraordinary Minister and Plenipotentiary Minister (1893)Karl Moser von Filseck, Privy Legation Council, Chamberlain, Extraordinary Minister and Plenipotentiary Minister (1906)Until 1871, the Minister represented Württemberg in all matters arising in relation to Baden, only for special reasons were negotiations in Karlsruhe not conducted by the Minister, but by special representatives. The volume of work was relatively high and varied in the initial period up to about 1820 - this becomes clear, for example, in the territorial negotiations at that time or in the large number of uses in private affairs - and then fell noticeably, so that envoys von Bismarck could be called upon several times for special missions to northern German courts. After 1850 the mutual consultations between the Württemberg and Baden governments on issues of major European and German policy as well as the internal problems of both countries intensified. In addition, the increased administrative intensity and urgent questions of economic legislation were now also reflected in the business volume of the legation. After the reestablishment in 1893, the envoy was given almost exclusively formal tasks and those of representation. As a rule, he spent a few days in Karlsruhe once or twice a year, usually on the occasion of the court ball or another court event. Negotiations between Württemberg and Baden authorities were usually conducted directly, no longer via the envoy, so that his correspondence - about 100 diary numbers per year - was largely limited to the transmission of congratulations, inquiries and official correspondence and occasional indirect reporting. With the end of the monarchy, these tasks were almost completely eliminated. However, the legation was formally retained and from 1926 on again entrusted with smaller commissions, such as reporting in Baden newspapers. The tradition is not homogeneous. In the first years individual case files predominate, from about 1815/1820 - as with other Württemberg legations - a purely formal classification principle, such as "concepts and reports" or "rescripts and notes" and correspondence files. Mainly new business areas were filed after 1850 by subject, such as "railway files". But it did not come to a continuous registry management, since the new fascicles were put on as required and, provided with a sequential Arabic number, were attached to the already existing files at the end. In this way, the registry consisted of 72 in 1848, 104 in 1866 and dates back to 1818. From 1893 - 1933 the entire written material was filed only according to the chronological order. The content of the written material is also very unequal. Some envoys took part of the processes, so their instruction, to their private files. A number of events only appear in the diary, as they were passed on in original form without additional documents being gathered in the legation. After 1893, for parallel enquiries to Bavaria, Baden and Hesse, often only one joint draft was produced and filed with the Bavarian registry. Some things seem to have been lost or destroyed, for example when the passport register only covers the period from 1811 to 1816. as far as can still be seen, the present collection was archived in four deliveries together with documents of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and other legations and was added to the collection of "Legation Files" (E 70 and E 73). The documents summarised in inventory E 70 Verzeichnis (Ablieferung) 32 covered the period up to 1817, those of inventory E 70 Verzeichnis 33a the period from 1818 - 1871 and arrived after 1872. The material grown up in Munich was delivered until the year 1910 around 1920, the rest was probably incorporated immediately after the abolition of the legation in 1933 and the stock E 73 Verzeichnis 61. The reorganization could orient itself only little at the given condition. The archival records that had grown up at the legation were separated from the rest of the association and the provenance holdings "Württembergische Gesandtschaft in Baden" were newly formed. The originally planned division into two main parts, "I. 1806 - 1871" and "II. 1893 - 1933", was cancelled when the finding aid book was drawn up and all title entries were subordinated to the classification scheme prescribed by the distortion of other legations. Among them are the reports to the King or the Minister of Foreign Affairs and the general, not thematically limited correspondences with him, among others the first main group. The other files were separated according to their different subjects without regard to the previous state of order, and each of them was re-compiled into the other main groups. The breakdown of these was based on the total business volume. It was not advisable to align the plans with those of other legations, such as Berlin or Munich, which had been preserved. Certain inequalities in the distortion have remained in so far as some subjects, such as "German Question" etc., have been left out, Despite their complexity, a further subdivision was not permitted, whereas on the other hand after 1893 only individual cases still occur or until 1850 almost all affairs of private persons were classified under "Uses", but afterwards also under the subject headings such as "Reporting", "Justice - Individual Cases" and others.In the present finding aid book the indication of the registry signatures, i.e. the tuft counting with Arabic numerals, was omitted for the documents up to 1871, since they could be determined only partly without difficulties and references to these numbers are found only imperfectly in the last diaries before 1871. The previously valid archive signatures E 70 Verzeichnis 32 Faszikel 1-9 and E 70 Verzeichnis 33a Faszikel 1-33 were, however, noted in the title entries. Various old tuft numbers had to be applied when a new tuft was composed entirely or partially of old tufts. For the files from 1893 - 1933 the indication of the old archive signature could be omitted, since with the previous purely chronological storage - apart from isolated fact file beginnings - the written material from 1893 - 1899 was united in E 73 directory 61 fascicles 18 d, from 1900 - 1905 in 18 e, from 1906 - 1913 in 18 b and from 1914 - 1933 in 18 c.As diverse as the content of the title recordings may be, there are clear limits to their scientific evaluation: the continuous reporting to the king up to 1847 forms a closed whole, the other correspondence only covers partial aspects. The same often applies to the fact files, especially if minutes, excerpts or replies to enquiries were forwarded in original form. Parallel transmission is therefore of greater importance. On the Württemberg side, the holdings of the superior Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the State Ministry are to be mentioned primarily in the Main State Archives, on the Baden side in the General State Archives Karlsruhe the departments 47 - 49 Haus- und Staatsarchiv - II. The inventory was recorded and arranged by the signatory 1974 - 1976 with the temporary cooperation of the aspiring inspectors Bader, Gutenkunst and Kramer and comprises 724 tufts in 6.1 m. Stuttgart 1976gez. G. CordesThe completion of the present finding aid book took place with the help of the data processing on the basis of the program package MIDOSA of the national archive administration Baden-Wuerttemberg in the time from May to August 1987. For the various technical assistance is to be thanked the national archive management. The title recordings present on index cards were entered without substantial changes over screen into the system. At the same time as the inclusion of the title, the index terms were recorded, with a view to a later general index, broken down into a geographical index, a person index and a subject index. The MIDETIT method separates the indices on the basis of corresponding control characters. A concordance was not created for the following reasons: The dissolution of the old serial files and the subsequent creation of material files resulted in the fact that the archives of a former bundle are today located at up to 121 different sites. This basically calls into question the practicability of a concordance that could only have been achieved with unjustifiable effort. The relations, reports and rescripts found in Büschel 34 during the indexing of the holdings of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, E 36-38, Verz. 2, were subsequently added to the holdings, and the title entries were included in the present find book. These title entries with the respective serial number and the suffix a are included in the index.Stuttgart, December 1987Kurt Hochstuhl

              Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, E 70 v · Fonds · 1807-1817, 1865-1873, mit Vorakten 1
              Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

              The Württemberg Embassy in Switzerland was established in the first half of 1807 in connection with the conclusion of a trade agreement between Württemberg and Switzerland. After the recall of the envoy in 1817 it remained unoccupied(1). It was not until 1865, again in the course of a trade agreement, that it was re-established and existed until a large part of Württemberg foreign policy was transferred to the Reich in 1871(2). Württemberg envoys in Switzerland were: Johann Baptist Martin Edler Arand von Ackerfeld, Legation Council (June 1807-Jan. 1812) August Friedrich von Batz (Febr. 1812-Jan. 1814) Carl Philipp von Kaufmann, Privy Legation Councillor (Jan. 1814-Dec. 1817) Friedrich Heinrich Karl Freiherr Hugo von Spitzemberg (1865-Oct. 1866) Maximilian Adolf Freiherr von Ow, Privy Legation Councillor and Chamberlain (Oct. 1866-July 1871). The envoy of Ow proposed in 1866 the establishment of a consulate in Bern, whose consul was to represent him during his stays in Florence as an envoy in Italy and "take care of the current business, unless it requires special diplomatic treatment", for example passport matters; this was approved by King Charles in November 1866, consul in Bern became the merchant Albert Rooschütz (Nov. 1866-May 1873). In the absence of the envoy, his registry was kept and continued by the consul, also from 1871 until the dissolution of the consulate in 1873(3). The seat of the envoy was presumably Zurich until December 1816, and then permanently Bern(4). In 1865-1871 the legation and the consulate were located in the same building, probably in the house Hirschengraben 171, where the envoy lived(5). The files of the first registration layer (1807-1817) were probably sent to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs soon after the envoy was recalled. In the "Archive Register" of 1873(6), only the files of the second layer (1865-1873) are listed; these came to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1877. The delivery to the Staatsfilialarchiv and classification into the later holdings E 70 under directory numbers 52 and 52 a (for the first or second registration layer, with overlaps) probably took place before 1896, since the files of directory 53 were already there at that time(7). The State Archives presumably received the holdings together with other diplomatic files and holdings of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1901(8). The lists of singles are kept in holdings E 61 x volume 35 and 37. The corresponding counter-files from the registry of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs are to be found in holdings E 50/16 (Ministry of Foreign Affairs concerning the Ministry of Foreign Affairs). In the first registration layer, correspondence series predominate, especially for relations (diplomatic reports to the king); documents on international treaties were created as fact files. In the second registration layer, both subject files and subject series were formed, and finally both registration layers contain individual case files on subjects' affairs.the categories I-III of the second registration layer were recorded in 1971 by archive assistant Herwig John, the processors of the remaining files could no longer be determined.the old registration signature of the "archive register" serving as an order criterion is listed as pre-signature 1, the old archive signature as pre-signature 2.The stock E 70 v comprises 110 tufts (1.8 running m).Stuttgart, in May 2000 Hartmut Obst(1) cf. E 70 v Bü. 43(2) cf. E 70 v Bü. 56 and 61(3) cf. E 50/60 Bü. 32(4) cf. E 70 v Bü. 44(5) cf. E 70 v Bü. 57(6) in E 50/60 Bü. 32(7) cf. E 50/60 Bü. 32(8) cf. K. O. Müller, Das Württembergische Staatsfilialarchiv in Ludwigsburg, in: Archivalische Zeitschrift 1925 Vorsignatur 2 - Order number: E 41 Verz. 63 Fasz. 44110 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 164 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 192 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 196 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 21 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 265 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 297 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 284 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 2101 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 2102 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 2103 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 32 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 33 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 34 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 35 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 36 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 37 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 38 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 39 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 310 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 311 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 312 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 313 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 347 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 414 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 415 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 416 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 417 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 418 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 419 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 420 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 421 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 422 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 423 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 424 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 425 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 448 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 526 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 527 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 528 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 529 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 530 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 531 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 532 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 533 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 534 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 535 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 536 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 537 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 538 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 549 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasc. 639 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 640 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 641 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 642 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 643 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 650 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 744 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 745 E 70 Verz. 52 Fasz. 746 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 152 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 154 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 170 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 2104 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 2105 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 3106 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 3107 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 3108 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 451 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 457 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 458 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 459 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 460 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 555 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 593 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 581 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 582 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 695 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 694 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 6100 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 690 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 687 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 683 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 691 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 688 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 689 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 775 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 7109 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 798 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 799 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 767 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 753 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 785 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 877 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 879 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 868 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 869 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 880 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 886 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 871 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 972 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 973 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 974 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 1063 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 1078 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 1076 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 1066 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 1056 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 1061 E 70 Verz. 52 a Fasz. 1062

              Working Conditions Act
              BArch, NS 52/70 · File · Jan. - März 1942
              Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

              Contains: Working Time Ordinance Ordinance for the Protection of Female Indigenous Forces Ordinance for the Protection of Juvenile Indigenous Workers

              Landesarchiv NRW Abteilung Westfalen, K 001, 5459 · File · 1899, 1907-1908
              Part of Landesarchiv NRW Department of Westphalia (Archivtektonik)
              • Enthaeltvermerke: Darin: Denkschrift betreffend die Entwicklung von Kiautschou, 1898; Erzeugnisse der Deutschen Kolonien, Sammlung für Lehrzwecke, Schulsammlung für den Naturwissenschaftlichen und Geographischen Unterricht, Berlin (1907); Denkschrift betreffend die Gründung der Doa-Plantagen-GmbH (in Deutsch-Ostafrika )n* 1899, 1907-1908, Landesarchiv NRW Abteilung Westfalen, K 001 Oberpräsidium Münster
              We use

              Minutes of the conferences of the Usaramo missionaries, 1892, 1895, 1896, 1897, 1898; baptismal form according to the Common Prayerbook, about 1900; map sketch of Usaramo northern half), 1 : 450,000, by W. Göttmann, about 1900; Report on an inspection trip by Missionary Liebau to Lungwi about Maneromango, 1900; "Die Zukunft von Usaramo, 5 p.., ms. 1902; Protocols and correspondence concerning the handover of Usaramo to Berlin I, 1901-1903

              Evangelical Missionary Society for German East Africa
              war reports

              Reports on the war in East Africa by Pastor Siegfried Delius, 1914-1917; reports on the battle at Jassini, sinking of the "Königs-berg, Battle of Tanga, etc. by Weiss, Nickel, Gregorius and Warth

              Evangelical Missionary Society for German East Africa
              War Archive (Stock)
              Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, M 1/11 · Fonds
              Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

              Preliminary remark: On 3 January 1907, War Minister von Marchtaler ordered the establishment of a special war archive, abbreviated to K. A., of the Central Department of the War Ministry. It shall administer and maintain the existing old files of the War Ministry, its so-called old registry, keep and process the officer stock lists kept until 1874, other older files of the War Ministry or the War Ministry. of its departments, if for historical or other reasons they seemed to be worthy of preservation, to collect documents of permanent military or war-historical value from authorities, military units and private individuals, from whom they may retain title, and to reclaim the archival records handed over to the Haus- und Staatsarchiv in 1900 as soon as space conditions permitted.In addition, surveys on the history of the Württemberg army and troops and on the personal circumstances of former officers, as far as they were to be taken from the existing officer stock lists and were primarily of a statistical nature, surveys on circumstances and institutions in the Württemberg army, as far as the then existing ones were not touched and as far as they resulted from the files kept at the war archive, were transferred to the war archives.In addition to the library of the Ministry of Württemberg, which remained in the Central Department, the new institution had to acquire as many troop histories, biographies of Württemberg officers and rankings, court and state handbooks as possible, as well as several rooms in the building of the Ministry, which were too small altogether, and which did not allow for a satisfactory arrangement of the archives. This did not change until 1914, when the new building of the War Minister Jum could be occupied. The management was taken over by the colonel (retired) Wilhelm Strack von Weißenbac, who had been aggregated to the minis rium and who was still assigned a paymaster aspirant and, if required, individual non-commissioned officers and teams were commanded to provide assistance. The incoming documents - archive, library and collection material - were to be divided uniformly into 16, Roman-counted "series", whose titles were "Königliches Haus und Land", "Organisation und Formation des Militärs", "Feldzüge", "Handbibliothek", "Bau- und Festungspläne", "Stempelsammlung" and others. The further splitting into "series" resulted in signatures of up to five sections for the individual volumes and tufts (e.g. 11010 A f). To what extent preserved, very concise find book, which breaks off with Group III "Campaigns", covers all or only parts of the documents collected and recorded up to the outbreak of World War II, must remain open. On the whole, the war archives did not show any significant development: during the war Strack still had a small collection of newspaper clippings on individual fights, until he died on August 9, 1917. At almost the same time, Major Winter, who had been commanded to provide services in the War Archives since 1915, was placed at the disposal of the Deputy General Command, while Major Osterberg, retired Adolf Osterberg, was assigned to provide services to the War Ministry on 1 June 1915, namely its newly formed War History Department. By the end of the war the number of employees had risen to 27, including those employed only temporarily, 41, mostly reserve officers and Landsturm members. At the end of September 1916 the department was renamed "Kriegsarchiv 1", abbreviated to Kr. A. 1, while the previous Kriegsarchiv was given the name "Kriegsarchiv II", abbreviated to Kr. A. II. : The War Archive I had the task of collecting war diaries made by the field troops, viewing them and sending them to the Deputy General Staff of the Army in Berlin for transcription and examination, to show the "share of the Württemberg troops in the World War" in a sober scientific presentation by some officers who had been damaged by the war and had been ordered to the War Ministry, and to show them, with the help of the former War Minister von Schnürlen, the "share of the Württemberg troops in the World War", (1)in the series "Schwäbische Kunde aus dem großen Krieg" to describe and publish individual combat experiences in more popular form, (2)to create a collection of portraits of officers and army officials killed during the war and to publish them in the form of a commemorative plaque, "outstanding deeds of officers and individual troop divisions" and "heroic deeds", d. to present and publish the results of the war in a more popular form.h. to process reports requested by the field troops on the deeds of the non-commissioned officers and teams awarded the Iron Cross 1st Class or the Golden Medal of Military Merit, and to forward them to the local press, to talk about special achievements in combat in lectures and to make the texts available to the public. As the name suggests, they were presented immediately at the express request of the latter, then evaluated in the departments of the War Ministry, and finally, after a certain period of time, handed over to the War Archive I for permanent safekeeping and inspection for the aforementioned war-historical series. In January 1916, on the instructions of the War Minister, the thematic collection of newspaper clippings, which had been kept by the department since the beginning of the war and which had been added at that time until March 1915, was transferred to the War Archive I in order to be brought up to date here as quickly as possible. The individual subject areas of the collection were now designated with capital letters and further subdivided as of October 1917. As with the Central Department, excerpts from the Schwäbisches Merkur and other daily newspapers were collected, including the "Berner Bund", the "Münchener Neueste Nachrichten", and the "Vossische Zeitung", among others, while the Württemberg party papers pronounced as "Beobachter" or "Tagwacht" continued to be evaluated by the Central Department for the series remaining there. In August 1918, the collection was transferred to the newly created "Department H" of the Ministry, later "Ministerial Department". This department subdivided the excerpts from July into 17 new subject groups, which lasted until November, occasionally December 1918, and were brought to an end again in the War Archive after the dissolution of the Ministerial Department at the beginning of 1919. In the spring of 1918 there were five (working) groups a-e, some of which overlapped somewhat in their competence, and in the autumn of 1918 - after the formation of the ministerial department - they were regrouped into the groups a-d. The groups a-e were then divided into two groups. (3) : After the end of the war, Lieutenant Colonel (retired) Osterberg was reassigned to the General Command on 13 January 1919. A few days earlier, the staff of the Kriegsarchiv I had already elected Friedrich Hötzer, the vice sergeant of the Landwehr, from among its members to the board of directors. At the same time, the temporary closure was discussed, but it did not take place. In any case, the former commander of the mountain regiment, Major Theodor Sproesser, was commanded to the War Archive I on 23 April 1919.The "Kriegsarchiv" (War Archive), which Sproesser then managed until the end of 1920, united the previously separate War Archives 1 and II; it continued to form a department of the War Ministry and from August 1919 was subordinate to its successor, the Reichswehrbefehlsstelle Württemberg, and from October 1919 to the Landeskommandanten, while the personnel was made available by the Heeresabwicklungsamt Württemberg or the subordinate Abwicklungsamt of the former War Ministry. After protracted negotiations about the future shape of the military archives and, among other things, about a possible continuation of the work "Anteil der württembergischen Truppen am Weltkrieg" (Share of the Württemberg troops in the World War), the war archive was moved at the end of December 1920 from the building of the former Ministry of War in Stuttgart, Olgastraße 13 to the former rifle magazine of the secondary artillery depot in Stuttgart, Gutenbergstraße 109, and in January / March 1921 formally integrated into the then Reichsnebenarchiv, the future Reichsarchiv branch.As business transactions, as mentioned above, at first almost and later still to a considerable extent ran through other departments of the Ministry, mainly the Central Department, no systematic filing of documents developed for the War Archives during its existence. The main part of the Kriegsarchiv II consisted of archive material received from other provenance sites; Kriegsarchiv I focused on the drafts and, in part, fair copies of the series and individual writings processed here, followed by the reports of the troops received for safekeeping, among others.In the Reichsarchivzweigstelle / Heeresarchiv a part of these documents has been combined with other relevant documents to form new pertinence stocks: The various newspaper cuttings collections of the Ministry were added to the later stock M 731 "Druckschriften und Zeitungsausschnittsammlungen" and in individual cases continued until 1938/1942.The field postal letters were partly newly compiled and by a multiplicity of further letters they belong today to the holdings M 750/1-3 "field postal letters I-III". The photographs collected for the work "Anteil der Württembergischen Truppen am Weltkrieg" (share of the Württemberg troops in the World War) should form the basis of the holdings M 705/1 "Königsalben" (king's ointments) under inclusion of no longer individually ascertainable extensions.Photographs of fallen officers were stored in the stocks M 707 - M 709 "Portrait Collections I-III" without this always being possible to prove. The few remaining fact files and numerous report series were compiled by the Army Archives Council Captain of the Reserve Franz Knoch to the stock "War Archive". Furthermore, Knoch worked in parts of the archival material collected by the former Kriegsarchiv - for example from the former registry of the Generalquartiermeisterstabs until 1870 -, then "historical" records of other departments of the ministry, other authorities and troop units, i.e. mostly summarizing reports and memoranda, and finally still "various scattered files and records of Württenberg army members, which were purposefully incorporated into the Kriegsarchiv collection for lack of other classification possibilities". Knoch apparently felt himself that the documents united in this way in one inventory did not quite fit together, nevertheless he completed the find book in 1943. Probably in the same years the majority of the now available archive units were bound in booklet or book form, as was usual at that time with the Army Archives, even if this was not always satisfactory, especially in the case of "General Correspondence". Joachim Fischer and archive inspector candidate Walter Wannenwetsch, the documents classified here from the period up to 1870, then from 1983 onwards Senior State Archives Councilor Dr. Günter Cordes and archive employee Werner Urban further individual pieces in order to insert them into other holdings according to their provenance. Accordingly, only those documents remained which had grown up in the course of business of the War Archives (I and II). In addition, the collection of newspaper clippings kept by the Kriegsarchiv was taken from the aforementioned holdings M 731 "Druckschriften- und Zeitungsausschnittsammlung des Kriegsministeriums" and reintegrated here. In contrast, the other collections of the War Archive mentioned above - field mail letters, photographs - were converted to such an extent that their original condition could no longer be reconstructed in the Army Archives, and they were therefore left as archival collections. As early as 1972/75, Fischer created a separate finding aid book for the business diaries of the War Archive, which had not yet been recorded, and which could now be incorporated unchanged into the new repertory. The order and structure of the holdings are based on the original tasks of the war archives, as Fischer and Wannenwetsch had intended according to a preliminary draft. The order - as well as the naming and spelling - of the listed formations is based on the "Übersicht Friedens- und Feldformationen (Behörden und Truppen) des ehemaligen XIII. Armeekorps und deren Abwicklungsstellen" published in 1920 by the Heeresabwicklungsamt Württemberg (Military Processing Office Württemberg). The creation of separate local, personal and expert directories for the files/volumes and newspaper clippings is intended to facilitate access to the two different groups of archival records. In addition, the keywords for the files/volumes are based on Westenfelder's comprehensive subject title photographs, revised by Fischer, Cordes and Urban. On the other hand, the title recordings made by former Colonel Kurt Hiller around 1940 for the unfinished inventory of newspaper clippings by the Army Archives employee Oberst D. Kurt Hiller, which have now been taken over almost unchanged, go beyond general details of the contents and, especially in the notes on the contents - and thus also in the present index - bring conspicuous details. However, the material content of the newspaper clipping volumes is much more extensive, as can be seen from the content overviews compiled by the War Archives and bound to the volumes; however, it was not possible at present to compile the content of the new finding aid book in detail, which was desirable in itself, mainly for personnel reasons.In the reorganisation of the holdings, 66 archive units were combined with other identical subjects, 24 further, mostly double copies were removed; 349 tufts and volumes were integrated into other holdings in accordance with the provenance, while 2 newspaper cuttings were inserted here again. The collection now comprises 1032 volumes and tufts in 17 metres of shelving. Literature: Joachim Fischer: Das württembergische Kriegsarchiv. On the history of the military archives of Württemberg. In: From the work of the archivist. Festschrift für Eberhard Gönner (Publications of the State Archive Administration Baden-Württemberg Vol. 44). Stuttgart: Kohlhammer 1986Stuttgart, December 1985Cordes notes: Comments:(1) The aim of this work was to avoid a situation in which the achievements of the Württembergs would be underestimated in a future General Staff Organisation. The first three volumes were presented to the king on the occasion of the government's anniversary in 1916.(2) Two volumes, edited by Lieutenant Robert Silbereisen of the Reserve and Captain Georg Schmückle of the Reserve, were published by the end of the war.(3) See the appendix

              Vorlesung zur Südsee
              Universitätsarchiv Mainz, NL 47/37 · File · 1905-1906
              Part of Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz
              • 1905-1906, Universitätsarchiv Mainz, NL 47 Nachlass Karl Sapper (1866-1945)n* Fotografien<br />- Manuskript<br />- Hörerliste der Vorlesung
              Verträge
              Universitätsarchiv Tübingen, UAT 407/49 · File · 1907-1963
              Part of Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen
              • Contains mainly: Publishing correspondence and publishing contracts.<br />Also includes: Sale of Henning's scientific library to the Geological-Palaeontological Institute Tübingen (28 April 1948).n* 1907-1963, University Archives Tübingen, UAT 407/ Edwin Hennig (1882-1977), estate
              Landeskirchliches Archiv Stuttgart, D 104, Nr. 51 · File · 1893-1938
              Part of Regional Church Archive Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)
              • 1893-1938, Landeskirchliches Archiv Stuttgartn* Contains, among other things<br />- Letters from and to Heinrich Stahl (1875-1954) and Pauline Stahl<br />- 1 billion marks 'for Mother's Day from your old man'<br />- Printed passenger list of Lucie Woermann 1913<br /><br />Includes:<br />- dried coffee leaves from Lobethal<br />- feathers of probably African birds and dried leaves
              Vermischte Zeitungsbeiträge
              Universitätsarchiv Tübingen, UAT 407/66 · File · 20. Jahrhundert, 1941-1968
              Part of Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen
              • 20th century, 1941-1968, Universitätsarchiv Tübingen, UAT 407/ Edwin Hennig (1882-1977), Nachlassn* Contains, among other things: 'Im Berliner Gebirge'. O.O. and D; 'A. Trendelenburg 95 years' and 'Are dinosaurs still alive?'. In: Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung, 10 August 1939; 'The distant past and the present of East Africa'. In: Nürtinger Tagblatt, 8 March 1941; 'Is nationalism a historical fossil?'. In: Tübinger Studentenzeitung, n.d.; 'We are in no hurry --'. In: Deutsche Volkszeitung, undated; 'Richtungspunkte im Strudel des Zeitgeschehens. In: Zeitung des Volkes No. 3, May 1950; 'Tuisko-Wanderfahrten'. In: Wilhelmiten-Zeitung, Christmas 1950; 'Rationing of water with increasing consumption?'. In: Stuttgarter Zeitung, 19 July 1950; 'Für ein Ost-West-Gespräch' (Letter to the editor). In: Tübinger Chronik, 7 March 1951; 'Tuisko-Partie in Schwarz'. In: Wilhelmiten-Zeituung, around 1952; 'Love, not hate!'. In: Mitteilungen des westdeutschen Kreises der internationalen Konferenz zur friedlichen Lösung der deutschen Frage Sonderblatt Nr. 3, August 1953; 'Hundert Jahre Afrika' (Africa. In: Stuttgarter Zeitung, 19 February 1954; 'Am Kreuzweg'. In: Schwäbische Zeitung, 6 July 1954; 'Deutschlands Aufgabe - so oder so?'. In: Deutsche Freiheit No. 19, 1 October 1957; 'Scientific experiences with intolerance' and 'The German Christmas idea'. In: Reality and Truth, December 1957; 'Colonialism - Nationalism'. In: Deutsche Freiheit No. 1, 5 January 1958; 'Wanderers Zauberspruch'. In: Blätter des schwäbischen Albvereins No. 3, 1958; 'Eine Schwebebahn für Tübingen?'. In: Tübinger Chronik, 9 February 1959; 'Flag as symbol'. In: Stuttgarter Nachrichten 17 October 1959; 'Experience of special personalities'. In: Berliner Wilhelms-Gymnasium, newspaper of former pupils, undated; 'Johann Ludwig Krapf - his life and work'. In: Schwäbisches Tagblatt, 23 April 1960; 'Colonialism' (letter to the editor). In: Schwarzwälder Bote, 25 October 1960; 'South Africa at the crossroads'. In: Hohenzollerische Zeitung, 16 September 1960; 'Raichberg - Nägelehaus'. In: Blätter des schwäbischen Albvereins, August 1967; 'Olympischer Geist', in: Stuttgarter Zeitung, 2 November 1968; Also contains: Copies of letters to the editor on various topics, 1950-1973.
              Landeskirchliches Archiv Stuttgart, G 64, Nr. 74 · File · o.D., 1857-1900
              Part of Regional Church Archive Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)
              • undated, 1857-1900, Landeskirchliches Archiv Stuttgartn* Contains, among other things:<br />- Directory of the institutions and associations of the Inner Mission and Humanity Care in Sigmaringen (undated).)<br />- Sigmaringen Women's Association for the Care of the Poor<br />- Appeals for donations, grants and donations to the Gustav Adolf Foundation and Basel Mission<br />- Consistory decree on the Inner Mission (1883)<br />- Care of the war wounded<br /><br />Includes:<br />- Statutes of the Klein-Kinder-Rettungs-Verein in Stuttgart (o. D.).D.)<br />- 'Mittheilungen über das Evangelische Stift zu Coblenz', offprint (1881)<br />- 'Statuten des Jerusalems-Hülfs-Vereins Berlin', offprint (1860)<br />- 'Appeal for participation in the founding of a healing and care institution for stupid children in the Rhineland & Westphalia in the district of Gladbach', offprint (1859)<br />- 'Wort und Tat. From the work of the Central Committee for the Inner Mission of the German Protestant Church in 1924', Berlin [1924] (taken from the Stuttgart Central Church Library collection)
              Landeskirchliches Archiv Stuttgart, F 19, Nr. A 168 · File · 1893-1943
              Part of Regional Church Archive Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)
              • 1893-1943, Landeskirchliches Archiv Stuttgartn* Contains: 1. winter relief organisation, various welfare matters, clubs, associations, communities (Gustav Werner Foundation, Protestant and Catholic women's clubs, Basel and Liebenzeller Mission, Blue Cross, etc.), 1909. Welfare matters, associations, organisations, communities (Gustav Werner Foundation, Protestant and Catholic women's associations, Basel and Liebenzell Mission, Blue Cross, etc.), 1909-1943<br />2. External Mission, 1920-1942<br />3. Internal Mission, 1903-1943<br />4. District Charity Association, individual cases of support, 1894-1934<br />5. Red Cross, war nursing, 1914-1937<br />6. Gustav-Adolf Association, 1895-1915<br />7. Bible Association, 1893-1915<br />8. Evangelical Federation. Admission of men's orders, 1911-1917<br />9. Association for the care of released prisoners, 1893<br />10. Deaconesses, 1894-1910<br />11. Oberamtssparkasse Geislingen, 1909-1912<br />12. Youth associations, youth welfare, establishment of Geislingen Youth Welfare Office, 1919-1938
              Landeskirchliches Archiv Stuttgart, A 26, Nr. 509 · File · 1910-1924
              Part of Regional Church Archive Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)
              • Contains:<br />- Pentecostal movement, Stünersche movement, Liebenzeller Mission (South German Association for Evangelisation and Community Care), Flammeanus Community, Wielandt Unity Church, Heinzelmann sect, Brillinger Community, resignations to the Anthroposophists etc.n* 1910-1924, Landeskirchliches Archiv Stuttgart
              Universitätsarchiv Freiburg, B0001 / 382 · File · 1923-1933
              Part of University Archive Freiburg (Archivtektonik)

              Contains: among others: Garden Associations; Student Associations; Hiking Associations; Schools; Music Associations; Association for the German Abroad; Hausfrauenbund; Lecture Doegen, Prussian State Library; Women's Associations; Anthroposophical Society; Himmelsbach Company; Caritas; Sports Associations; Swiss Benefit Society; Singing Associations; German National Association of Assistants; Reichsbund der Kriegsbeschädigten etc.; Christian Community e.V.Freiburg Student Aid; Association of Catholic Academics; German Officers' Association; Friends of the City's Art Collections; Breisgau Association for Aviation; Nature Research Society; Baden Home; Art Research Society; Business and Professional Associations; German Institute for Scientific Education; Social Democratic Party; National Association Against Alcoholism; German Reich Railway; Breisgau Association Schauinsland; Protestant Association of the Gustav Adolf Foundation; Görresgesellschaft; Catholic Assembly 1929; Reichsbund der Kinderreichen; Marianische Kongregation; VolkshochschuKolonialgesellschaft; Allgemeiner Deutscher Automobilclub; Akademisch Literarische Gesellschaft; III Internationaler Friedenskongress; Süddeutscher Rundfunk; City of Freiburg; Studiengesellschaft für Automobilstraßenbau; Süddeutscher Jugendbund; Internationale Arbeiterhilfe; Gefangenenfürsorge; Überlassung für politische Veranstaltungen, allgemein; Darin: "3. International Peace Congress Freiburg im Breisgau, 1923;

              Universitätsarchiv Freiburg, B0001 / 380 · File · 1916-1918
              Part of University Archive Freiburg (Archivtektonik)

              Contains: Military; Red Cross; Badische Gefangenenfürsorge; Frauenvereine; Kulturwissenschaftliche Gesellschaft; Badische Jugendwehr; Deutsche Kolonialgesellschaft; Akademischer Hilfsbund; Kindergärtnerinnenenseminar; Deutsche Gesellschaft zur Bekämpfung von Geschlechtskrankheiten; Schools; Charity events in war; Caritasverband; Soldatenräte Oberbaden; Darin: Timetable for the Caritas School of the German Caritas Association, 1918;

              Universitätsarchiv Freiburg, B0001 / 381 · File · 1919-1922
              Part of University Archive Freiburg (Archivtektonik)

              Contains: among others: Military; women's associations; Association for the German Abroad; Association for Volunteer Nurses in War; Young Citizens' Association; Art Society; German Society for Combating Sexual Diseases; Alsace-Lorraine Displaced Persons Welfare; Schools; Student Associations; Caritas Association; Stenographer Associations; Badischer Heimatdank; Municipal food department; friends of nature; committee for the holding of scientific lectures; adult education centre; historical VereiReichslimeskommission; Freiburger Fürsorge für heimkehrende Auslandsdeutsche; student courses for workers; central office of the University of Strasbourg; housing for cafeteria sisters; cultural society; Red Cross; Social Democratic Party; Association of Homeless Upper Silesians; Association for Literature and Lecture Art; Political Science Working Group; Südwestdeutscher Hochschulkreis; Fichtehochschulgemeinde; 800th anniversary of the city; Lecture of the Städtische Bühnenvolksbund; Association for Weekly and Home Care; German Colonial Society; Company Himmelsbach; Marian Congregation; Police; Nature Research Society; Freiburg Student Aid; Youth Hostel Association; Association of Former Flyers; Association of German Book Printers; Black Forest Association; Tax Office; Trade Association; Ostmark Association; Badisches Weinbauinstitu; Synagogue Council; District Teachers' Association; Electrical Exhibition; also: Guest lecture by Pidro Bosch-Gimpera, 1921;