9 x 13 / S-W / negative
Universität
816 Archival description results for Universität
Administrative history/biographical information: The existing find book from the 70s was entered into the Augias archive with the help of the files. Later files of the university library from the period of origin until 1945 which were handed over to the university archive were also recorded in the Augias archive. The files with the signatures 0216, 0314, 0317, 0366, 0410, 0432, 0461, 0474, 0475, 0485 and 1144 were missing at the time of inclusion or had already been marked as missing during a revision in 2000 and were therefore not entered. Claudia Hilse Foreword: History of the registry sculptor On February 20, 1831, the UB was founded by cabinet order of Friedrich Wilhelm III, who had been preceded by an application from the rector and senate on the one hand and the then head librarian of the Royal Library, Wilken, on the other. The fund of 500 Thlr. per year approved for the maintenance and propagation of the UB for the first time should be covered until further notice from the surpluses of the wood and light money to be paid by the students. Furthermore, a contribution of 5 Thlr. should be paid to the University Library for the acquisition of a special fund by each PhD at the doctorate, by each Privatdozent at the habilitation and by each newly appointed professor at the employment or promotion. Friedrich W. Eilken was entrusted with the management on a voluntary basis. He designated the doublet room of the KB to receive the compulsory copies of the publishers of the Mark Brandenburg and Berlin which had been sent to the university since 1 January 1825, as well as for new acquisitions. As the acquisition fund was too small, the UB only expanded very slowly. From the very beginning, however, she participated in the exchange of university publications. Later, this exchange developed into a focal point of collecting. Today, the UB Berlin is the central collection point of Germany in the field of dissertations and other university publications as well as the centre of international exchange. The systematic catalogue, which was printed between 1839 and 1842, contained around 10,000 works in 15,000 volumes. The portfolio consisted of 15
and 85% for deposit copies and gifts. A scheduled purchase has therefore not yet taken place. Wilken's multiple attempts to obtain higher funds for the purchase of books and the salaries of officials failed. In 1839 the UB and the KB were spatially separated. The UB moved into the so-called Adler's Hall (Unter den Linden 76). Wilken died on 24.12.1840. His successor, the historian Georg Pertz, led the directorate business from 1842 to 1872 to the advantage of the library. By the end of 1848 the collection had expanded to over 30,000 volumes. In the years 1871 to 1873 the UB received a new building in the Dorotheenstr. 9, which had been calculated too small however regarding its capacity. Therefore, in 1900 the neighbouring property, Dorotheenstr. 10, was acquired. In 1874, Falk Koner began managing the directorate business. His main focus was on the acquisition of book collections of deceased scholars, which were partly donated, partly sold. Koner died in 1887 after receiving the title of Privy Councillor in 1884, but not Director of the UB. Until 1889, Minister von Goßler once again ordered the personal union with the KB, but on October 1, 1889 Wilhelm Erman, until then librarian at the KB, was appointed chief librarian and in April 1890 director of the UB. Erman was responsible for the reading room library, for the abolition of the vouchers, was very active in the collection of university publications and began cataloguing the libraries of the university institutes in 1891 on the basis of a ministerial decree. It is fatal that Ermann received Althoff's consent to the disposal of "superfluous book material". Between 1892 and 1898, 16,869 works were then sorted out, so that in February 1902 Johannes Franke found only 161,735 volumes as Ermann's successor. This made the UB one of the smallest university libraries in Germany. Under Franke, women entered the library service for the first time in Prussia. After two years of training under his direction, they received certificates on the basis of an examination. In addition, Franke dealt with a thorough examination of the entire UB, with the extension of the reading room library and with the reconstruction of the alphabetical catalogue on the basis of the "Prussian Instruction". Franke died on 25.03.1918. On 06 July 1918 Gotthold Naetebus, who came from the KB, took over the business. When he retired in March 1930 due to reaching the age limit, the Berlin and Göttingen UBs belonged to the top group of Prussian university libraries. On February 20th Rudolf Hoecker, the successor of Naetebus, celebrated the centenary of the UB. However, he was granted leave on 31.03.1934 as a member of the library council on the basis of the Nazi law for the protection of the civil service. Gustav Abb, the department director of the Prussian State Library, took over the provisional management of the management business on 01.04.1934. In May 1935 he was appointed director. On 28.04.1945 he retired voluntarily from life. Under Rudolf Hoecker, the clean-up and salvage work began at and in the heavily hit library. Wieland Schmidt, new director of the UB since 01 May 1946, reopened the library. After Schmidt left the company in October 1950, his deputy Rudolf Keydell initially ran the business until it was taken over by Willi Göber, the new director, on 1 April 1952. Under his leadership, the effectiveness of the UB was extended beyond the needs of the Humboldt University. She was granted the right to take over compulsory copies for Greater Berlin. Her special field remained the collection of university publications. From 1961 to 1973 Oskar Tyszko was director of the UB Berlin. Mrs Irmscher has been in his place since 1973. Inventory history The inventory, approx. 16 running metres, was in a completely disordered condition in the building of the University Library and was taken over on 9 and 10 June 1969 by employees of the archive of the Humboldt University. The work was carried out by a trainee of the Fachschule für Archivwesen, whose introduction has been shortened and revised and incorporated into the history of the Inventory Designer. References: 1. printed sources: Friese, Karl: Geschichte der Königlichen Universitäts-Bibliothek zu Berlin Hoecker, Rudolf: Die Universitäts-Bibliothek zu Berlin zum ihren 100jährigen Bestehen 20. Februar, 1831 - 1931 Köpke, Rudolf: Die Gründung der Königlichen Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität 2. Archivalische Quellen: Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Archive: Stock University Curator current no. 62 - 64 The University Library Bd. 2 1887 - 1922 vol. 3 1923 - 1925 vol. 4 1925 - 1927 current no. 645 New building of the UB Berlin, 1938 - 1939 current no. 1132 - 1134 University library, administrative matters 1928 - 1938 1928 - 1944 1935 - 1941 Citation method: HU UA, University Library.01, No. XXX. HU UA, UB.01, No. XXX.
Administrative history/biographical information: Status: December 2016 With the exception of three files that cannot be found at present, the collection is fully indexed (Augias, search book printout and old search index from the 1960s). Scope: approx. 47 linear metres, 4,288 units in 421 archive boxes (1834 - 1978) Life data are only given if they emerge from the contents of the file This is a consolidation of files. Mainly they were created by: - the Rector of the FWU - the University Curator of the FWU - the Administrative Director of the FWU - math.-nat. Faculty - Medical Faculty - Charité - Berlin Merchant Corporation - Berlin Chamber of Commerce and Industry - Berlin Graduate School of Economics - Berlin University of Agriculture - and other institutions: HU/UA UK Personalia: Signature (l. Num.). The Findbuch printout in the LS still lacks the additions resulting from the processing of the stocks PAMed1 and PAMed2. A reprint is pending. Period to: 1978 Period from: 1834 Citation method: HU UA, UK Personnel files until 1945, Mustermann, No. HU UA, UK Personalia, Mustermann, No.
Administrative history/biographical information: Details from the Findbuch, compiled in 1961 by Archivdirektor Kossack (corrected and edited version): Der Universitäts-Kurator in Berlin - Behörden- und Bestandsgeschichtlicher Rückblick (The University Curator in Berlin - Review of Authorities and Inventory History) Heinz Kossack compiled a review of the history of authorities of the office of curator at the University of Berlin from the time the university was founded until 1945 in 1960. The order and distortion of this inventory made it necessary to give such a retrospective so that all those who use it would be aware of its importance and significance for the history of the university. The relationship between university and state, which was controversial among scientists and scholars, especially in the time of the feudal-absolutist state, confronts us in one way or another in this inventory when reviewing the archives. The state authority, be it in the form of the absolute or constitutional monarchy, the republic or the National Socialist dictatorship, enforces its demands against the university through a representative "on the spot" and controls the implementation of the given instructions and directives. This commissioner is the curator, although it should be noted that in Berlin the Ministry for Spiritual, Teaching and Medical Affairs carried out the most important curatorial tasks itself until 1923. Therefore the existence begins only with the employment of the extraordinary government plenipotentiary in the year 1819. Authority history I. The curator up to the appointment of the a. o. government plenipotentiary 1810-1819 By the regulation because of improved mechanism of the provincial authorities from 30 April 1815 (Pr. GS. 1815, S. 85ff) § 16 it was decreed that each chief president should be as "constant Commissarius curator of the university, which is in the province entrusted to him". The term "curator" appears in this ordinance, although the university's statutes of 1816 do not know it. The tasks of this curator were specified in the decree of 26 December 1808 (Pr. GS. p. 467ff) in § 10 (3) concerning the improved establishment of provincial, police and financial authorities (Pr. GS. p. 467ff) as follows: "the internal establishment of the universities the economic curate the appointment and employment of teachers of the university". For the University of Berlin, however, the Ministry of Spiritual, Teaching and Medical Affairs, formed by the Allerhöchste Kabinetts-Order of 3 November 1817 from the former Department of Cult and Public Education of the Ministry of the Interior, had reserved the performance of the so-called curatorial affairs for itself. Therefore, nothing is known about this period of the curator's activity at the University of Berlin. TWO. The Extraordinary Government Plenipotentiary 1819-1848 The Instruction for the Extraordinary Government Plenipotentiaries at the Universities of 18 November 1819 (Pr. GS. 1819, p. 233ff), issued by King Frederick William III of Prussia with the countersignature of the State Chancellor of Hardenberg in the execution of the Karlovy Vary resolutions for Prussia, initiated the blackest period in the history of the university on the one hand, but on the other hand it created clearer conditions in the history of the authorities. This instruction, which made the Government Plenipotentiary's task of lace-making both against the university teachers and against the students, transferred in Section IV that § 16 of the Decree was repealed because of improved establishment of the Provincial Authorities of 30 April 1815, according to which each Chief President was to be the curator of the university in the province entrusted to him. The powers of the trustees should be transferred to the government officials. However, in order not to eliminate the chief presidents completely, it was ordered that they should support the government plenipotentiaries by all means. Section V pointed out that the Government Plenipotentiaries are in the same position as the Trustees and clearly specified the tasks of the Government Plenipotentiaries: 1. they are to be regarded as deputies of the Ministry, as are the Trustees. Therefore, their orders must be executed by the academic authorities and all reports, including those of the directors of institutes and collections, must go through their hands. 2. are directly subordinated to the Ministry of Spiritual, Educational and Medical Affairs and report only to it. They also receive their orders and resolutions only from the ministry. 3. You will receive the necessary service personnel. If necessary, all "subalterns" of the universities should be made available to them. However, a special reservation was made at the University of Berlin, in that the instruction of 18 November 1819 ordered that it was reserved for the Ministry to carry out the curatorial duties directly, but to transfer them to the government representative to such an extent that he could act in the best interests of the university. By decree of the Minister of 20 November 1819, the University was informed that the Geh. Oberregierungsrat Schultz had been appointed Government Plenipotentiary. However, the following restriction has been made: "Since the Instruction for the Government Plenipotentiaries reserves to the Minister the right to delegate to him part of the business of the Board of Trustees of the Royal University within himself, the Privy Council of the Supreme Government Schultz has been provisionally instructed in general to establish a personal relationship with the University, its staff and its institutes and facilities, to maintain itself in continuous and ongoing knowledge thereof, to investigate the shortcomings and needs of the University in all its branches and to bring them to the attention of the Ministerio together with appropriate proposals for their secondment, to see for itself that the orders made or approved by the Ministerio, whatever part of the university institutions or the institutes and collections belonging thereto they also concern, are promptly and fully implemented, and to report to the Ministerio on their implementation." Schultz ran the business until May 1824, when he was succeeded under the same circumstances by the Beckedorff supreme government council. The Cabinet Order of 21 May 1824 regulated in particular the position of the Government Plenipotentiary to the Rector and the sub-officials of the University. Thereafter, the Government Plenipotentiary was the Rector's superior in charge of supervising the Rector's conduct of office. Furthermore, the subordinates of the University were obliged to obey the orders of the Government Plenipotentiary in the matters which he dealt with directly. Because of the matters concerning the Rector and Senate, the Government Plenipotentiary could issue his instructions to the sub-officials by the Rector. Beckedorff retired in June 1827. By ministerial decree of 14 June 1827, it was decreed that the rector and the university judge should now act jointly as deputy government representatives. This regulation existed until 1841. After confirmation by the ministry, the rector was entrusted with the performance of this activity with the university judge. However, by decree of 13 April 1841, this transitional arrangement was repealed and the duties of the Government Plenipotentiary were entrusted to the Director of the Ministry's Education Department, Oberregierungsrat von Ladenberg, with effect from 1 June 1841. After an instruction for v. Ladenberg as temporary curator and extraordinary government representative, it was particularly emphasized because of the tasks of the curator that v. Ladenberg should only perform these tasks to the extent that they were not processed by the ministry. We therefore find this restriction in the corresponding decrees on an ongoing basis. Furthermore, according to this instruction, the rector and the university judge were again deputy government plenipotentiaries, i.e. the government plenipotentiary could delegate his duties to the rector and the university judge in the absence of the rector and the university judge. In April 1848, following the decision of the Federal Assembly, the exceptional legislation of the German Confederation enacted in 1819 was repealed. The Federal Decrees on the use of extraordinary government plenipotentiaries at universities also fell within the scope of this resolution. III The Board of Trustees of the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Berlin 1848-1923 By decree of the Minister for Spiritual, Teaching and Medical Affairs of 18 July 1848, Ladenberg was recalled from office as a government representative and instructed to limit himself to the pure functions of a curator. These functions consisted according to § 10 (3) of the decree of 28 September 1808 (Pr. GS. 1806-1810, p. 467) in: a.) the internal institution; b.) the economic board of trustees; c.) the appointment and employment of teachers because of improved establishment of the provincial, police and financial authorities (Pr. GS. 1806-1810, p. 467). At the same time, the decree stated that the final provisions on university boards of trustees should only be recast after a general reform of universities had been carried out. However, this reform did not take place until 1918. Since von Ladenberg was entrusted with the direction of the Ministry, he appointed the then Rector and Deputy University Judge to administer the duties of the Board of Trustees by decree of 16 November 1848. Since then, the duties of curator have remained with the University of Berlin until 1923, unless they were handled by the ministry itself, with the respective rector and university judge. The official designation was: "Deputy Curators" or "Royal Board of Trustees of the Friedrich Wilhelm University of Berlin". The activities of the Board of Trustees consisted in the processing of: 1. matriculation matters; 2. scholarship matters; 3. administrative matters. To 1.): Here, the Board of Trustees was particularly active in the admission of students in accordance with the ministerial regulations issued for this purpose. Too 2.): Granting support to needy and dignified students, continuing the administration of scholarship foundations and their revision. To 3.): The administrative matters concerned the authorisation to allocate budgetary appropriations up to RM 6000 per year. Furthermore, student statistics had to be prepared for the ministry and other special orders had to be handled by the ministry. At a later stage it seems that the personnel files of professors and other employees have been added. The tasks of this board of trustees were therefore rather limited. Therefore also the file material available from this time is relatively small and little productive. The staffing was carried out in such a way that, in addition to the Government Plenipotentiary, a clerical secretary was active. The latter was named curatorial-secretary after the abolition of the institution of the government plenipotentiary. His tasks were: a.) The keeping of the journal, a file repertory and an index; b.) The preparation of all copies; c.) The stapling and rotating of the files; d.) The preparation of various lists. The report of the curatorial secretary Schleusener of 26 February 1858 shows that the registry at that time contained 335 volumes of files. Furthermore, according to Schleusener's report, 250-260 new things were received each year and 140 letters were issued and "mundiert" (mouthed). This office of curatorial secretary was maintained until 1923. After Daudé, the curatorial secretary had the following duties in 1887: a.) Completion of registration work and management of the journal; b.) Acceptance of applications for enrolment (4 semesters, subsequent enrolment); c.) The registration of the student (4 semesters, subsequent enrolment).) Preparation of expeditions and clean copies of the correspondence of the Board of Trustees; d.) Preparation of expeditions and clean copies concerning the administration of the title "Insgemein" and the support fund; e.) Provision of information to students regarding the admission requirements for their studies. In addition, the curatorial secretary had to work on some tasks in the closer university service, since he obviously could not be fully employed in his own field of work. The distribution of business remained essentially the same until 1923. IV. The administrative director at the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Berlin 1923-1936 The statutes of the University of Berlin of 1930, which were issued on the basis of the decision of the Prussian State Ministry of 20 March 1923, provided in § 5, p. 2 an administrative director with the following duties: "The external administration of the institutes, seminars and institutions including the clinics outside the Charité on behalf of the minister. He oversees the university's budget, treasury and accounting." Under Articles 83-84 of the Statutes, the Administrative Director was required to exercise certain powers in the appointment of officials in grades A 7 to A 11. Erich Wende, "Grundlagen des Preußischen Hochschulrechts", p. 59, speaks of the administrative director as the minister's representative in the external affairs of the natural science and humanities institutes and institutions and the clinics outside the Charité. The remaining tasks of the former Board of Trustees have been transferred to the Rector, who is supported by the University Council. There is no doubt that these are mainly the tasks that had to be carried out with enrolment. Compared to the former board of trustees, however, the number of employees has now increased to about 10 (civil servants, employees, clerks). After the fall of communism (loc. cit., p. 53 et seq.), the creation of the office of Administrative Director is the result of a fundamental university reform that had been discussed long before the outbreak of the First World War. The first administrative director at the University of Berlin was the former university judge Geh. Regierungsrat Dr. Wollenberg, who was replaced by Dr. Büchsel in 1925. V. The University Curator in Berlin 1936-1945 The institution of the Administrative Director remained in existence until 1936. With effect from 1 April 1936, by decree of the Reich Minister for Science, Education and Popular Education of 2 April 1936 (W Ib No. 861, Z II), the position of Administrative Director was transformed into that of Curator. The former Administrative Director Dr. Büchsel, who worked as curator until 1944 with minor interruptions, was entrusted with the management of the business. The tasks of the university curator in Berlin, as the official name was, seem to have been very extensive, measured by the number of staff (34 civil servants, employees and typists). There is a business allocation plan which divides the entire administrative area into 7 working groups (see Annex). In order to achieve a settlement of competences between rector and curator, the Minister for Science, Education and Popular Education issued a corresponding draft of a speaker by decree of 9 March 1942 (WA 278/42), the further fate of which could not be established. The draft is based on the assumption that the curator for the area of external operating resources and the stock of equipment and personnel, which only enables teaching and research to be carried out, is the local representative of the Reich Ministry. According to the a.m. draft, the external administration of higher education institutions included the following tasks: 1. the appointment and employment of all university staff outside the teaching staff and scientific officials, but including assistants, and the supervision of these groups of persons; 2. the handling of all civil servants' and remuneration-related matters for all officials belonging to the higher education sector, in this case including university teachers and scientific officials, and the keeping of the personal files of these officials. 3. the swearing in of the civil servants listed under 1. with the exception of the assistants; 4. the management of the budgetary, cash and accounting system; 5. the entire external administration of the institutes, seminars, clinics and other institutions; 6. the management of the building and property administration; 7. the representation of the state university administration vis-à-vis other authorities and the representation of the state and the university in legal transactions and legal disputes before and outside the court. The curator also had the Central Registration Office for Supply Aspirants for the area of the entire scientific administration in the former German Reich, whose activity, however, ended in 1944 as a result of transfer to another office. Furthermore, the respective administrative director or curator was administrative director of the University Hospital and chairman of several examination commissions (e.g. food chemist examination, insurance expert examination). This complex of tasks remained essentially unchanged until 1945. With the collapse of the Nazi state, the activities of the curator's office also ended. This marks the end of a development phase in the administrative history of the university. Provenance: University Curator 1819-1945 Order and Classification: Business Distribution Plan for the Office of the Curator of the University of Berlin (Basis of Classification after 1928) Department I: Office Director Affairs General Affairs of the Institutes Personnel Affairs of the Office Property Management (Main Building, Assembly Building, Lecture Hall Building) Management of Fund Controls Support Control of the Processing of All Correspondence of all Departments Department II: Officials Natural Science and Medical Institutes and Clinics Budgets Affairs Foundations Building Matters of University Institutes Division III A: Assistants Lecturers Teaching Assignments Student Affairs Fee Schedule Scientific Assistants Faculty Affairs Humanities Institute Division III B: Professors Professors-Witwen "Professoren emer. Veterinary institutes Lecturers Construction matters of veterinary institutes Division IV: Employees Wage earners. Division L: University Institutes of Physical Education Sports Affairs Division V, Audit Office Division VI: Payroll Office Statistics pp. Form administration postage stamps inventory list. Division VII or VII B: official housing pp. Property levies pp. Property management Building matters of the agricultural department Fuel supply pp. Photographic demonstrations pp. Agricultural Institutes Humanities Institutes, insofar as not included in III A. Zentral-Vormerkungsstelle Preface: Archive Director Heinz Kossack listed the holdings in 1961 and compiled an extensive finding aid book. The units of distortion already taken over into the archive software some time ago were checked, corrected and supplemented in 2016/17. Some file units (mostly no. XX/1) were probably not assigned to this collection until later - these numbers did not exist in the find book Kossack 1961. Information from the find book Kossack 1961 created (excerpt): The inventory of the university curator was partly scattered according to signatures and partly mixed with other inventories, partly in the magazine, partly in the archivist's workroom. Order and registration work seems never to have been carried out on the inventory. There were no major losses in the portfolio. The entire collection was recorded and arranged by Heinz Kossack in the period from January 1960 to February 1961. The distortion could take place at first only after the Bärschen principle. The order was then established in the holdings of the Government Plenipotentiary according to the old signatures. In the case of the administrative director and curator, the order could be established according to the present file plan (administrative structure principle). Period to: 1950 Period from: 1819 Citation method: HU UA, University Curator.01, No. XXX. HU UA, UK.01, No. XXX. Inventory history: History of the files and the registry: At first it could be established that the registry was structured according to the following system: a) Government Plenipotentiary, from 1819, Board of Trustees from 1848, Administrative Director 1923 to 1928, subject formation according to keywords alphabetically. Hand stapled files were kept. The file number was formed, applying the letter with number. Example: Litt. A. No. 1/ VollII. From this time a file index or repertory could not be found. If a new file was created, the subject was added to the corresponding letter under the following number. It was not possible to determine whether a central registry existed, but it can be assumed. On the basis of a file handover register from 1848, it could be established that the holdings of the government authorised representative have been almost completely preserved. b) Administrative Director 1928 - 1936 In 1928, as a result of the office reform, the use of filing cabinets was switched to in 1928. The previous keyword system was abandoned at the same time. The numbering system was introduced. The reference number, which was now the same as the reference number, consisted of three digits. The structure of the file plan was such that the numerical series I 100 - I 199 fundamental matters: included personnel, insurance, organisational and support matters. The numbers II 200 - II 399 included: Cash and accounting matters, building and property matters, legal and procedural matters, student body matters, examination matters. Numbers III 400 - III 640 include the building budgets, material and personnel matters of the faculties, seminars and institutes. Numbers IV 650 - IV 700 included the construction budget, the material and human resources of the university hospital and the dental institute. The new file number formed in this way was e.g: "VD 126/30" State of development, extent: Ordered and completely listed; extent: approx. 35 running metres
Contains among other things: - Closure of the Forestry Institute of the University of Giessen (correspondence with the Reich Minister for Science, Education and People's Education and the Reich Forestry Master), 1938 - Professor Dr. Josef Köstler, Hannn-Münden: On the Question of the Establishment of a Colonial Economic Institute at the University of Göttingen (Report of 23.2.1938; transcript), 1938 - Professor Julius Oelkers, Hann.-Münden: On the relocation of the Hann.-Münden Forestry University of Applied Sciences to Göttingen (Annex to the letter of the former Minister of State Dr. h. c. Saemisch, President of the Court of Audit of 24 March 1938 to Finance Minister Prof. Dr. Popitz, memorandum; transcript), 1938.
9 x 9 / S-W / trigger glued on cardboard
Administrative history/biographical information: University Judge 1810 - 1945 1810-1819 Syndicate from 1819 University Judge from 1923 University Council from 1935 University Legal Council from 1943 University Council Foreword: According to the statutes of the University of Berlin of 1816, which were replaced by a new statute in 1930, the so-called "academic jurisdiction" was exercised by the Rector and Senate. The legal basis of this provision was the "Regulations of 28.12.1810 concerning the Establishment of Academic Jurisdiction at Universities". This instruction abolished the jurisdiction previously extended to all members of the university under the provisions of General Land Law. With regard to the place of jurisdiction of university members, the following provision has been made: The members of the faculty, including the rector, the syndic and the secretaries, should have the jurisdiction of the royal civil servants. Other members of the university, such as court masters and servants of the students, were subject to the courts to which other citizens of the same class were assigned. A special place of jurisdiction has been created for students. For them, the respective Higher Regional Court was planned, in Berlin the Court of Appeal. In addition to exercising disciplinary and police authority in cases of violation of order and discipline within the university, the university authorities could also be punished: Students' injurious causes among themselves, light duels and all offences that threatened no more than 4 weeks in prison. In all other respects, the judiciary's function remained the same for civil claims. For the legal advice of the rector and the senate, the function of in-house counsel was created with the rank of full professor. In all disciplinary cases, the power to decide was vested in the rector and the syndic jointly or in the senate, with the competence being regulated in such a way that minor offences were decided by the rector alone or jointly with the syndic, while for major offences the senate was responsible (e.g. duels, realinjuries, disturbance of peace in public places, insulting an authority, insulting a teacher, inciting incitement and gang up among students). The syndicus had to lecture the senate on the cases to be tried. A further task of the syndic was to take up debt contracts of the students and to carry out judicial certifications for foreigners. The admissible disciplinary penalties were: Rector's reprimand; public reprimand before the Senate; detention; threat of "Consilium abeundi"; "Consilium abeundi"; relegation. These statutory provisions were supported by the reformers' desire to grant extensive rights to the university's governing bodies in the field of disciplinary law. Only the efforts of the reaction to suppress all movements at the universities that somehow appeared free or democratic put an end to this development. At the same time as the "Instruction für die außerordentlichen Regierungsbevollmächtigen bei den Universitäten" of 18 November 1819, a "Reglement für die zukünftige Verwaltung der akademischen Disziplin- und Polizeigewalt bei den Universitäten" was issued on the same day by King Friedrich-Wilhelm III and State Chancellor Hardenberg. After that, a university judge was appointed at all universities in Prussia to replace the previous in-house lawyer, who was given the task of enforcing academic discipline and police force. The reason given for issuing this instruction was that the rectors and senators of the universities had not maintained the necessary cooperation with the police authorities and that the change of rectors and senators had prevented the constant exercise of disciplinary authority. In reality, the individual provisions of this decree bear witness to the attempt to increasingly restrict the rights once granted to the university in the spirit of the reformers, in order to combat by all means the progressive movements developing among students in the universities. Thus the rector was able to deal with all minor offences, which resulted in warnings and reprimands, himself, but had to inform the university judge. For all offences that were likely to result in a prison sentence of more than 14 days, the university judge had to conduct the investigation himself, with the rector or a representative being called in for the negotiations. As major offences, the decree states: "Duels among students in which no significant wounding or mutilation has occurred; real juries; disturbance of silence in public places; insulting an authority; insulting a teacher; incitement; gangsterism among students; discrediting or making a discrediting statement; participation in secret or unauthorized connections. The decision in the case of an offence should be made by the university judge himself, if the university has not recognized the offence on relegation. The Senate had to be heard, but the decision on the Senate's objection was made by the Government Plenipotentiary, to whom the University Judge was subordinate. In the event of exclusion from university, Senate members should have a casting vote, and the majority of votes should be decisive. In this case, too, the university judge could appeal to the government representative in case of disagreement. The university judge was appointed by the Minister of Spiritual Affairs, Education and Medicine in agreement with the Minister of Justice, had to have the qualifications of a judge and was not allowed to be a university teacher. He had the rank of a full professor. While the syndic only took part in the "judicial affairs of the Senate", the university judge became an equal member of the Senate as a so-called legal advisor to the university. He had a duty to ensure that the Senate's decisions complied with existing laws. The differences of opinion on the legality of Senate decisions were decided by the Government Plenipotentiary. Even after the abolition of the office of Government Plenipotentiary in 1848, the University Judge retained the right of the provisional veto against decisions of the Senate which, in his opinion, were illegal or unconstitutional. The Senate protested in vain against this right, which the university judge Lehnert practised in 1864. The above remarks showed that the function of the university judge was closely connected with that of the government representative, indeed the university judge became the auxiliary organ of the government representative. The struggle of Government Plenipotentiary Schultz to consolidate his position at the University was expressed in his efforts to exert a direct and lasting influence on the appointment of the university magistrate in order to employ persons for this function who fully corresponded to the ideas of the Government Plenipotentiary. The previous syndic, Kammergerichtsrat Scheffer, took over the function of university judge in January 1820, but resigned it as early as March 1820, because there had been disputes between him and the government-appointed Schultz, which led to a prolonged illness of Scheffer. Scheffer applied for his dismissal, which he justified with his illness. After the efforts of the government Plenipotentiary to appoint an articled clerk as university judge had failed due to the resistance of the Senate and the Minister of Culture Altenstein, a successor was found in the person of the Kammergerichtsrat Brassert, who on Altenstein's personal order was commissioned to investigate the students Karl Ulrich and Karl von Wangenheim. But Brassert asked already after the session of the senate on 12 April 1820, at which he was introduced, to be released from his office, after he negated the political offenses in his expert opinion against Ulrich and von Wangenheim. However, the Senate decided to suspend the decision until the accused had been recognized as members of the fraternity. After a few days, Brassert withdrew his application and agreed to continue acting provisionally. His final appointment took place in November 1820, but already in March 1821 Brassert was persuaded by the rebukes and reprimands of Schultz, the government official, to give up his function for good. This request was granted by the Ministry. The decrees of 18 Nov. 1819 had led to an extremely tense situation at the university and provoked disputes that were detrimental to all sides. Brassert worked until December, when he was supported by an unskilled worker. The successor - a candidate of the government-appointed Schultz - was the subject of disputes that went far beyond the scope of the university and were finally resolved at the highest level. Despite the negative attitude of Minister Altenstein, the Assessor of the Court of Appeal Krause was appointed university judge in December 1821 by a cabinet order of King Friedrich Wilhelm III. Schultz had turned directly to the king and pointed out that the liberal conditions prevailing at the university would create the danger of revolutionary and state-threatening activities. If his request were not complied with, he would be obliged to resign. The Director of the Ministry's Education Department, von Ladenberg, was entrusted with the temporary administration of this office and with the additional function of curator. The reason given for this measure was that the previous form of deputies could no longer be justified vis-à-vis the Federal Government. As Max Lenz rightly notes in his 1910 History of the University, this was just an excuse from Eichhorn, who sought to regulate university life as he pleased. This measure had been taken without prior consultation of the Senate, so that Eichhorn's Rector and Senate were outraged by this intervention. A protest letter that Boeckh had drafted and that had been signed by 31 Ordinaries was rejected by the Ministry. Thus the function of the university judge Krause as deputy extraordinary government representative was also extinguished. The Instruction of 2 May 1841, which Lenz mentions but does not deal with further, is of interest for these explanations only in so far as it deals with the tasks of the Government Plenipotentiary in the implementation of academic jurisdiction. There has been no fundamental change other than the removal of some formal norms due to Ladenberg's position as Director of the Ministry's Education Department. If the government representative was prevented from attending, the rector and university judge again acted as representatives. Krause left the university on 1 September 1842. On October 1, 1842, the Kammergerichts-Assessor Lehnert was appointed as his successor, administering the position as university judge until April 1848. As his successor, the Higher Regional Court Assessor von Ladenberg was appointed by the Ministry. After the institution of the extraordinary government representative was abolished as a result of the March Revolution in July 1848, Ladenberg's activities were limited to curatorial business, which was almost exclusively carried out by the Ministry's Education Department. After von Ladenberg had been entrusted with the management of the Ministry of Culture in November 1848, he resigned his function at the university and, by decree of 16 November 1848, entrusted the then Rector and the University Judge with the administration of the curatorial business, which essentially consisted of handling scholarship matters. This regulation came into force on 5 December 1848 and remained in force until 1923, when an administrative director was appointed to the university as part of the university reform and the responsibilities of the administrative director and the rector were reorganised. Symptomatic, however, is that the above-mentioned decree of 1848 already provided for a reformation of this office. These reform intentions of some liberal officials, seen as the first reaction to the revolutionary events of March 1848 but never realized because of the capitulation of the liberal bourgeoisie to the feudalabsolutist regime, only came to fruition after the November Revolution. On April 1, 1875, Lehnert was retired at his request and appointed as his successor to the syndic of the Mittelmärkische Ritterschaftsdirektion, Schultz. Schultz died on 16 April 1885. In the meantime, the introduction of the so-called "Reichsjustizgesetze" necessitated a reorganization of academic jurisdiction. In this "Law concerning the Legal Relations of Students and Discipline at the State Universities, the Academy of Münster and the Lyceum Hosianum of Braunsberg" of 29 May 1879, disciplinary authority was exercised by the Rector, the University Judge and the Senate. The following penalties were foreseen: Reference; fine up to 20,-M; detention up to 2 weeks; non-crediting of the current semester to the prescribed period of study; threat of removal from the university (signature of "Consilium abeundi"); removal from the university ("Consilium abeundi"); exclusion from university studies (relegation). The university judge had to conduct the investigation in all cases. The powers of punishment were defined as follows: Rector: reprimands and prison sentences up to 24 hours; Rector and judge: fines and prison sentences up to 3 days; Senate: All higher penalties. In the Ministry's instruction of 1 October 1879, it was pointed out that the term "university court" could no longer be used due to the "change in circumstances". This purely formal act, of course, did not change the way disciplinary authority was exercised, but the rector and the senate were now directly involved in the exercise of disciplinary authority, while the university judge could only pronounce punishments in association with the rector. The successor to Schultz, Paul Daudé (1885-1913), a former public prosecutor, used this power to take action, in close cooperation with the Berlin police president, against progressive efforts within the student body and Polish and Russian students. Daudé was repeatedly commissioned by the Minister himself to provide expert opinions. He is also the author of the infamous "Lex Arons". Since 1901, the university judge also acted as treasurer of the State Library and the Meteorological Institute. He was also a member of the Matriculation Commission, the Honorarium Postponement Commission, the Support Fund and the General Nursing Association for Students. The regulations for students at the state universities of 1879 were renewed in 1905 and 1914, without any change in the regulations governing the position of university judges. Daudé's successor was Ernst Wollenberg, who served as university judge until his appointment as administrative director of the university in 1923 and was also a part-time in-house lawyer of the Technical University. Already in 1919 reform efforts began, which in 1923 led to the enactment of new statutes for the universities by the Prussian Ministry of Education, but which did not change the character of the higher education policy of the Weimar Republic. The discussion about the position of the university judge was also held at Berlin University. The commission set up to consider the matter concluded that the removal of the function of university judge was justified, but called for the appointment of an administrative director who, without being a member of the Senate, would have the task of managing the administrative affairs of the university and its institutes, as well as providing legal advice and preparing disciplinary matters. The appointment was to be made by the government, with the Senate having the right to make proposals. The new statutes, which were then issued by decision of the Prussian State Ministry of March 20, 1923, eliminated the institution of the university judge and introduced the function of the "university council". The University Council then had the task of providing legal advice to the Administrative Director, the Rector and the other institutions of the University. In addition, he was responsible for carrying out the academic discipline in accordance with the disciplinary rules, which were still applied in accordance with the aforementioned law of 1879. The Prussian Minister's close collaborator, Erich Wende, already pointed out at that time that a reform of these outdated regulations was inevitable. The fact that the University Council involved prosecutors and investigating magistrates as well as the rector as the judge in the disciplinary proceedings resulted in a situation that was already contrary to the procedural rules of general criminal law. The position of university councillor was usually filled part-time by a judge who was not a member of the Senate, but who could be called in to advise the Senate on Senate sessions. The participation in the matriculation committee remained. With effect from November 1, 1923, Hermann Marcard, Councillor of the Local Court, was appointed University Councillor at Berlin University, and in January 1924 he was also appointed Legal Counsel of the State Library. At the end of January 1933 the NS-Studentenbund publicly staged a large-scale slander campaign against Marcard for his actions against National Socialist thugs, which ended with Marcard's replacement as a university councillor in April 1933. Mardcard's successor was Wilhelm Püschel, the director of the regional court, who was appointed to the post of university councillor by the ministry in May 1933. However, Püschel retired in October 1935, as the position of university council was to be converted into a full-time legal council position on April 1, 1936. The Leitmeyer Public Prosecutor's Office Council was appointed to the University Law Council. In addition to providing legal advice to the Rector, the Administrative Director and the other academic authorities of the University, Leitmeyer was also commissioned to provide legal advice to the Administrative Director of the Charité Hospital, the Rector and the academic authorities of the Technical University of Berlin, as well as to the Director General of the State Library. Leitmeyer had already been active since October 1935 on a commission basis as a university law council. In the meantime, by decree of the Reich Minister for Science, Education and Popular Education of 1 April 1935, a "Penal Code for Students, Listeners and Student Associations at Universities" had been announced. This new disciplinary order, which corresponded to the NS leader principle, provided for the following penalties: 1. oral warning; 2. written reprimand; 3. non-compliance with the current semester; 4. distance from the university, combined with non-compliance with the semester; 5. permanent exclusion from studies at all German universities. The Legal Council had to conduct the investigation. Warnings and reprimands were issued by the Rector, while non-compliance, removal and expulsion were imposed by the Rector following a prior decision of the so-called Tripartite Committee, to which the Rector and the heads of the faculty and student body belonged. The Legal Council had the function of an accuser, i.e. it had to submit the accusation and represent it. Appointment at the Reich Ministry of Science was possible. The old disciplinary regulations of 1879 and 1914 probably remained in force until the enactment of the penal code on April 1, 1935, with the abolition of the provisions that had become obsolete as a result of the development. Wende already pointed out that fines and detention were outdated and should be abolished. In the period from November 1936 to March 1937, the Legal Council was entrusted with the performance of the University Trustee's duties. Leitmeyer was delegated to the university administration of the so-called "Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia" in 1939 and appointed curator of the Brno Technical University in 1940. As a replacement, the Regional Court Councillor Bernhard Rosenhagen was appointed provisionally from September 1939 and definitively by the Ministry from September 1, 1940. His responsibilities included providing legal advice to the Rector, the University Curator and the academic authorities of the University, the Administrative Director of the Charité Hospital, the General Director of the State Library and the State Materials Testing Office. When Rosenhagen was appointed Administrative Director of the Charité Hospital in 1943, he only performed his duties as a legal councillor at the university part-time with the official title "University Councillor". His activities ended on 8 May 1945. In summary, the university judge had to carry out his duties as an executive and supervisory body at the universities. This applies not only to the time of the reaction after the enactment of the Karlovy Vary decisions in 1819, but also to the later years. The university judge Daudé (1885-1913) is a particularly vivid example of whose commission and for what interests the university judge had to work. III. archival processing Although the individual disciplinary processes were used, the entire holdings had to be processed in accordance with the principles of order and registration. The order and distortion took place in the months of December 1967 to March 1968 by the then archive manager Kossack. The transfer of the index or find book entries into the electronic form did not mean any changes to the order of the holdings. Only the spelling and the punctuation were normalized. The signatures and titles have been retained. Citation style: HU UA, University Judge.01, No. XXX. HU UA, UR.01, No. XXX.
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;
without foliation, Contains among other things: - Elaboration of a series of letters Karoline von Humboldt wrote to the archaeologist Prof. Dr. Gottlieb Welcker by Dr. Erna Sander, née Rindtorff in Bonn, 1931 - Elaboration of a scientific treatise on the poet and state archivist Bernhard Endrulat by the Ministerialrat in the Ministry of Agriculture, Domains and Forests [...Rastell in Berlin, 1931 - Elaboration of a scientific treatise on the founding and development of the State Educational Institutions in general and the school in Wahlstatt in particular by the Study Council [Felix] Taubitz in Wahlstatt, 1931 - Elaboration of a scientific work on the founding and establishment of the Protestant Consistory in Berlin by the pastor Walter Wendland in Berlin, 1931/1932 - Elaboration of a biography of the internist Prof. Dr. Peter W. W. W., 1931 - Elaboration of a biography of the internist Prof. Dr. Dr. Walter W. W., 1931 - Elaboration of a scientific work on the founding and establishment of the Protestant Consistory in Berlin by the pastor Walter Wendland in Berlin, 1931/1932 - Elaboration of a biography of the internist Prof. Dr. Dr. Christian Friedrich Nasse by the Geheimen Sanitätsrat Dr. [Werner] von Noorden in Bad Homburg, 1931 - Elaboration of an article about the Professor of Classical Studies in Wroclaw Dr. [Werner] von Noorden in Bad Homburg, 1931 - Elaboration of an article about the Professor of Classical Studies in Wroclaw Dr. [Werner] von Noorden in Bad Homburg, 1931 - Elaboration of an article about the Professor of Classical Studies in Wroclaw Dr. [Werner] von Noorden in Bad Homburg, 1931 - Elaboration of an article about the Professor of Classical Studies in Wroclaw Dr. Johann Gustav Büsching by the Head of the Biographical Section of the Historical Commission for Silesia Prof. Dr. Friedrich Andreae in Breslau, 1931 - Elaboration of a biography and ergography of Prof. Dr. Joseph Hermann Schmidt by the Regierungsmedizinalrat Dr. Paul Fraatz, 1931 - Elaboration of a biography of the professor of moral theology and apologetics in Münster Dr. [Joseph] Mausbach by the prelate and member of the Reichstag Dr. [Georg] Schreiber in Berlin, 1931 - Elaboration of a scientific work on the history of the Köllnisches Gymnasium in Berlin by the Studienrat [....] Theel in Berlin, 1931 - Elaboration of a scientific work on the history of the Ursuline monastery in Erfurt by the superior of the Ursuline monastery in Erfurt, sister Franziska Koch, 1931 - Elaboration of a scientific work on the legal situation of the denominationally bound high school in Prussia by the student teacher Helmut Simons in Bonn, 1931 - Elaboration of a biography of the philosopher and pedagogue Friedrich Eduard Beneke by R. Murtfeld in Cronberg, 1931 - Elaboration of a biography of the Konsistorialpräsident in Kassel Ernst von Weyrauch by the Geheimen Studienrat und Gymnasialprofessor i. R. Gustav Hüpeden in Kassel, 1931 - Elaboration of a scientific work on the "history of social policy" by the honorary professor at the University of Kiel Dr. Gustav Hüpeden. Ludwig Heyde, 1931 - Elaboration of a scientific work on the Prussian State Stage by Dr. Walther Feldmann in Lübeck, 1931 - Elaboration of a scientific work on the position of the Prussian government on child welfare in the first half of the 19th century. The study of the dismissal of Dr. Reinhold Pauli, Professor of Political History in Tübingen, by the former President of Germany, Dr. P. Hieber, in Stuttgart, 1932 - The study of the Protestant theologian David Schulz and the struggle between orthodoxy and rationalism in Silesia in the first half of the 19th century. The development of a genealogical work on the councillor and university administrator in Witttenberg Friedrich Wilhelm Prillwitz by the Reichsbank inspector Franz Prillwitz in Frankfurt (Oder), 1932 - Determination of biographical data of the physician Robert Koch by the ministerial councillor in the Reich Ministry of the Interior Prof. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. G. G. G., the latter being the only one to have done so. Dr. [...] Taute in Berlin, 1932 - Elaboration of a scientific work on the history of German gymnastics by Max Barsekow, secondary school teacher at the Königstädt Realgymnasium in Berlin, 1932 - Elaboration of a scientific work on "The Secret of the Berlin Rousseau Island, a contribution to the history of the Berlin Tiergarten with the appendix Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Frederick the Great" by Dr. phil. Karl Walter in Charlottenburg, 1932 - Elaboration of an essay for publication in the Akademische Turnbundsblätter on the history of German gymnastics by Prof. Dr. [...] Heinrich in Charlottenburg, 1932 - Elaboration of a scientific thesis on the right to award doctorates for the Technical Universities in Prussia and about the award of the academic degrees "Diplom-Ingenieur" and "Doktor-Ingenieur" and "Doktor-Ingenieur Ehrenhalber" at the Prussian Technical Universities by the clerk for engineering questions in the office of the Association of German Engineers in Berlin Dipl.-Ing.Ing. [...] Baer, 1932 - Elaboration of a biography of the physician Justus Christian von Loder by Paul Alfred Merbach in Berlin, 1932 - Elaboration of a scientific work on the male orders and congregations of the Catholic Church and their development in Prussia from 1815 to 1926 by the archival candidate Dr. Joachim Lachmann in Berlin, 1932 - Elaboration of a scientific work on social change and education by the director of the Städtische Höhere Handelschule in Bayreuth Dr. Joachim Lachmann, 1932 - Elaboration of a scientific work on social change and education by the director of the Städtische Höhere Handelschule in Bayreuth Dr. Joachim Lachmann, 1932 - Elaboration of a scientific work on social change and education by the director of the Städtische Höhere Handelschule in Bayreuth Dr. Fritz Söllheim, 1932 - Preparation of a scientific work on the Socialist Law and its implementation by the Historical Reich Commission in Berlin, 1932 - Preparation of a commemorative publication on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the Provinzialschulkollegium in Königsberg by the former Vice-President [....Latrille, 1932 - Elaboration of a scientific treatise on the origin of the Rhenish-Westphalian church order by the Consistorial Councillor Prof. Dr. [Johannes] Heckel in Bonn, 1932 - Compilation by Dr. Walter Boje in Berlin of all regulations applicable to studies at German universities, 1932 - Elaboration of a biography of the head teacher Karl Friedrich Köppen by the cand. phil. Helmut Hirsch in Barmen, 1932 - Elaboration of a scientific work on the development of the cultivation of science in Germany by Dr. Karl Griewank in Berlin, 1932 - Elaboration of a biography of the writer Hermann Heiber by the cand. phil. Theo Röschmann in Vienna, 1932 - Preparation of a scientific paper on the historical development of student disciplinary law by the judicial assistant Hans Otto Muthmann in Berlin, 1933 - Preparation of a commemorative publication on the occasion of the 125th anniversary of the Koblenz Music Institute by the archive assistant Dr. Meinhard Sponheimer in Koblenz, 1933 - Preparation of a scientific paper on "The New Establishment of the Diocese of Osnabrück in 1857" by the cand. phil. Adalbert Beckmann in Berlin, 1933 - Elaboration of a biography of the historian Leopold von Ranke by the retired rector Dr. Bernhard Hoeft in Wilhelmshorst, 1933 - Elaboration of a speech on the occasion of the celebrations for the 100th birthday of the geographer Ferdinand von Richthofen [1833 -1906] by Prof. Dr. Albrecht Penck, 1933 - Elaboration of a biography of the theologian Theodor Fliedner by the archivist of the deaconess institution Kaiserwerth Dr. Martin Gerhardt in Düsseldorf-Kaiserwerth, 1933 - Elaboration of a scientific work on the Heilandskirche in Sacrow and the Friedenskirche in Potsdam by Herbert Engel in Berlin, 1933 - Elaboration of a scientific presentation of the historical and cultural development of Masuria by the State Archives Council Dr. Dr. Martin Gerhardt. Hermann Gollub, 1933 - Investigation of biographical data of the office council in the Prussian Ministry of Culture Robert Gotthard Marczinkowski (? 1897) by his son Robert Marczinkowski in Wandsbek, 1933 - elaboration of a scientific work on the history of the German-Catholic movement in the administrative districts of Koblenz and Trier by the prorector [Andreas] Schüller in Boppard, 1933 - elaboration of a dissertation on the pedagogue Wilhelm von Türk by Clara Gelpke in Berlin, 1933 - elaboration of a family chronicle by Heinrich Hermann Freiherr von Hünefeld in Bremen, 1933 - determination of biographical data of the ministerial director a. D. in the Prussian Ministry of Culture Dr. Karl Löwenberg (1838-1914) by his nephew Richard Löwenberg in Bunzlau, 1933 - Determination of biographical data of the Prussian Minister of Culture Julius Robert Bosse (1832-1901) by the married couple Arno Pötzsch and Helene Pötzsch, née Bosse in Leipzig, 1933 - Elaboration of a scientific presentation about the share of Karl Friedrich Schinkel in the buildings in Berlin by the scientific assistant worker at the Nationalgalerie Dr. Karl Schinkel (1838-1914) Paul Ortwin Rave in Berlin, 1933 - Determination of biographical data of the War Council and rendants at the Prussian Ministry of Culture Carl Gottfried Schröder by his great-great grandson Pastor [...] Scheske in Bad Polzin, 1933 - Elaboration of a biography of the Wroclaw Cardinal Melchior von Diepenbrock by the library assessor Dr. Josef Beckmann in Berlin, 1933 - Determination of biographical data of the court opera singer Carl Adam Bader (? 1870) for the purpose of family research by the former lieutenant Wilhelm Eulert, 1933. Also contains: - Akademische Turnbundsblätter. Journal of the ATB, 45th year, issue 7, no. 546, Heuet-Juli 1932. Berlin 1932 (print) - Akademische Turnbundsblätter. Magazine of the ATB, 45th year, issue 8, no. 547, Erntemond-August 1932, Berlin 1932 (print) - Meinhard Sponheimer, Aus den Beginnings des Koblenzer Musikinstituts, Sonderabdruck aus: Koblenzer General-Anzeiger, No. 54 - 58, 6 - 10 March 1933. Koblenz 1933.
9 x 9 / B-W / print pasted on cardboard
Includes: A.H.S.C. Worms (Bezirksverband alter Corpsstudenten Worms, invitations to Farben pubs and other events; ALLGEMEINER RICHARD-WAGNER-VEREIN, Zweigverein Leipzig (concerning membership fees); GENERAL DEUTSCHER JAGDSCHUTZVEREIN; ALTERTUMSVEREIN (Invitations; Newsletter No. 5, May 1934); AUTOMOBILCLUB von DEUTSCHLAND (Membership Card); BADISCHER SCHWARZWALDVEREIN Ortsgruppe Bühlertal (Membership Card); DEUTSCHE AUFBAUHFE (Cancellation of membership); DEUTSCHE AUFSBILGEHILFE (Cancellation concerning Membership, detailed explanation); DEUTSCHE GESELLSCHAFT zur Rettung SCHIFFBRÜCHIGER (Representative for Worms and surroundings L. Bischoff, retired Police Director)); DEUTSCHNATIONALER HANDLUNGSGEHILFEN-VERBAND, Ortsgruppe Worms; DEUTSCHER SPRACHVEREIN, Ortsgruppe Worms; DEUTSCHER SCHEFFELBUND; DEUTSCHE STEUBEN-GESELLSCHAFT (Membership Cards); FRAUENVEREIN vom ROTEN KREUZ für Deutsche über See; FREIWILLIGE FEUERWEHR WORMS (grem. 1854, 80th anniversary, 16./17.6.1934); GARTENBAUVEREIN WORMS e.V. (Foundation Festival, 28.9.1935, 22.9.1934); GESELLSCHAFT für FREIE PHILOSOPHIE (circulars to members; invitations; membership card); GESELLSCHAFT von Freunden und Förderern der Universität Gießen); GESELLSCHAFT für Deutsch-Italienische Verständigung (information, list of members, statutes); GÖLLHEIMER WALDJAGD-GESELLSCHAFT (Invitation to a hunt); HESSISCHES ROTES KREUZ; HEUFIEBERBUND e.V. (Information, circulars to members); HILFSVEREIN für BERUFSARBEITER der Inneren Mission e.V. (Correspondence concerning limited possibility of donation, situation on site, imminent confiscation of the hostel by SA); JUNG-ODENWALD-KLUB Worms; KANARIENZUCHT- und VOGELSCHUTZVEREIN Worms und Umgebung; KANINCHENZUCHT-VEREIN Worms; KAUFMÄNNISCHER VEREIN Worms-Frankfurt a.M. e.V. (founded 1890; Elly Beinhorn-Abend, 28.2.1934 [Sportfliegerin] Correspondence concerning her stay as well as two newspaper articles [WVZ vom 01.03.1934, WZ vom 01.03.1934]; KOLONIALE JUGENDGRUPPE "Lettow Vorbeck" (correspondence negative; critical attitude) Darin: 79. Jahresbericht des Germanischen Nationalmuseums
Contains: Foundation of the district Cologne city and country of the German Life-Saving Society (1925), association for the preservation of the art historical institute in Florence, Bode (1925); office Saar-Verein (1925); association of banks and bankers in Rhineland and Westphalia, Robert Pferdmenges, concerning foundation of a local group Cologne (1925), G. Ricordi
Contains: Achelis, Hans Thomas, Attorney at Law, 15.12.1952: - Request for a receipt, which can be cancelled, to clear the land register for a loan of 10,000 RM to the late Dr. Adolf Jürgens, which had been repaid on 30.11.1944 Akademie-Verlag, 17.5.1950: - Presentation of 32 special editions from issue 7/8 of the journal "Forschungen und Fortschritte" Karl Stuchtey in memory of Andae, W., 24.6.1945: - Personal Baur, Elisabeth, 22.1.1952, 24.2.1952: - Personal experiences from the post-war period Becker, first director of the Prussian State Library, 18.4.1939: - Presentation of a gift (commemorative edition on the 60th birthday of the Director General of the Prussian State Library) Behrmann, W., Prof. Dr., Geographisches Institut der Freien Universität Berlin, 28.7.1948, 14.10.1950: - Invitation to a board and advisory board meeting of the Gesellschaft für Erdkunde on 18.10.1950 - Also on 1.6.1953: Birthday greetings Bellmann, Richard, 16.4.1955: - Holiday greetings from Locarno Bertling, K. O., Amerika-Institut Berlin, 3.6.1945: - Congratulations on his 85th birthday Bishop, University of Michigan, General Liberary, 4.11.1948: - Library questions Böhnecke, Director of the Hydrographisches Institut Hamburg, 26.2.1948: - Presentation of the first issue of the Deutsche Hydrographische Zeitschrift - Meteor-Expedition - 13.4.1948: Admiral Spies (leader of the Meteor expedition), whose resignation from a position as president of the German Naval Observatory - 8.6.1950: Presentation of the 4th annual report (1949) of the German Hydrographic Institute Bonhoffer, K. F., Prof., 16.1.1950: - Thanksgiving for birthday greetings Breitfuss, Deutsches Hydrographisches Institut Hamburg, 29.5.1950: - Congratulations on the 90th birthday Campbell-Drury, A., Melbourne, 28.10.1954: - Antarctic expedition 1954 Clemen, Chairman of the Council for Monuments of the Rhine Province, 17.2.1926: Correns, Prof., Göttingen, 2.6.1950: - Birthday greetings - Memory of the Emergency Community and the Meteor Expedition - 3.7.1950: Personal, Meteor-Expedition, Swedish Albatross-Expedition Deibel, Rudolf, 24.12.1947: - Christmas and New Year greetings Dyck, van, 20.2.1926: - Invitation to a breakfast in the German Museum Munich Euler, H. von, Prof.., Stockholm, 6.12.1947: - Personal data - 13.12.1947: Christmas greetings - Sending of a voucher - 14.8.1950: concerning the stay of a grandson of Schmidt-Ott in the house of Euler, Memories of the Academy of Sciences, University of Göttingen Fehling, A. W.., 29.12.1949: - New Year's Greetings Rock, Edwin, Geographical Institute of Freie Universität Berlin, 1.6.1950: - Birthday Greetings Fick, Zentralanstalt für Meteorologie und Geodynamik, Vienna, 24.4.1946: - Personal - concerning Prof. Defant and his Institute of Oceanography Fischer, (Franz), Prof.., former director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Coal Research in Mühlheim, 1.12.1947: - Todesanzeige Frederik, Kronprinz von Dänemark, 23.12.1933: - Telegram - Königliche Dänische geographische Gesellschaft Forschungen und Fortschritte, Schriftleitung, 17.4.1950: - Acknowledgment for the obituary made available to Prof. Stuchtey (see letter of the Akademie-Verlag of 17. December 1947: - letter of the Akademie-Verlag of 17. December 1947: - letter of gratitude for the obituary made available to Prof. Stuchtey)5.1950) Friend, Georg, Montevideo, 4.12.1948: - Congratulations to the marriage presidency in the Gesellschaft für Erdkunde zu Berlin - Personal - concerning Max Planck and Son - concerning Haber biography (see Haber, L. F.) - 16.12.1950: Birthday, Christmas, New Year's greetings, personal, remembrance of common work Friedrich, Prof.., 16.4.1950 answered: - Birthday greetings Goldschmidt, University of California, 15.2.1952: - common personal memories Grober, Prof., 19.7.1947: - Personal Haber, L. F., son of Prof. Haber, 10.4.1949: - Personal - Request for material for a planned biography of his father taking into account the development of the chemical industry in the last 50 years (see Friend, Georg, Montevideo) Hahn, Otto, Prof..., Göttingen, 4.5.1949: - concerning Haber biography - 11.6.1952: Acknowledgment for the congratulations on the award of the Order Pour le mérite - 18.12.1952: Concept of a letter Schmidt-Otts concerning Physikalisch-technische Reichsanstalt, Chemisch-technische Reichsanstalt, Emil Fischer Hedin, Sven, 3.1.1951: - for the 90th birthday - Zeitbetrachtungen Heuss, Theodor, 20.11.1946: - concerning Dahlemer Institute [of the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft] - 17. birthday of the German Emperor, 1951: - for the 90th birthday - for the German Emperor, 1946: - for the German Emperor, 1946: - for the German Emperor, 1946: - for the German Emperor, 1946: - for the German Emperor, 1946: - for the German Emperor, 1946: - for the German Emperor, 1946: - for the German Emperor, 1946: - for the German Emperor, 1946: - for the German Emperor, 1946: - for the German Emperor, 1946: - for the German Emperor, 17.10.1950: Acknowledgment for sent essay on Gemeinschaftsforschung Hilf, Director of the Institute for Forestry Work Science, 3.2.1950: - concerning the takeover of his institute by the Max Planck Society Jobst, Günther, 25.1.1949: - personal Jonas, Hans, 27.9.1947: - personal - 13.9.1955: request of the Federal Foreign Office for consul Hans Jonas for his use in the Federal Foreign Office Just, Günther, Prof.., 23.11.1948: - Congratulations on his appointment as Honorary Senator of the Max Planck Society - Remembrance of joint work Kerckhof, Reichszentrale für naturwissenschaftliche Berichterstattung, 9.1.1944: - Concerning the destruction of the Reichszentrale and its further work - Damage to the Academy of Sciences and the Staatsbibliothek Kienle, H., Prof. Dr., 13.10.1950: - concerning Prof. Fellinger Kinzl, Hans, Prof., Geographical Institute of the University of Innsbruck, 15.5.1951: - congratulations on the 90th birthday of Kohnen, Prof., Rector of the Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, 11.11.1946: - Personal - Attempts to revive the Emergency Community and the Kaiser Wilhelm Society - 21.1.1947 (Konen, Minister of Education and Cultural Affairs of North Rhine-Westphalia): Personal - 31.12.1948: Announcement of Kuhn's death, Director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Medical Research, Institute for Chemistry, Heidelberg, 11.12.1943: - Sending of a liver protective substance for the son Schmidt-Otts Larfeld, Sybille, 31.10.1951: - Personal Laue, Max von, Prof.., 25.6.1952: - Acknowledgment for congratulations on the award of the Order Pour le mérite - 1.12.1952: Schmidt-Otts concept of 1.12.52 concerning the position of Prof. Emil Fischer at the founding of the Kaiser Wilhelm Society Loewe, F., Head of the Meteorological Institute of the University of Melbourne, 6.2.1952: - Personal - 1.4.1954: concerning Wegener expedition - French Antarctic expedition 1949 - 1951 Meckelein, Wolfgang, 30.12.1954: - New Year's greetings from an expedition in Africa Meyer, (15.7.1945 answered): - Birthday greetings - (22.7.1945 answered): Greetings to the Golden Wedding Peters, Hermann, Lecturer in Zoology, Stuttgart, participant of the Wegener expedition, 17.11.1948: - Personal - 1.4.1949: Please speak on behalf of the Rector of the Stuttgart University of Applied Sciences, since difficulties exist due to taking up his teaching activities, although denazification has been completed and permission has been granted by the military government Rim, Physiological Institute of the University of Göttingen, 30.7.1947: - concerning the admission of Siemens jun. to the mathem. nat. faculty together with Schmidt-Otts' note to Mrs. von Siemens Roeder, January 1945: Sauerbruch, Prof.., 18.1.1949: Schott, Gerhard, 15.3.1950: - common personal memories (Admiral Spies) Schottenloher, 15.9.1954: - thanksgiving of the widow for condolation Schreiber, Georg, chairman of the Historical Commission of the Province of Westphalia, 30.10.1946: - thoughts about an emergency community after the war, together with Schmidt-Otts remarks for answer - 19.8.1947: Acknowledgement for sending the reprint "Die deutsche Wissenschaft in Not" Schumacher, Deutsches Hydrographisches Institut in Hamburg, 31.5.1952: - concerning material for a depiction of the meteor expedition Selve, from, 13.12.1936: - confirmation of the receipt of the minutes of the board of trustees meeting of the Kaiser Wilhelm Society Siebeck, Prof.. Dr. Dr. H. H, Director of the Ludolf-Krehl-Klinik, Heidelberg, 11.12.1943: - concerning liver protection substance of Prof. Kuhn (see letter of 11.12.43) Telschow, Ernst: - telegram concerning quarter order Thienemann, A., Director of the Hydrobiological Institute of the Max Planck Society, 27.10.1952: - Personal - Memories of the German limnological Sunda expedition Troll, Carl, Dr., Prof. der Geographie, Bonn, 10.9.1945: - Personal exchange of experiences Ulrich, Kansas City, 16.6.1947: - Personal exchange of experiences - Difficulties of a possible new emergency community Wagner, K. W., Prof.., 29.1.1948: - Declaration for his rejection of the appointment as president of the Physikalisch-Technische Reichsanstalt - makes himself available to work on the new emergency association Weese, H., Prof., Director of the Pharmacolic Institute of the Medical Academy, Düsseldorf, 30.9.1946: - concerning preliminary discussions for a new state research council to be formed at the suggestion of the government in Düsseldorf Winkler, Gustav, 7.10.1946: - Personal Wolff, Gottlieb, 1.6.1950: - congratulations on his 90th birthday;
Contains among other things: Association for the Promotion of German Economic Interests Abroad Reichsverband der Vereinigung des Drogen- und Chemikalienfaches, Berlin Gesamtverband deutscher Baumwoll-Webereien e.V. Kuratorium für den China-Fonds des Deutschen Flotten-Vereins und den Südwestafrika-Fonds Verband Deutscher Großhändler der Nahrungsmittel- und verwandten Branchen e.V. (Association of German Wholesalers in the Food and Related Industries) Gesellschaft zur Förderung des Instituts für Seeverkehr und Weltwirtschaft an der Universität Kiel (e.V.) Bund der Industriellen Verband Berliner Großhändler und Fabrikanten für Nahrungs- und Genußmittel e.V. Bremen Association for German Colonial Interests Zentralverband der Chemisch-technischen Industrie e.V. Berlin German-Austrian-Hungarian Business Association
Contains among other things: Proposals for the establishment of a Reichswerbeamt (= industrial advertising and cultural propaganda) by Kommerzienrat Friedrich Soenneken, Bonn, 1915, Unterfasz.1 Qu. 231; the plight of the freelance technical professions of Syndikus Dr. Klein II, Düsseldorf, 1916, brosch. 7 p., underfashion. 2 Qu. 254; Report on the 2nd business year of the Society for the Promotion of the Institute of Shipping and World Economics at the University of Kiel, Kaiser Wilhelm Stiftung e.V., with 4 supplements to the list of members, 1916 Qu. 267 - 271; submission by the Executive Board of the German Confederation against the emancipation of women, Prof. Dr. Langemann, Kiel, on the protection of civil servants against subordination to officially appointed female superiors and on the protection of civil servants and private employees against female competition in working life, Unterfasz. 2 Qu. 279; Statutes of the Association "Kolonialkriegerdank", Berlin, Association for the Support of Former Colonial Warriors of the Army, Navy, Protection and Police Forces and their Survivors, brosch. 9 p., 1913, Unterfasz. 3 Qu. 284; Annual Report for 1917 of the Pension Fund of German Journalists and Writers, Munich, brosch. 14 p., underfashion. 4 Qu. 329
1903-1947 in Walvis Bay, Swakopmund, Gaub, Okahandja, Praeses 1937-1947, then emer.., Senator South West Africa, 1950-1958, see also RMG 1,308, 1,344, 1,366, 1,426-1,431, 1,661, 2.694; extensive correspondence, reports, circulars, 1903-1947; application, curriculum vitae, medical certificate, 1894-1903; building plans for residential house Swakopmund, 1904; appeal by Lieutenant Kuhn to the scattered Hereros to surrender, 1904; petition to d. District office Swakopmund for the improvement of the conditions in the prison camps, 1905; report on the formation of the protestant parish of Swakopmund, 1906; letter of 9 Hererochristen with the request for translation of the Old Testament in Herero, 1906; "Gau-Sari-Aob" (The sower) newsletter for natives, 1907-1909; order e. printing press, brochure here about, 1909; budget d. Missionshaus in Swakopmund, 1909; transcript of the honorary doctorate of the University of Tübingen for Vedder, 1925; State Secretary of Lindequist: Please do not recall Vedder from Africa, 1927; conference negotiation of the church elders and evangelists in Okahandja, 1930; exam questions for diploma examinations of the University of South Africa, 1931; Zur Frauenfrage in Südwestafrika, Referat, 10.., ms. 1935; National Socialism and colored workers, essay, Karl Pegel, 11 p., ms., 1936; appointment of Vedder as "Konsistorialrat h. c" by the California Konsistorial Academic Society, copy of the deed, 1947; statutes of the Heinrich Vedder Foundation, 1954; honorary newspaper articles and obituary, 1961, 1966 and 1972
Rhenish Missionary Society