Contains only: Letter from the D e u t s c h e K o l o n i a l g e s e l l l s c h a f t to send the honorary diploma of 26 June 1895.
Bennigsen, RudolfSchreiben
209 Archival description results for Schreiben
Contains among other things: Letter of Th. Barths to Holleben from Aug. 1908
Barth, TheodorCorrespondence on cooperation; Letter from Breutel and Roentgen/Neuwied, 1823 1826; Letter from Breutel/Berthelsdorf, 1837; Short Memorandum on the Nyassafrage, v. Baudert, 1925; Call for an interest-free loan for the best of the ecclesiastical budget of the community of Herrnhut, Dr., 1930; O that soon your fire burned, call for donations for the 200th anniversary, Dr., 1932
Rhenish Missionary SocietyNachlaß:; Fotokopien von maschinenschriftlich übertragenen Briefen u. Abschrift d. Testamentes, 11 p.; Newsletter to the missionaries working with Carl Ludwig Hegner in Africa: "How far may the newly arriving missionary give room to the first impressions and disappointments?"1867; Letter of reply of Carl Ludwig Hegner, after the letter was circulated, 8.9.1867; Letters of Carl Ludwig Hegner to Inspector Friedrich Fabri and Ludwig von Rohden concerning matters of marriage, 5 letters from Pella, 1867-1869; elaboration on the awakening of spiritual life, signed I.N.J.A.., 1875; last will and testament, 1913;
Rhenish Missionary Society- description: Contains, among other things: - Thanks for interesting letter, which is not presentable for Wilhelm II. because of the last sentences - - Please to Zimmermann, to write again the "book content" from his letter copies - - Current reading material of Princess Hermine: Letters of Frederick the Great to Fredersdorf 25.4.1926, Secret State Archives of Prussian Cultural Heritage, BPH, Rep. 192 Nl Zimmermann, E. Zimmermann, Eugen (Dep.) Contains et al: <br />- Thanks for interesting letter, which is not presentable for Wilhelm II due to the last sentences <br />- Please to Zimmermann to write again the "book content" from his copies of letters <br />- Present reading material of Princess Hermine: Letters of Frederick the Great to Fredersdorf
Contains: Reorganization of the inspection of the torpedo system, transcript by Erich Edgar Schulze for a meeting in the Reichsmarineamts on 29 Oct. 1913 Tirpitz to Ferdinand Graf von Zeppelin concerning naval airship "L2", 10 Nov. 1913 Greek buying interest in a German armoured ship, Oct. 1913 - Jan. 1914 Type development of the Great Cruiser, transcript by Erich Edgar Schulze for a meeting in the Reichsmarineat on Nov. 6, 1913 Location of a colonial court, Dec. 1913 1913 Reichstag speech on budget for Kiautschou, 1914 materials for the Reichstag negotiations on the navy budget, including graphic representations on the personnel and material development of the navy, 1914 Georg Alexander von Müller in particular on the navy budget, March - May 1914 press commentaries on the 65th anniversary of the Reichstag, 1914 Birthday of Tirpitz, March 1914 Prince Heinrich of Prussia on the English Navy and German-English Relations, September 1, 1911 Letter to Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg and the State Secretary of the Reich Treasury, Hermann kühn, concerning Navy Budget 1915, May 22, 1914
Tirpitz, Alfred vonContains: August von Heeringen, May 1910 Gustav Bachmann, May 1910 and March 1911 Grand Duchess of Baden for the naming of the liner "Nassau", June 1910 press article about rumours of a resignation of Tirpitz, July 1910 correspondence with Duke Jaohann Albrecht of Mecklenburg about Tsingatu, July - Aug. 1910 correspondence with Eduard von Capelle, July 1910 correspondence with the Chief of the Admiral Staff of the Navy, Max von Fischel, Aug. 1910, bem. 1910, rem. Memorandum of Fischel not enclosed Wilhelm von Lans on torpedoes, Aug. - Sept. 1910, March 1911 Sale of ship to Turkey. Correspondence especially with Emperor Wilhelm II, Georg Alexander von Müller, Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg and the State Secretary of the Reich Treasury, Adolf Wermuth, July - Sept. 1910 Correspondence with Rudolph Rittmeyer about his naval war history, Sept. 1910 Hunold von Ahlefeld, July - Nov. 1910 Hubert von Reuber-Paschwitz, July 1910 Reichsmarineamt: Minutes of meetings of liner ships and large cruisers 1911, Aug. 1911, Aug. 1910 Hunold von Ahlefeld, July - Nov. 1910 Hubert von Reuber-Paschwitz, July 1910 Reichsmarineamt: Minutes of meetings of the ships and large cruisers 1911, Aug. 1910, Aug. 1910, Aug. 1910 - Oct. 1910 Telegram change with Grand Duke Friedrich II: and Grand Duchess Luise of Baden, Sept. and Dec. 1910 Telegram from Crown Princess Cecilie of 14 Jan. 1914, cf. No. 182 Eduard von Capelle zum deutsch-Eglischen Flottenagrement, Sept. 1910 Philipp A. Mumm von Schwarzenstein concerning the death of the chief of the Kreuzergeschwader, Erich Gühler, 22. Jan. 1911 telegram of thanks to Emperor Wilhelm II. on the occasion of the wedding of Ilse von Tirpitz, Jan. 1911 congratulations of Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg on his 62. birthday, 19. birthday, 22. January 1911 March 1911 Negotiations on German-English naval technical exchange of information: Memoranda and Positions of Tirpitz, Feb. - June 1911 Wilhelm Höpfner concerning Alfred Meyer-Waldeck as Governor of Kiatschou, 7 Apr. 1911 Reichstag Speech of Tirpitz concerning the German-English naval technical exchange of information, Feb. - June 1911 Wilhelm Höpfner concerning Alfred Meyer-Waldeck as Governor of Kiatschou, 7 Apr. 1911 Reichstag Speech of Tirpitz concerning the German-English naval technical exchange of information, Feb. Fleet Laws and Navy Budget 1899 - 1908 (excerpts) Statements of German and English Government Representatives on Fleet Construction, Dec. 1908 - March 1911 Fleet Construction Plan 1912 - 1917 Correspondence with the State Secretary of the Reich Treasury, Adolf Wermuth, on the subject of the German Navy's Navy's budget. Resolution of the German Fleet Association on fleet construction, June 1911 Eduard von Capelle on negotiations on a new Reichsmarineamt building, June 1911 Correspondence with Georg Alexander von Müller, particularly on job matters, July 1911 Ferdinand Graf von Zeppelin, July 1911 Command Relationships of the Naval Forces in War: Immediatbericht sowie Schreiben des Chefs des Admiralstabs der Marine und des Marinekabinetts, Juni - Sept. 1911 Harald Dähnhardt concerning appointments in the Reichsmarineamt, 13. June 1911 Correspondence with the chief of the Admiralstabs der Marine, August von Heeringen, Juni - Aug. 1911 Thoughts about the development of fleet tactics Efforts for a German-English fleet agreement (excerpts from files), Jan. 1907 - June 1911
Tirpitz, Alfred vonContains above all: Letter to Class as chairman of the Rhein-Main-Gaues and the local group Mainz of Hasse, Lehr and of local groups and members of the association about association affairs Contains among other things..: Fleet Issue Colonial Policy Issues Burensammlung
Foreword Origin and history of the holdings Provenance or inventory creator of the holdings B was the Greven administrative office (or Greven municipal administration for files after the dissolution of the Greven office on 15 May 1954). The collection begins with the introduction of a standing registry in 1932. The older files in Prussian thread-stitching were recorded as a separate collection by Joseph Prinz in 1938 ("old registry", today inventory A). Stock B is the older part of the files of the Greven administrative and municipal administration from 1932 to approx. 1986, which were indexed by finding lists according to the model file plan of 1954 (publisher: NRW Landkreistag, NRW Städtebund, Gemeindetag Nordrhein und Gemeindetag Westfalen, see file C 13023) and which extend up to 1952. The more recent files created after 1952 are to be found in stock C, whereby overlaps of the running times could not be avoided. The model file plan consists of ten main groups. In 1954, the intention was to 'gradually reorganise the file plan of the local administration in accordance with this model file plan' (letter of 7 August 1954 from the municipal director in C 13023). This was implemented in the following years. The main groups are: 0 General administration 1 Public safety and order, Civil status 2 Schools 3 Culture and sport 4 Social welfare, Youth welfare, Equalisation of burdens 5 Health and veterinary administration 6 Building and surveying administration 7 Economy and transport 8 Economic activity and public institutions 9 Finances and taxes The files from the period from 1932 to 1952 were inserted into the order of the model file plan in 1965-1975 by the honorary archivist Karl Schwartze, who formed the inventory. He had agreed this measure with the Landesamt für Archivpflege, namely the scientific archivist Dr. August Schröder. Regarding the original registry order of these files, Schwartze notes in the preliminary remark to the reorganization of the registry of January 1975 (ZwA 32842) that it had corresponded "roughly to the order of the repertory created by Dr. Prinz" (today inventory A), which consists of five main groups (I: Reichs- und allgemeine Verwaltung, II: Kommunalverwaltung, III: Abgaben und Steuern, IV: Polizei- und Gerichtswesen, V: Militärwesen). However, these classification features are only likely to be found in the oldest files of inventory B. In October 1931, the Greven office received a "completely operational administrative registry" according to the Regis decimal system (B 3162, pp. 2-31). The official regulations for the official administration of the Greven Office of 9 April 1936 also refer in § 3 to the list of files drawn up by a main file plan "for the entire administration according to the system of ten" (cf. B 3160, p. 4). In the summer of 1936, the administration ordered a file plan for municipal administrations from the Soennecken company in Bonn, which was structured according to the Dewey decimal system and divided into seven main groups: general administration, police, education and culture, welfare, construction, municipal economy, financial administration. It is unclear whether he replaced the Regis decimal system and changed the registry order. (B 3162, page 43). In any case, in 1938 the use of the uniform file plan apparently published in 1937 by the German Association of Municipalities "was not undertaken and was also not intended", among other things "because the registry of the Greven Office was still relatively new" (cf. B 3162, pp. 46f.). A complete file list has not been preserved, but the preserved parts of the file list show that the file plan remained in force until 1954. The assigned file numbers had five digits, the first three of which indicated the main file group, file group and file subject group, followed by a separator (usually a dash or slash) and the two-digit numbering of the file within the subject group. Examples of individual file directories provide the following files: B 3161: Main group 1: General administration (1945) ZwA 25045: Main group 3, schools and education (1939, contains register sheets from 1931) ZwA 25057-25059: Main group 7, construction (1939-1954/1963) The foreword to the finding aids compiled by Schwartze corresponding to the 10 main groups of the file plan, dated January 1975 (ZwA 32842). Although this date does not mark the end of the work on the collection, it does represent a striking cut that can be equated with a regular transfer to the City Archive. The holdings comprise 3164 units of description with a running time of 1932-1952 as core period, about 500 files each extend into the period before to 1830 and the period after to 1995. The volume amounts to about 100 linear metres. The priorities are derived from the ten main groups mentioned above and fully cover the administrative activities of the Greven administration. History and tasks of the registry draughtsman The Greven administration administered the Greven office as a local authority for the area of the present-day city of Greven and the municipalities belonging to the Greven office. Since the separation and division into three parts of the municipality of Greven in 1894, these have been the municipalities of Greven-Dorf, Greven left of the Ems (with the building communities of Aldrup, Westerode, Herbern and Hembergen and, from 1925, the settlement of Reckenfeld), Greven right of the Ems (with the building communities of Pentrup, Wentrup, Hüttrup, Schmedehausen, Bockholt, Fuestrup, Guntrup and Maestrup) and the municipality of Gimbte. In 1950, the municipality of Greven-Dorf received city rights and in 1952 merged with the municipalities of Greven rechts der Ems and Greven links der Ems ("Reunification") to form the city of Greven. In 1954 the Greven office was dissolved and an administrative community was formed between the town of Greven and the municipality of Gimbte, which was finally incorporated into Greven in 1975. The extensive tasks and responsibilities of a municipal administration can be determined concretely from the administrative structure and business distribution plans or organization plans of the Greven administration. They're here: Administrative Structure and Business Distribution Plan 1939 (B 3160) Organizational Plans 1949, 1951, 1953, 1954 (C 13021) According to the administrative structure, the next highest registry administrator is the administration of the administrative district of Münster, whose archival shares are now to be found in the Munster City Archives and contain numerous references to Greven affairs. Police matters can also be found in the Landesarchiv NRW, Abteilung Westfalen: Ortspolizeibehörde Amt Greven 1942-1945. Reference: Two files of the Stadtwerke zum Elektrizitätswerk, VEW, Stromversorgung 1920-1955 can be found in the Stadtarchiv Greven in Dep. 70, No. 37 and 38. Festschriften: - Leo Drost, Festschrift zur Wiedervereinigung der drei Grevener Gemeinden, Greven 1952. - Leo Drost, Amt Greven 1844-1954, Rückblick auf das Amt Greven, [Greven 1954]. The registration of the files from 1931 was started in 1961 at the suggestion of the city director Dr. Werra and continued from 1965 by the teacher and honorary archivist Karl Schwartze until 1975, from 1976 to 1986 by the retired registrar and part-time archivist Heinrich Schmücker. Schwartze formed the inventory with registry items until about 1970, arranged it and in 1975 compiled the find lists ("repertories") for the ten main groups. There are no indications regarding its evaluation criteria or cassations. The same applies to Schmücker's supplements until 1986. The order according to the model file plan from 1954, also for the files from 1931 onwards, has already been explained above. The division of the holdings along the cut-off year 1952 was a decision made in 1990 by the archivists Christoph Spieker and Angelika Haves. Thus, inventory B was separated from the more recent files for the period 1932-1952 in order to make it quickly usable through the computer indexing, which also began in 1990. Since inventory B covers the period of National Socialism, which is already decimated by wild cassations that are difficult to reconstruct, it was also decided not to make any further cassations for files of this duration. The new indexing from finding list 0 was carried out from 1990 to mid-1999 by Christoph Spieker (B 3000-B 3908). Stefan Schröder continued his deep development in August 1999 and completed it in October 2010. With the completion of the distortion of finding list 1, the distortion was changed to a flat development (from B 4381). In the finding lists 2 to 9, therefore, as a rule, no or only a few contained notes were made. To a small extent, title changes were made when these did not sufficiently reflect the content of individual files. The main groups, groups and subgroups of the model file plan were retained as the classification. With the new indexing from 1990 onwards, new signatures (from B 3000 onwards) were assigned instead of the ambiguous old file numbers, which, however, are available in the EDP indexing as "old archive signatures" for the purpose of concordance. An exception is the signature B 4937, in which the maps and plans taken from various files are listed. Since this compilation is cross classification groups, this file has been placed in front of the classification groups in the index under the heading "Unsystematized". It should also be noted that there are special features in classification group 0-6 (elections and votes): The classification subgroup 0-61 (elections to the Bundestag) also contains the Reichstag and Landtag elections of 1933 with the signature B 3691; 0-62 (Landtag elections) also contains the referendum on the state constitution of North Rhine-Westphalia 1950 with the signature B 3689 in addition to the election to the Landtag; the classification subgroups 0-63 (municipal elections) and 0-64 (other elections) contain district, office and municipal elections in various combinations. As early as 1965, the files were stored lying in labeled folders, which contained metal parts and plastic hangers that were not suitable for archiving. The metal parts contained in the files were removed parallel to the re-drawing from 1990. Partially, but not continuously, oversized maps and plans were taken from the files, filed separately flat and listed as B 4937 with reference to the provenance context. Since 2007, the holdings - with the exception of bound official books - have been deacidified in stages within the framework of the NRW state initiative "Substanzerhalt des Landes NRW". This work is expected to be completed by early 2015. In the course of this conservation measure, the folders and hangers were exchanged for folders and hangers suitable for archiving, provided with the new signature and copies of the old labeled folders pre-stitched. At the same time the file sheets were paginated so that an improved citability is given. Methods of use and citation Individual archival documents are blocked due to statutory periods of protection. Blocking notices were not made continuous, and the blocking notices contained in the finding aid book were only partially checked. The absence of blocking notices does not therefore automatically mean a right of inspection, an inspection is carried out individually. The digitisation of B 3091 to B 3095 (protocol books official representation Greven 1935-1954, municipal council Greven-Dorf 1935-1950, municipal council Greven left 1935-1952, municipal council Greven right of the Ems 1935-1952 and municipal representation Greven 1950-1954) from classification group 0-22 (supreme municipal organs) is currently being realised, so that they can be used online in the archive portal NRW at any time by 2015 at the latest. Please quote us as follows, if available with sheet number or page reference: StaG B [no. of file] sheet [sheet no.] or StaG B [no. of file] S. [page no.] Example: Stadtarchiv Greven, Bestand B, Nr. 3022, sheet 13 is to be quoted as: StaG B 3022 sheet 13. References: - Detlev Dreßler/Hans Galen/Christoph Spieker, Greven 1918-1950, 2 volumes, Greven 1991 and 2. verb. Aufl. Greven 1994 - Joseph Prinz, Greven an der Ems, 2nd extended edition in 2 volumes, Greven 1976/77 - Volker Innemann, Industrialisation in Greven, Greven 1992 - Indra Ecke, Die Volksschule zur Zeit des Nationalsozialismus, Staatsexamensarbeit, Münster 1998 - Christoph Leclaire, "Unser Pole - ein decständigen Kerl", Zwangsarbeit im Amt Greven, Magisterarbeit, Münster 2003. - Jochen Wilsmann, The Reorganization of Political Life in the Greven Office after 1945, State Examination Work, Münster 1995 - Stefan Schröder, Displaced Persons in the District and City of Münster 1945-1951, Münster 2005 Greven, June 27, 2014 Dr. Stefan Schröder
Length: 207 sheets.Reference number:HI XIII 3c 3IIA11 I 7 347-52,245.Damage: cat. B (can only be used as a digital copy) Contains: Gift from various groups of fish, including migratory fish of the Rhine from E. vom Rath, wildlife in the Gulf of Naples from Louis Hagen, wildlife of East Africa from the Africa traveller B. Kreuser by the board of the Verein zur Förderung des Museums für Naturkunde (Eduard Lent), approval of funds for the establishment of the animal groups (1907, with cost estimate of the taxidermist Heinrich Sander, Cologne, and plan for the establishment of the East African animal groups, provision of funds by the association); willingness of the Museum für Handel und Industrie, Wiedenfeld, to provide limited rooms in the Severinstorburg for the preparation (July 1907); contract between the city, Laué, and Sander regarding the preparation of the East African animals (31. July 1907); reports of the director Janson about the progress of the preparation work, inspection with Lent (1907/1908); acceptance of the work, listing of the animal groups, payment of the installments to Sander by the association (1908/1909); collection of association contributions for the museum promotion (1910/1923); donation of a collection of bird skins and other animals by the district judge Dr. Steinkopf, now Mülheim, which he captured in Cameroon, granted funds for preparation (1910); donation of a gorilla by the association, Lent (1910); correspondence with Hansen concerning payment of the tax on a donation by Franz Clouth for purchase of the Jakob Scheiner collection, Torburgen and street pictures (March 1911); complaint by Janson concerning donation of a butterfly collection by Miss F. Voelkers, Rodenkirchen, suggestion for the donation for drawing lessons in schools and sale of surplus pieces (February-March 1910, with statement of the heads of the secondary schools); report of Willi Foy concerning the use of the granted funds for the acquisition of objects of South East European gypsies, arrows from southwest New Guinea, cult figures of the Pueblo Indians, a collection of the Caroline Islands (September 1911); donation of animals by the physician Dr. Bermbach (November 1911); purchase from the Zoological Station in Naples (1911); application Jason for the processing of the butterfly collection of Eduard Lent by the head teacher Dr. Rupp (1912); purchase of a collection of Dr. Steimann, Bonn, concerning petrefacts from the Eifel from the Middle Devonian with the support of the association, especially from Theodor von Guilleaume and Richard Grüneberg (1912); determination of the invoice for von B. Wiemeyer, Warburg, sold rocks (August 1912); donation of a bust of Lent by the heirs, installation in the museum, procurement of a granite plinth (1911-1912); cost estimate of the carpenter C. Stratmann concerning two exhibition tables (1912); transfer of funds from the association, Heidmann, Louis Hagen, concerning an elephant group (1912); reorganization of the beetle collection of Lamers, Düsseldorf, by the rector W. Geilenkeuser, Elberfeld, grant of funds (1910-1911, with claim of Geilenkeuser); sale of duplicates from collections, permission, booking of income; regulation concerning the purchase of objects from collections of foreign mission stations by the Museum für Volkshygiene, the Natural History Museum and the Rautenstrauch-Joest-Museum (1912); consultation of the constitutional commission concerning the acquisition of collections, butterfly collection of Philipps (1913); Acceptance of Becker's donation to the Museum of Natural History (1913); submission by Major Scheunemann concerning the purchase of two monkeys from Cameroon belonging to him and exhibited in the museum, a gorilla and a great ape (1913); offer by the carpenter Caspar Stratmann concerning three viewing tables (1913); offer by the taxidermist concerning a bison bull received at the zoo (July 1914); letter by Dr. Wildschrey concerning a rock loop in the Devonian slate of the Siebengebirge, work on the geology of the Siebengebirge, acquisition of the rock collection of the main teacher Schonauer in Cuxenberg near Oberdollendorf concerning the Siebengebirge (1913); order of a collection of the deceased taxidermist Jehn in Rheinbreitbach donated by the association by Prof. Dr. Dr. Wildschrey, a professor of geology of the Siebengebirge and a professor of geology of the Siebengebirge. Rupp, remuneration (1914); Janson's submission concerning the takeover of the colour show from the Werkbund exhibition, considerations on the construction of a sample show concerning natural colours (July 1914); Heinrich Sander (July 1914) rejects the offer of a collection by the taxidermist; correspondence with Jason and Czaplewski concerning the selection, purchase of objects from collections of foreign mission stations (1914); Verein zur Förderung des Museums für Naturkunde, Gustav v. Mallinckrodt concerning Dr. Janson from his activity as a senior teacher at the Gymnasium in the Kreuzgasse, rejection because of the wartime ((1915); remarks by Heinrich Sander "Die Tierwelt in moderne volkstümlichen Museum für Naturkunde (1914, machine writing, 6 pages, written for the Kölner Zeitung); offer Sander concerning his exhibition in the Werkbund exhibition "Farbenquellen aus der Tierwelt, Verkaufsangebot, abgelehnt (1915); Inheritance Carl Bodewig, correspondence with the executor Alfred Schmidt, inheritance tax (1915, excerpt from will); donation of a collection of small butterflies by consul Hans Leiden (1917); inheritance of a butterfly collection of the pensioner Gustav Stroemer, correspondence with the executor Ludwig van Rossum (1918/1919); order of butterflies from collections of different mission stations by Prof. Dr. Peter H. H. Schmidt; order of butterflies from collections of different mission stations by Prof. Dr. H. H. H. H. H. Rupp (February 1916); donation of a collection by Minister-Resident Max Freiherr von Oppenheim, consisting of minerals, bird eggs and nests, conchylias and corals (May/June 1919); cash affairs, double payment of an invoice amount to the company A. Zausmer, Gdansk (1914); donation of a collection of fossils by Prof. F. Winterfeld, Mülheim, by the association (April 1920); proposal of the consul Heinrich Maus concerning the exchange between the Cologne Museum and the Museo Nacional de Historia Natural in Mexico (1920); donation of a sum of money by Paul Franke for the purpose of preserving the collection objects by the taxidermist Sander (July 1920); correspondence with Dr. Walter Voigt on the collections and library of the Naturhistorischen Verein der prussischen Rheinlande und Westfalens und Übernahmeangebot von Köln und Düsseldorf (1912-1920); donation of a group of kingfishers by Max Kunkel, Cologne, gift tax (1922); gift tax on the donation of the physician Dr. Frey, Wesdorf, bird group Haubentaucher am Nest (1921/1922); Please W. Voigt concerning meeting date because of emergency of the association by the money devaluation (1922, with report Janson about the inspection and the collections of the natural historical association, 14. November 1922, with the note Adenauer concerning advice in the administrative conference, investigation of storage rooms, withdrawal of an offer of surrender by the association due to support from the University of Bonn (1922-1923); circular letter of the association for the promotion of the Museum für Naturkunde (Richard v. Schnitzler and Gustav v. Mallinckrodt, concerning increase of the membership fee due to the devaluation of money) (1923); donation of the Karl Grube over 4 billion Marks (1923).
2 Letter for occupancy of the house
Rhenish Missionary SocietyContains above all: - Minutes of the General Assemblies 1937 and 1940 - Annual Report 1937 - Financial questions during excavations (including the Boghazköy excavation 1937) and for publications - Letter from the Working Committee (Secretary Andrae to the members demanding the resignation of Jewish members from the Society (25.5.1938) - Invitations - Minutes of the Working Committee meetings - A. Nöldeke: Short Report Warka XI. 1938/39 (Special Print of the German Research Foundation) - Board Elections. after the death of the Chairman of the Bussche-Haddenhausen in 1939/1940;
Contains among other things: Decree of the Chief of the High Command of the Wehrmacht of June 22, 1941, on the Administration of the Occupied Territories of the USSR, 1941, on the Utilization of the Rouble Means of Payment, which had Arisen at the Introduction of the Zloty Currency in Galicia - Letter of July 27, 1942, from the Reich Minister of Finance to Governor General Frank
Contains among other things: Salaries of Employees of the German Cultural Institute in Paris in Comparison with Salaries of Employees of the Wehrmacht - Letter of 28 Apr. 1942 from the Reich Minister of Finance to the Foreign Office
(introductory letter to the book: "Im Herzen von Deutsch-Südwest")
Contains: Writing etc. of the 'Volksbund für das Deutschtum im Ausland' (VDA); Deutscher Kolonialdienst Darin: Brochure 'Das geht Dich an', edited by VDA
Contains among other things: Fiftieth anniversary of the D e u t s c h e K o l o n i a l g e s e l l l s c h a f t Amendment to the Statutes and Personnel Issues in 1933 Dissolution of the D e u t s c h e K o l o n i a l g e s e l l s c h a f t a f t and Foundation of the R e i c h s k o l o n i a l b e a f t - Letter of 10 July 1936 from SS Oberführer Bauszus to the Auswärtige Amt Ordinary Representatives' Meetings of the D e u t s c h e K o l o n i a l s e l l s c h a f t on 15 May 1936 and 13 June 1936 - Confidential Reports
Contains: Letter to arrow about his participation in the congress - Program - Report about the negotiations of the congress - Handwritten notes arrow
Pfeil, Joachim vonContains among other things: Information from Ulrich Rauscher on the conditions for the takeover of "März", 7.11.1916; letter from a civilian prisoner from the Indian concentration camp Ahmednagar, 15.10.1917; plan for the foundation of an "International Newspaper" 1921/22; submission by the Association of German Newspaper Publishers on the situation of the German press, 26.1.1921; petitions against the classification of the city of Pfullingen in place class C, Febr. 1922 and against the decree of the Reich Chancellor concerning the liquidation of French private property in Germany, July 1917; communication of Conrad Haußmann to Max Warburg for the election of the German envoy in China, n.d. (Early 1920?) Report to the Prime Minister of Württemberg, von Weizsäcker, on a meeting on 2 October 1914 with the Reich Chancellor, 12 October 1914; R e i c h s k o l o n i a l a m t responded to the complaint of an intern, previously a civil servant resident in Duala, Cameroon, about his salary, 8 October 1914.6.1917; Contestation of the Schultheiss election in Wildbad because of the ballot papers used, 1922; Memorandum on the necessity of the freight reduction for food, no. D. (Early 1920?)
Haußmann, Conradonly incoming letters to director Wilhelm Kotthoff; mainly admission of pupils etc.; letter from parents from Prussian provinces; advertising letter from reciter Richard Dufki-Wegner, April 4, 1911; greeting from Dr. Albert Sleumer from a trip through South America, June 26, 1911; letter from philosopher and pacifist Friedrich Wilhelm Foerster, 12. July 1911, also interested in his lecture in Vechta; 2 loans of archival documents of the Landesarchiv to the teacher Dr. Clemens Pagenstert, 1911-1912; concert offer of the violinist Ernestine Boucher, 29 October 1911; 2 letters of the goldsmith van den Wyenbergh in Kevelaer because of
Contains: Letter from Werner Schramm (South Cameroon) - Memorandum
Pfeil, Joachim von- 1931 - 1933, Secret State Archives of Prussian Cultural Heritage, VI. HA, Nl Grimme, A. Grimme, Adolf Contains: <br />- Writing Frobenius' about the broadcast of his book about an expedition to Africa <br />- Congratulations. description: Contains: - Writing Frobenius' about the broadcast of his book about an expedition to Africa - - Congratulations.
Proposals for the Celebration of e. Community Mission Festival, 1828; Minutes of the Barmer Missionsgesellschaft, 1828; Instruction for the Deputies of the Cologne Miss-Ges., 1828; Statutes of the Deputation of the Rhine. Miss... Draft, 1828; Lecture by the deputies of Cologne, Wesel, Elberfeld and Barmen, July 1828; Protocol on the unification negotiations of the Four Misses, July 1828; Draft of the Statutes and continuation of the constituent negotiations in Cologne, Sept. 1828; Extracts from the minutes of the constituent negotiations, Sept. 1828; Justification of the Wesel Misses.Ges. not to join the Association, Sept.1828; Dec. 1828; Dec. 1828; Proposals to the Statutes of the Cologne Miss. company, January 1829; Letter Pastor Klönne, Kalkar, concerning the union of Wesel, Febr. 1829; Letter Pastor Klönne, Kalkar, about election of deputy Davidis, August 1829
Rhenish Missionary SocietyLetter from London, 1832; Letter from Luxembourg, 1834; Letter from Lyngbye/Denmark, 1832; Letter from Odessa/Russia, 1834; Letter from Petersburg, 1833; Letter from Stavanger, 1833-1834; Statutes (Love for Stavanger Missions-Forening), Dr., 1834
Rhenish Missionary SocietyContains also: Letter of the Command S.M.S. "Arcona" to the Imperial Command of the Cruiser Division: Filling of Coal and Provisions, 09. Nov. 1897 List of Secret Objects to be Destroyed According to the Classified Information Ordinance, 17. Aug. 1914
Contains: among other things collection of newspaper reports about monument consecration war memorial a. "Black Lord" and on cemetery Wachenheim 15.7.1928; mixed letters and prints; circular letter concerning elections z. Landwirtschaftskammer, 1906 (to mayor's office!); printed instruction for the leadership of the local chronicles (by the clergymen), 1857; print: Facts. The letter sent by the French Protestants to the Protestants of the neutral states, answered by Dr. Adolf Bolliger, Pfarrer v. Zürich-Neumünster, Konstanz [1915]; vertraul. Print: Liebesgaben dt. Geistlicher und seelsorgerliche Hilfe für kriegsgefangene Deutsche (Verf. F. M. Knote, ca. 1915/16); Aufruf/Sammelliste der Ludendorff-Spende für Kriegsbeschädigte, June 1918 (with collection result of 612 Marks; note: put into circulation by the board of the Frauenverein Mölsheim, second ex.); various collections and collection lists Rev. Müller 1915-1919 (e.g. for prisoners of war, ambulance train; sacrificial day for the colonial war donation Aug. 1918; call for the donation of Christmas gifts, with collection list; donation for infant and toddler protection); 25th anniversary of Kaiser. National donation for the mission (1913); Sacrifice Day for the German Fleet, 1.10.1916 (donor lists); Kaiser and Volksdank for army and fleet. Christmas Gift of the German People: Collection List; Call: Heimatdank an heimkehrte deutsche Kriegsgefangene, April 1918 (Worms district; Grand Duke, Red Cross), including: lists of results of the collection; government circular concerning education of the rural population about the situation (including food security), Oct. 1916; Volks-Emden-10-Pfennig-Spende, Nov. 1914; implementation of a war economic course in Frankfurt May 1917; Der ev. Heidenbote. Organ of the Evangelical Mission Society in Basel 88th year no. 6, June 1915 (obituary to fallen Georg Jung, born 11.9.1892 Mölsheim, died Westfront 25.03.1915); Kirchlich-statistische Tabelle ev. Pfarrei Mölsheim-Wachenheim für 1949; Reisebescheinigung Pfr. Reinhard Müller, April 1915 (Worms-Wachenheim); questionnaire (executed) of the Oberkonsistorium to the parish offices concerning war work of the evangelical church, April 1919 (among other things collection results); further letters; leaflet for field postings, Dec. 1914; call of the Hess. Landesverein vom Roten Kreuz 2.8.1914 zum Kriegsbeginn: Aufforderung zu Gelabenaben); Collection list for the Red Cross, 1914 (Wachenheim); List of nurses from Mölsheim and Wachenheim; various other collection lists, e.g. Nationalstiftung für die Hinterbliebenen der im Krieg Gefallenen, 1915; Call for the Ludendorff donation (in favour of war-damaged persons), May 1918 (Chairman of the Vereinigung für Kriegsbeschädigtenfürsorge im Kreis Worms: C. W. Frhr. v. Heyl, MdR, Wirkl. Rat); Call for the delivery of eggs, Confirmations of egg deliveries (here: as poultry farmer Pfarrer Müller, Wachenheim) Darin: hs. Welcoming speech on the occasion of the arrival of the 1st expellee transport in Wachenheim 16.6.1950 (56 persons, ev. priest); egg duty 1919; Red Cross bandage priest Müller; Wormser Zeitung v. 02.02.1915; cover with various food stamps (e.g. bread card, bread stamps, bread coupons; Reichsfleischkarten, Zuckerkarte; also soap card of the municipal association of Worms, charcoal card, twist card); card: Sammel-Hilfsdienst der Schuljugend des Kreises Worms
- description: Contains: State aid and support for mission activities for: The Co-operative of St. Karl Borromäus (Motherhouse Trebnitz i. Schl.); with it: annual report on the overall activity of the Congregation of the Merciful Sisters of St. Karl Borromäus, both the German Province with the General Motherhouse Trebnitz and the Oriental, Polish and Czechoslovak ones, in 1931; list of foreign branches; also: news on the election of the Superiors General. - The Co-operative of the Sisters of St. Love; including: Information on the foreign activities of the Co-operative of the Sisters of St. Love from the Paderborn Motherhouse, school year 1930, 1931, 1932, 1933, 1934; Status of schools and institutions in South America, 1930; Report by Sister Liboria Brinkmann on her trip through the United States of North America, 16 Oct. 1934; also: Criminal proceedings against Sister Anselma, née Gertrud Nickes, Superior General. - The Mission Cooperative of the Servants of the Holy Spirit, Steyl, including: overview of the activities of the Steyler Missionary Sisters; report on the activities of the Steyler Missionary Sisters of 28 Sept. 1934; also: recognition of the legal capacity of the association "Missiezusters" to Steyl, congregation Tegelen (Holland). - The Co-operative of the Sisters of St. Joseph; above all: Renovation of the monastery St. Trudpest near Freiburg i. Br.; with it: Letter of the Imperial Chancellor to D. Dr. Marx, M. d. R. - Die Genossenschaft der Schwestern der Göttlichen Vorsehung (Motherhouse Münster). - The Cooperative of the Sisters of U. L. Frau (Motherhouse Mühlhausen, District Düsseldorf); including: The Congregation of the Sisters of U. L. Frau and their activities abroad. - The Cooperative of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd (Motherhouse Münster). - The Benedictine Sisters; including: Report on their Mission Activities; Mission Statistics, 1928 - The Ursuline Sisters and the Association of German Ursuline Monasteries (headquarters in Haselünne, Westphalia). - The Dominican Sisters. - The Franciscan Sisters of Salzkotten; with: presentation of the foreign activities and branches. - The Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, Hilltrup; including: Report on their missionary work. - The Missionary Sisters of the Precious Blood, Neuenbeken. At the same time: Foundation of the Church Advisory Office for the Work of German Women Religious Abroad; Annex A. Distribution of requested aid for the promotion of cultural work of German nuns in South America. B. Proposals for grants to promote the cultural work of German nuns in South America. Entry permit for Polish aspirants to German monasteries; among others: Situation of the hospital St.-Borromäus-Stift in Könitz (Pommerellen). Citizenship of Sister M. Gregoria Kratz of the German-American Co-operative, Mission Jan José as designated Prioress of the Dominican Monastery Altenhohenau. Identification of a monastery "Marie von Rickenbach" Includes:<br />State aid and support for missionary activities for: The Co-operative of St. Karl Borromäus (Motherhouse Trebnitz i. Schl.); with it: annual report on the overall activity of the Congregation of the Merciful Sisters of St. Karl Borromäus, both the German Province with the General Motherhouse Trebnitz and the Oriental, Polish and Czechoslovak ones, in 1931; list of foreign branches; also: news on the election of the Superiors General. - The Co-operative of the Sisters of St. Love; including: Information on the foreign activities of the Co-operative of the Sisters of St. Love from the Paderborn Motherhouse, school year 1930, 1931, 1932, 1933, 1934; Status of schools and institutions in South America, 1930; Report by Sister Liboria Brinkmann on her trip through the United States of North America, 16 Oct. 1934; also: Criminal proceedings against Sister Anselma, née Gertrud Nickes, Superior General. - The Mission Cooperative of the Servants of the Holy Spirit, Steyl, including: overview of the activities of the Steyler Missionary Sisters; report on the activities of the Steyler Missionary Sisters of 28 Sept. 1934; also: recognition of the legal capacity of the association "Missiezusters" to Steyl, congregation Tegelen (Holland). - The Co-operative of the Sisters of St. Joseph; above all: Renovation of the monastery St. Trudpest near Freiburg i. Br.; with it: Letter of the Imperial Chancellor to D. Dr. Marx, M. d. R. - Die Genossenschaft der Schwestern der Göttlichen Vorsehung (Motherhouse Münster). - The Cooperative of the Sisters of U. L. Frau (Motherhouse Mühlhausen, District Düsseldorf); including: The Congregation of the Sisters of U. L. Frau and their activities abroad. - The Cooperative of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd (Motherhouse Münster). - The Benedictine Sisters; including: Report on their Mission Activities; Mission Statistics, 1928 - The Ursuline Sisters and the Association of German Ursuline Monasteries (headquarters in Haselünne, Westphalia). - The Dominican Sisters. - The Franciscan Sisters of Salzkotten; with: presentation of the foreign activities and branches. - The Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, Hilltrup; including: Report on their missionary work. - The Missionary Sisters of the Precious Blood, Neuenbeken. At the same time: Foundation of the Church Advisory Office for the Work of German Women Religious Abroad; Annex A. Distribution of requested aid for the promotion of cultural work of German nuns in South America. B. Suggestions for grants for the promotion of cultural work of German nuns in South America.<br />Entrance permit for Polish aspirants to German monasteries; e.g..: Situation of the hospital St.-Borromäus-Stift in Könitz (Pommerellen).<br />Citizenship of sister M. Gregoria Kratz of the German-American Co-operative, Mission Jan José as intended prioress of the Dominican monastery Altenhohenau.<br />Determination of a monastery "Marie von Rickenbach" Sept. 1926 - Aug. 1936, Federal Archives, BArch R 901 Foreign Office
Contains: Definition of competence between the foreign organisation of the NSDAP and state foreign offices, 1938 claim by Deutsche Lufthansa for transport remuneration for letters from the Foreign Office, 1939 maintenance costs for German lecturers abroad, 1939 letter from the Reich Minister of Science, Education and Popular Education to the Reich Minister of Finance, 1939 Die Konsularakademie in Wien, internationale Akademie für Politik und Volkswirtschaft (Druck), Vienna 1937 Staff level of the Austro-Hungarian Empire Oriental Academy in Vienna, Nov. 1894 Establishment of the Consular Academy in Vienna - Design by Dr. Walter Schmitt, former director of the foreign policy training centre of the NSDAP in Berlin-Dahlem as well as recording of the Legation Council of Etzdorf/Foreign Office, 1939 relief measures in Spain on the occasion of the liberation of Spanish territories by the national Spanish troops, 1939 compensation to neutral countries for sinking their ships - Question of Budgetary Jurisdiction, 1939 Planned Expansion of the Economic Department of the German Embassy in Moscow due to Impending Economic Agreement with the Soviet Union, 1939
- on the Gauger/Heiland family: Joseph Gauger is the first person documented in the collection with originals. He was descended from a Swabian family that can be traced back to the 16th century and that early confessed to Pietism. His father, Johann Martin Gauger (1816-1873), was head of the Paulinenpflege, his half-brother Gottlob Gauger (1855-1885) was in the service of the Basler Mission and was active 1878-1888 in Africa at the Gold Coast and afterwards in Cameroon, where he died. Joseph Gauger's brother Samuel (1859-1941) was also a pastor and last dean in Ludwigsburg. Born in 1866 in Winnenden, Joseph Gauger became an orphan early on, at the age of 13. He graduated from the Karlsgymnasium in Stuttgart. He first attended the teacher training seminar in Esslingen and became a teacher in Dürnau after graduating. From 1889 to 1893 he studied law in Tübingen, then Protestant theology. Afterwards he became vicar in Mägerkingen and Großheppach, 1898 finally town parish administrator in Giengen. The emerging Swabian career was broken off by the marriage with Emeline Gesenberg from Elberfeld. She was to stay in Elberfeld to care for her father, so the young couple moved into their parents' house in Hopfenstraße 6. There was also a Pietist community in Elberfeld. Joseph Gauger found employment as the second inspector of the Protestant Society, which provided him with a solid foundation for an equally pietistic career in his new Rhineland homeland. Later he was able to obtain the position of Director of the Evangelical Society. The Evangelical Society in Elberfeld had dedicated itself to mission in Germany since 1848. Here Gauger became responsible for the publishing work and the so-called writing mission. Since 1906 he was editor of the weekly "Licht und Leben", an activity he carried out until 1938, shortly before his death. From 1923 he also published the widely read political monthly "Gotthardbriefe". In 1911 Gauger became a member of the board of the Gnadauer Verband and in 1921 - not least because of his musical talent - chairman of the Evangelischer Sängerbund. In 1921 he also became a member of the Constituent Assembly of the Evangelical Church of the Old Prussian Union. His favourite sister Maria married Jakob Ziegler, who worked at the Ziegler Institutions in the pietist community of Wilhelmsdorf (near Ravensburg) as a senior teacher and later director at the boys' institution. Due to the very intensive correspondence and frequent visits to his sister, Joseph Gauger remained attached to Swabian pietism. During the Third Reich, Joseph Gauger and his family were followers of the Confessing Church. Joseph Gauger was finally banned from publishing, his publication organ "Licht und Leben" was banned, and in 1939 he was expelled from the Reichsschrifttumskammer. In 1934 his son Martin refused the oath to Adolf Hitler, whereupon he - a young public prosecutor - was dismissed from public service. Since 1935 he has worked as a lawyer for the 1st Temporary Church Administration of the German Evangelical Church and since February 1936 for the Council of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Germany in Berlin. When the war broke out in 1939, he also refused military service and fled to the Netherlands. However, he was seized here, arrested and later taken to the Buchenwald concentration camp. He therefore had to give up his church service in 1940. In 1941 he was murdered by the Nazis in the Sonnenstein Killing Institute near Pirna. The younger son of Joseph Gauger, Joachim, was also harassed by the Gestapo for his work for the Gotthard Letters and "Light and Life". After the death of Joseph Gauger (1939) and the complete destruction of the Gauger House in Elberfeld following an air raid in June 1943, the family returned to the south. Siegfried Gauger, after a short time as town vicar in Schwäbisch Gmünd, had already become town priest in Möckmühl in 1933 and had settled there with his wife Ella. Martha Gauger has lived in Heidenheim since her marriage to Theo Walther in 1934. Hedwig Heiland moved in 1943 to Gemmrigheim, the new parish of her husband. The parsonage there also offered space for the mother Emeline Gauger and the nanny of the Gauger children, Emilie Freudenberger. A little later, after her early retirement in 1947, her sister Maria Gauger also moved to Gemmrigheim. After his release from captivity as a prisoner of war, Joachim Gauger had also moved professionally to Möckmühl, where he ran the Aue publishing house. Only Paul Gerhard had stayed in Wuppertal, where he lived in the Vohwinkel district. Emeline Gauger's mother and sister Maria moved from Gemmrigheim to Möckmühl in 1951, which became the centre of the Gauger family, as a result of the forthcoming move of the Heilands to Stuttgart. Because now the mother lived here with three of her children: Siegfried, Maria and Joachim. The family gathered here regularly for sociable celebrations and the grandchildren of Emeline Gauger often came to visit here during the holidays. It was not until the grandson generation of Emeline and Joseph Gauger entered working life in the 1970s that the family scattered throughout Germany. Despite everything, this generation remained in contact with each other and organized regular family reunions. 2nd history of the stock: Bettina Heiland, Marburg, and Susanne Fülberth, Berlin, handed over the family documents Gauger/Heiland to the Main State Archives for safekeeping in January 2011 after the death of their mother Hedwig Heiland. Some further documents were submitted in June 2013. Hedwig Heiland, née Gauger, born 1914, was the youngest child of Joseph and Emeline Gauger and had survived all siblings and close relatives at the age of 96. The documents handed over originate from different persons in the family. Important documents come from her aunt Maria Ziegler, her father's favourite sister who lives in Wilhelmsdorf. She kept the letters of Joseph Gauger and his wife to their relatives in Wilhelmsdorf (to which she also belonged), a remarkable series of correspondence. Memorabilia such as her place card for the wedding of Joseph and Emeline in Elberfeld in 1898 and individual books by Joseph Gauger and the history of the family are also included. After her death Hedwig Heiland received her from her daughter Ruth Dessecker. Other documents come from mother Emeline Gauger, including letters to her and valuable memorabilia as well as files. They must have come to Hedwig Heiland after her death in 1964 or after the death of her daughter Maria, who lived with her. The documents of the brother Siegfried, city priest in Möckmühl, who died in 1981, are also rich. They date back to before 1943, when the parents' house in Elberfeld was destroyed. Worth mentioning are the dense series of letters of his brother Martin (the Nazi victim) and his parents, as well as his sister Hedwig to him. Furthermore there are letters of Sister Maria (until she moved to Möckmühl in 1950). Less dense is the letter tradition of the brothers Paul Gerhard and Emil Gauger to the city priest. Only the memorial book of the young Siegfried, which has a very high memorial value, his children did not want to do without. It is therefore only available as a copy, but in two copies. Sister Maria Gauger was primarily important as a photographer from the early days of Elberfeld. In addition to files on her own life and fate, she kept a family guest book in Möckmühl, which contains many interesting entries on family life and mutual visits. This is also included in the original stock. Her cousin Maria Keppler, née Ziegler, and her husband Friedrich also sent documents to Hedwig Heiland, especially correspondence and photographs. After the death of her husband Alfred in 1996, the documents of the older family Heiland also came to Hedwig Heiland and were kept by her. These were correspondences and the pastor's official records as well as family history materials, investigations and genealogical tables, but also documents from the mother Anna Heiland. In addition, the family of Hedwig and Alfred Heiland had a large number of younger records. Hedwig Heiland also proved to be a collector here, who rarely threw away a document and preferred to keep it. It didn't stop at collecting and picking up. Hedwig Heiland also arranged the documents and supplemented them with his own notes and investigations. Numerous notes on the family history of Gauger bear witness to this. Hedwig Gauger read the letters from her youth, extracted important dates and took notes. On the basis of the documents she kept and evaluated, she made a film in 2007 entitled "This is how I experienced it. Memories of my family and my life, told by Hedwig Heiland née Gauger" (DVDs in P 39 Bü 469). It consists essentially of an interview with her and numerous photos about her life and the fate of her family. Hedwig Heiland was particularly committed to the rehabilitation of her brother Martin. She intensively supported the research on his fate with information, compilations and also with the lending of documents. She collected the results, i.e. books and essays, and compiled the state of research almost completely. For the exhibition "Justiz im Nationalsozialismus" she read letters of her brother Martin Gauger and other documents about his life, which are stored as audio documents on a CD (P 39 Bü 468). Despite the richness of the available material, gaps in the tradition are to be noted. The sudden destruction of the Elberfelder Haus der Gaugers in 1943 resulted in a severe loss of family documents. About Maria Ziegler from Wilhelmsdorf and Siegfried Gauger, who did not live in Elberfeld anymore at that time, other documents from this time have fortunately been preserved, which compensate this gap somewhat. Another gap exists in the correspondence of Hedwig Heiland during the 70s to 90s of the last century. Even then, there must have been a rich correspondence, of which there is hardly anything left. The correspondence of Hedwig Heiland, on the other hand, which has been richer again since 2000, is present; it was hardly ordered, but has not yet been thrown away. In 1993 documents concerning Martin Gauger were handed over to the Landeskirchlichen Archiv Hannover for archiving. They received the inventory signature N 125 Dr. Martin Gauger. The 1995 find book on these documents is available in the inventory as no. 519. 3rd order of the stock: The documents originate from different provenances and had been arranged accordingly. A delivery list could be prepared and handed over for the inventory. Letters from Hedwig Gauger to his fiancé Alfred Heiland from the 40 years and also the letters in the opposite direction have been numbered consecutively, which points to a very intensive reading and thorough order, which, however, is an extreme case. In the letters Joseph Gauger wrote to his sister Maria after 1920, the covers of the tufts contain summaries of the most important pieces and references to outstanding family events mentioned in the letters. This information can be used as a guide during use. However, the original order of the documents was badly confused by the frequent use by the family and by third parties. One has not or wrongly reduced the taken out pieces. Frequently, individual letters were found in the photo albums with photos that were related to the content of the letter, but had to be returned to the original series. A photo album (P 39 Bü 353) had been divided into individual sheets so that the photos required for publications could be passed on to third parties as print copies. Hedwig Heiland had attached self-adhesive yellow notes to many letters and provided them with notes and references in order to be able to orientate herself better in her family-historical research. For conservation reasons, these notes had to be removed. In addition to the restoration of the original order, further measures were necessary for the order of the stock. Many documents were too broadly characterised as "other" or "miscellaneous". Tufts with very different contents were incorporated into existing units. A larger box still contained completely disordered, but nevertheless valuable letters from the period 1943-1952, which had to be sorted and indexed. Thematically similar tufts could often be combined into one unit. For example, mixed tufts containing letters from different scribes to the same recipient were divided and transformed into tufts with uniform scribes. This order according to the principle "a tuft, a letter writer" could not always be carried out. Letters of the married couple Emeline and Joseph Gauger, for example (to Maria Ziegler) are so closely interlocked that they cannot be split into two separate tufts. Sometimes Emeline signed her husband's letter with a short greeting of her own, sometimes she is greeted in the name of both, but often Emeline wrote her own passages on the letterhead and sometimes there are whole letters from her. Separation is also impossible in terms of content. Similarly, letters from Emeline Gauger and Maria Gauger in their Möckmühl days cannot be separated from those of Siegfried Gauger. Such letters were classified according to the author author. The index refers to the other persons. The present order and indexing was based on family interests. Essentially, in addition to the corrections and restructuring measures mentioned above, the documents had to be arranged and made accessible for scientific research. For this reason, a greater depth of indexing was necessary, above all, by means of title recordings with detailed content annotations. An overall order of the holdings according to the different origins of the documents did not prove to be meaningful for a family archive of the present size. The uniformity of the documents produced by Hedwig Heiland was therefore accepted and maintained. Accordingly, the title recordings of the correspondence of members of the Gauger family are arranged according to the letter writer and not according to the letter recipient. Letters usually contain more information about the author than about the recipient. Letters from non-family members and from letter writers to whom little material has grown, on the other hand, were classified according to the recipient principle ("Letters from different correspondence partners to XY"). The present collection documents the fate of a Swabian family closely linked to Pietism over almost two centuries. Outstanding is the relatively well-known theologian Joseph Gauger, who is richly documented with his correspondence and in his writings. The marriage of his sister Maria Ziegler also gives a glimpse of the Pietist settlement in Wilhelmsdorf and the Ziegler Institutions. The family's attitude during the Nazi period and especially the fate of his son Martin, who was imprisoned for his conscientious objection and finally killed, are also reflected in the inventory. Relations with the family of the Berlin prison pastor and member of the Kreisau district of Harald Poelchau are also documented. Dense series of letters from the Second World War (letters from Hedwig Heiland to her husband Alfred, letters from Alfred Heiland to his wife Hedwig, letters from Maria Gauger to her brother Siegfried) tell of the hard everyday life of the World War II. In addition, the collection illuminates the everyday family life of a Swabian family over at least two generations. The collection comprises 529 units in 5.20 linear metres, the duration extends from 1882 to 2010 with prefiles from 1831. 4. Literature: Article Joseph Gauger in Württembergische Biographien I (2006) S. 87-88 (Rainer Lächele) Article Joseph Gauger in NDB Vol. 6 S. 97-98 (Karl Halaski)Article Joseph Gauger in Deutsche Biographische Enzyklopädie Bd. 3 S. 584Article Martin Gauger in Wikipedia http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Gauger Further literature is included in stockStuttgart, June 2013Dr. Peter Schiffer
[Letters from Africa] Reply to Brackers letter of 21.03.1911. No possibility for the establishment of a Breklumer mission station in North Cameroon. There Islam had already penetrated far too far. In the south of Cameroon, however, the Catholic mission is spreading, which must be met just as urgently as Islam. 'I cannot say how I would be pleased if we could get a new ally for the south of our colony in the struggle with Rome and Islam'.
Untitled-
- Nov. 1943, Bundesarchiv, BArch MSG 2 Subject and biographical collection on German military history description: Includes: Structure 2: War classification of the Schutztruppe on 1 Apr. 1915 with occupation of officers (only up to the company) Structure 3: War classification of the Allies on 1 Apr. 1915 Structure 4: as Structure 2, on 1 Jan. 1916 Structure 5: as Structure 3, on 1 Jan. 1915 1916 Letter of 30 Dec. 1943 from the War Historical Research Institute of the Army to Colonel z. V. Strümpell, Aktensammelstelle West, with statement on the war divisions and marginal remarks Contains:<br />Gliederung 2: Kriegsgliederung der Schutztruppe am 1. Apr. 1915 with officer occupation (only up to the company)<br />Gliederung 3: War classification of the Allies on 1. Apr. 1915<br />Gliederung 4: like classification 2, on 1. Jan. 1916<br />Gliederung 5: like classification 3, on 1. Apr. 1915<br />Gliederung 3: like classification 2, on 1. Apr. 1915<br />Gliederung 5: like classification 3, on 1. Apr. 1915<br />Gliederung 4: like classification 2, on 1. Apr. 1915<br />Gliederung 5: like classification 3, on 1. Apr. 1915<br />Gliederung 5: like classification 2, on 1. Jan. 1916<br />Letter of the Kriegsgeschichtlichen Forschungsanstalt des Heeres from 30 Dec. 1943 to Colonel z. V. Strümpell, Aktensammelstelle West, with statement on the war divisions and marginal remarks
Lange, Erich (1889 - 1965) Prof. Dr.phil.; Professor of Fuel Geology 1946 President of the German Geological Survey; Director of the Geological Service of the GDR The estate contains: Excerpts from the file 1957 "Preparation of the commemorative event 10 years StGK (Staatliche Geologische Kommission) (contains among other things: material, elaborations and handwritten notes) Correspondences Personal letter of Gottlieb A. Seberna Handwritten notes among other things from and to geological books, to Cameroon, manuscripts to geological observation in French, German and English. Colonies (e.g. East-Adamaua), excerpts from the journal of the German Geological Society vol. 84(1932), photographs of tree trunks in a basalt stream near Meiganga
454 sheets, Contains: - Collection of letters of condolence to Ferdinand Jühlke on the death of his son Dr. Karl Ludwig Jühlke, colonial politician, born 6. 9. 1856 Eldena, murdered 1. 12. 1886 on the Somali coast/East Africa: Private letters, a. o. by Reich Chancellor Prince Bismarck (personally) - telegrams from the Empress and the Crown Prince - letters from members of the Berlin court as well as from friends, colleagues, scholars, societies and institutions in Germany and abroad - obituaries in press - detailed curriculum vitae in "Deutsche Rundschau für Geographie und Statistik", vol. 9, vol. 5 (1887), pp. 236-238, with portrait - doctoral diploma Univ. Heidelberg dated 21. 5. 1881 (print);