negotiation

Elements area

Taxonomy

Code

Scope note(s)

    Source note(s)

    Display note(s)

      Hierarchical terms

      negotiation

      negotiation

        Equivalent terms

        negotiation

        • UF Négociations
        • UF Verhandeln
        • UF Négociateur d'otages
        • UF Negociation
        • UF Négocier

        Associated terms

        negotiation

          100 Archival description results for negotiation

          100 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
          Geheimes Staatsarchiv Preußischer Kulturbesitz, I. HA Rep. 83 · Fonds
          Part of Secret State Archive of Prussian Cultural Heritage (Archivtektonik)

          I. History of the authorities The peace treaty between France and Prussia was signed in Tilsit on 9 July 1807. A few days later, on 12 July, a military convention was concluded in Königsberg, which provided in Article 6 for the settlement of outstanding issues by French and Prussian Commissioners. Among others, the Prussian side appointed Johann August Sack (1764-1831), Privy Councillor of Finance, as commissioner. In the course of further negotiations with France, the Immediate Commission for the Enforcement of the Tilsit Peace was finally formed, as its president Sack was again appointed (further in the find-book introduction to the collection GStA PK, I. HA Rep. 72 Immediate Commission for the Enforcement of the Tilsit Peace). After the settlement of the question of contribution and the withdrawal of French troops, the Peace Enforcement Commission was dissolved on 16 December 1808. With the evacuation of the provinces and the abolition of the French control authorities, the administration passed completely into Prussian hands. The general civil commissioners' offices were abolished and replaced by supreme presidencies whose rules of procedure ("Instructions") were issued on 23 December 1808. As Chief President of Brandenburg and Pomerania, Sack was once again appointed in Berlin, but he was still responsible for the contribution payments to France. The war and domain chambers, whose renaming as "governments" has already been promised, were subordinated to the supreme presidencies. The instruction explained the appointment of the chief presidents from the need to reorganize the financial administration to raise the contribution payments to France. The Chief Presidents were entrusted with executive, supervisory and consultative tasks. They should represent the highest state authorities vis-à-vis governments, estates, corporative institutions, heads of military corps, chief post offices and post offices, and all sub-offices in the provinces. They should also be in charge of the safety and sanitation facilities and animal disease control facilities and lead the measures to improve the country. In these matters, they were allowed to issue decrees to the governments, which then had to implement them. As far as the other functions of the governments were concerned, the presidents had only the right of supervision. In particular, they were responsible for reviewing the management of the government and the supervision of personnel. Their disciplinary authority lasted until suspicious civil servants were suspended. While the Presidents were able to request reports from governments, they should not do so excessively. In order to obtain information, the Chief President had to visit the governments and other authorities at their headquarters, have himself reported orally there and check the management on the basis of the files submitted. He had to send an annual report on his findings to the highest internal and financial administration in Berlin. The instruction emphasized that the Presidium did not form intermediate instances between the supreme authorities in Berlin and the governments in the provinces. The course of business between the central and provincial administrations should continue to run directly, i.e. without the involvement of the chief presidents. Governments also had the right to appeal to their superior's office in Berlin in control and auditing matters against the orders of the chief presidents. Only when "danger was imminent" did the rulings have to be implemented immediately. These ultimately very limited powers of the chief presidents were underlined by the fact that they had only a very small staff at their disposal, consisting of a governmental or presidential council, a travel agent, a copyist and a messenger. As early as November 3, 1810, the presidencies were dissolved again - to expand the business circle of the district presidents, as it was said in the corresponding cabinet order. With immediate effect, Sack was appointed head of a Department of Public Order ("Polizey") and Medical Affairs in the Ministry of the Interior. He was also appointed a member of the Council of State. II. Inventory History When the tradition of the upper presidency of Brandenburg and Pomerania was handed over to the secret state archive is just as little known as the issuing authority. The stock was originally divided into the parts A. Generalia, B. Neumark, C. Kurmark and D. Pommern. The finding aids, which are also subdivided, are still available in the old finding aids collection of the GStA PK. In 1875 the stock was revised and reorganized. In 1877 102 acts were removed from the tradition of the Ministry of Culture and classified according to the tradition of the Supreme Presidium. Other files, which the Ministry of Culture handed over to the GStA PK in 1880, were also added to this collection. An inventory revision was carried out in 1884. In 1918 a small entrance with files of the Generalkommissariat for the province Brandenburg and Pommern was taken over and classified into the stock by Melle Klinkenborg. During the Second World War, the tradition was moved to the German Central Archives in Merseburg after 1945, where it was indexed on index cards. The index cards were entered into the archive database in 2013 by the typist Petra Kühnel, title formation and classification were subsequently revised by the archive employee Guido Behnke. Dr. Mathis Leibetseder (Archivrat) finding aids: database; finding book, 1 vol.

          Togo French?
          50/4 · File · 1911-1912
          Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

          Contains: Collection of materials, especially press clippings, on the negotiations concerning a possible transfer of Togo to France. - Note: Stitched in archive folder, 2 cm thick.

          BArch, NS 20 · Fonds · 1921-1967
          Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

          Inventory description: Collection of individual documents and fragments (partly copies) of NSDAP outlines and affiliated associations as well as of private origin, also after 1945. Content characterisation: Negotiations on government participations of the NSDAP (1932-1934); organisation, tasks, activities and political development of the NSDAP (1932-1942); collection of ID cards mainly of the NSDAP, its outlines and affiliated associations (1933-1945). Treatises, reports, notes and drafts on general colonial political ideas (1941). Racial treatment of the population of the former Polish territories (1939). Circular letter of the National Socialist Association of Lecturers (1935-1937). Communications of the Reichskriegerbund (1942). SS and concentration camps: overviews, directories and expert reports from the post-war period on SS offices and facilities, ghettos, forced labour camps and concentration camps. Lebensborn e.V. and affiliated organisations (copies of documents kept at the International Tracing Service in Arolsen). NSDAP offices outside the Reich borders (1937); documents of the "Welt-Dienst"; collection of anti-national-socialist propaganda material. Hand-files by, among others, Sepp Schuster (active in the Federation of Friends of the New Germany (EFENDE) in the USA, in the Kameradschaft USA and as Reich Speaker 1934-1940) and Rudolf Jordan (manuscripts of the former Gauleiter Halle-Merseburg and Magdeburg-Anhalt and Reich Governor in Braunschweig from the post-war period). State of development: Findbuch Zitierweise: BArch, NS 20/...

          40/3 · File · 1900-1938
          Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

          Contains: Negotiations about the subordination of the schools of the North German Mission Society to the specialist administration of the British colony, 20 pieces, 1900-1902; reports and materials, 1908-1920, 50 pieces; collection of printed reports and statistics, approx. 50 pieces. - Note: Everything in German or English language, loose in folder.

          Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Staatsarchiv Ludwigsburg, E 177 I · Fonds · 1817-1924 (Va ab 1717, Na bis 1936)
          Part of State Archives Baden-Württemberg, Dept. State Archives Ludwigsburg (Archivtektonik)

          The history of the district governments: The district governments were established by the 4th Edict of 18 Nov. 1817 at the same time as the district chambers of finance were revoked in 1849. Previously, the entire administration in Württemberg had been led by a central government college, in which sections had been formed for the various branches of the administration, in addition to the district governorates, which had only little competence and were called bailiwick bailiwicks from 1810 onwards, as well as the municipal and district authorities. The division of the country into districts and the creation of provincial colleges was modelled on the French Departmental Constitution of 1789, which also formed the basis for a new administrative organisation in other German states at the beginning of the 19th century. In 1818 it was put into effect, and at the same time the sections of internal administration, medicine, roads, bridges, hydraulic engineering, local government and the Commission for Municipal Use and Allodification of Farm Loans existing in the Ministry of the Interior, the section of crown domains, the section of state accounts, the section of agriculture, the section of state coffers in the Ministry of Finance, the section of foundations in the Ministry of Church and Education were abolished.After the instruction of Dec. 21. In 1819, the district governments were the supreme authorities in their area for all matters of state administration in the field of regimes (sovereign administration), the state police and the state economy, and for the administration of the property of municipalities, official bodies and foundations, insofar as these objects were not assigned to other district or central offices (Chambers of Finance as well as Protestant Consistory, Catholic Church Council, Academic Council, Superior Building Council, Provincial Stud Commission, Medical College, Superior Chamber of Accounts, Tax College, Forestry Council and Bergrat).The old 1819 directive was valid for 70 years, it was only replaced by the Decree of 15 Nov 1889 on the organisation of district governments and the course of their business. Their business was handled by a president as a member of the board, administrative councils and collegial assessors as well as the necessary office staff. For the technical consultation a county medical council was temporarily assigned to the health service, for the road, bridge and hydraulic engineering of the municipalities a construction council, another for the building industry of the municipalities and foundations an expert was assigned, for the permissions of steam boiler plants. Business was transacted partly through collegial consultation and decision-making, partly through the office.In the course of time, a number of important tasks were transferred from the original tasks of the district governments to other middle and central authorities, such as the Ministerial Department for Road and Water Construction (1848), the Central Office for Agriculture (1848), the Central Office for Trade and Commerce (1848), the Ministerial Department for Building Construction (1872), the Corporate Forestry Directorate (1875), the Medical College (1881) and the Higher Insurance Office (1912).After 1870, new tasks arose for the district governments through new Reich and state laws, namely the Industrial Code, the laws on the formation of district poor associations, on the administration of administrative justice, on the representation of Protestant church and Catholic parishes and on the compulsory expropriation of land. In addition, at the beginning of the 20th century, the water law was reorganized, social legislation was expanded and direct supervision of large and medium-sized cities and direct supervision of large and medium-sized cities was assigned. In the case of the tasks of the internal state administration to be carried out by the district governments, these were either the deciding or the decreing authority of the first instance, or the supervisory and complaints authority, or the evaluating and mediating authority. 1924, in the course of the removal of civil servants and offices, the district governments were replaced by a new ministerial department for district and corporate administration, subdivided into the Ministry of the Interior, for all competences which did not pass to the upper offices and the Ministry.Literature- Alfred Dehlinger, Württembergisches Staatswesen, 1951 - 1953 (esp. § 127)- Handwörterbuch der württembergischen Verwaltung, edited by Dr. Friedrich Haller 1915- Denkschrift über Vereinfachungen in der Staatsverwaltung vom 27.2.1911, in: Verhandlungen der Württ. Zweiten Kammer 1911/12, Beilage 28, S. 385ff. (Dep. of the Interior). To the district government of Reutlingen: The seat of the government of the Black Forest district, established at the end of 1817, was Reutlingen (Reutlingen district government), which was responsible for the upper offices of Balingen, Calw, Freudenstadt, Herrenberg, Horb, Nagold, Neuenbürg, Nürtingen, Oberndorf, Reutlingen, Rottenburg, Rottweil, Spaichingen, Sulz, Tübingen, Tuttlingen (with exclave Hohentwiel) and Urach. Furthermore, the workhouse for women in Rottenburg, which was affiliated to the prison for female prisoners in Gotteszell in 1907, was subordinated to her. While the number of senior offices in the district government of Reutlingen remained constant until 1938, the districts themselves experienced a decline in the number of senior offices in the district government of Reutlingen as a result of the law of 6 July 1938.1842 on the amendment in the delimitation of the administrative districts subsequent amendments:- from OA Herrenberg the municipality Hagelloch to OA Tübingen, - from OA Neuenbürg the municipalities Dennjächt, Ernstmühl, Liebenzell, Monakam, Unterhaugstett and Unterreichenbach to OA Calw- from OA Nürtingen the municipality Grabenstetten to OA Urach, Hausen am Tann and Roßwangen to OA Rottweil,- from OA Tübingen the municipality Altenriet to OA Nürtingen and- from OA Urach the municipality Pliezhausen to OA Tübingen and the municipality Eningen to OA Reutlingen.The above-mentioned places may therefore appear in the search book under different regional offices, which has to be taken into account in individual cases. Structure, order and distortion of the inventory: Present holdings E 177 I essentially contain the records handed over to the Ludwigsburg State Archives by the registry office of the district government in Reutlingen on December 3, 1924 - a torso in relation to the original records.A considerable number of the registry files had already been withdrawn and collected in 1823, 1835, 1848, 1853, 1863, 1872, 1889 and finally 1924, including the records until 1850, the business diaries until 1870 and the directorates until 1830 (cf. Further files had been handed over to the following offices for reasons of competence:- 1873 to the ministerial department for building construction (building files),- 1908 to the archive of the interior (files of the county Ober- und Niederhohenberg zu Rottenburg, the bailiwicks Black Forest, on the Alb, on the upper Neckar and on the middle Neckar, the Churfürstl. 1924 finally to the 17 upper offices of the district, to the ministerial department for district and corporate administration, to the ministerial department for building construction, to the regional trade office, to the trade and supervisory office, to the catholic high school council, to the ministerial department for higher schools and/or to the ministerial department for the higher schools. The files handed over to the Archive of the Interior as well as parts of the files handed over to the Ministerial Department for District and Corporation Administration and the Higher Offices (above all the Higher Offices Reutlingen and Urach) later came from these offices directly or via successor authorities (District Administrator's Offices) or the Ministerial Department for Technical Schools (see E 177 I Büschel 301 and 4393). In 1937, the State Archives Ludwigsburg, under the direction of the subsequent Director of the State Archives Prof. Grube, undertook a makeshift order and indexing of the holdings, which he described in the find book as follows: "The registry of the Reutlingen district government was handed over to the State Branch Archives in 1924 with an inadequate handover register of 5 pages. The older registry plan (with keyword register) and a keyword register of 1910 designated as "Repertorium", which was also handed over, were also not sufficient for the determination of the actually existing files. Since it is not possible in the foreseeable future to keep an internal order for the somewhat confused holdings and to separate the files that are not worthy of archiving, the present repertory was produced by Hausverwalter Isser in 1935 on the occasion of the external order of the holdings as a temporary auxiliary measure according to the fascicle inscriptions. As part of the revision of the holdings of the district governments in the Ludwigsburg State Archives from 1986 to 1990, the undersigned, together with the temporary employee Karin Steißlinger, who opened up the extensive administrative legal cases, made new title records for the various partial holdings of the Reutlingen district government (E 177 I, E 177 III and without signature). The registry was based on a simple systematic order introduced after 1863 by Registrator Bregizer and Chancellor List Wenz, according to which the files were divided into the main groups A Regiminal and B Police files with 19 and 13 rubrics respectively; the file bundles themselves were correspondingly provided with file signatures, i.e. with letters and numbers of the stands (boxes) and compartments. After the new indexing had been completed, the title records created using the numerus currens-procedure were sorted according to the old file plan, but the structure of the file groups in the finding aid book was made clearer and without the division into two parts of the Regiminal and Police Administration. Of these, 0.5 linear metres were allocated to the files available here (Kreisreg. Ludwigsburg, Ellwangen and Ulm, Commission for the Clean-up of the Official and Municipal Association, Ministerial Department for District and Corporation Administration). The Main State Archives received 0.6 linear metres (mainly old-valued files) and the State Archives Sigmaringen 1.6 linear metres (files of the higher offices), while 0.8 linear metres of files (slaughterhouse and meat inspection fees, office costs of the higher offices, examination of sports invoices) were collected.For 297, plans and cracks still attached to the files as well as 175 newspaper copies proof maps for the holdings JL 590 and JL 430 were produced. 4484 tufts were made for the holdings E 177 I. Ludwigsburg, in November 1990Hofer tufts 4485 to 4499, received from the State Archives Sigmaringen with access 2000/79, were incorporated into the holdings in July 2009. Retroconversion: This finding aid book is a repertory that was previously only available in handwritten or typewritten form and was converted into a database-supported and thus online-capable format according to a procedure developed by the "Retroconversion Working Group in the Ludwigsburg State Archives". This can lead to a certain discrepancy between the modern external appearance and the partly outdated design and formulation of the title recordings. Corrections, deletions and additions were verified and incorporated.

          Reports Vol. 2
          Geheimes Staatsarchiv Preußischer Kulturbesitz, VI. HA, Nl Schnee, H., Nr. 25 · File · 1932 - 1937
          Part of Secret State Archive of Prussian Cultural Heritage (Archivtektonik)

          Contains: contains and others: - Ada Schnees descent (1932); - Joined the NSDAP (1933); - Tasks after joining the NSDAP. Part 1 (1933); - Tasks after joining the NSDAP. Part 2 (1933); - My acquaintance with Schacht (1933); - Interview with Hitler (1933); - Composition of the new Reichstag (1933); - Jewish question and foreign policy: VI. Commission of the League of Nations Assembly (1933); - Negotiations of the Congress of the World Association of League of Nations Societies (1933); - Report on the treatment of the question of the government measures taken against Jewish population groups in Germany (1933); - Visit to Lord Snowden (1943); - Schnee Speech in Folkestone (1934); - England and the East African Mandate (1934); - Events of the 30th World War of Nations (1933); - Events of the 30th World War of Nations (1933); - The World War of Nations (1934); - The World War of Nations (1933); - The World War of Nations (1934); - The World War of Nations (1934); - The World War of Nations (1934); - The World War of Nations (1934) June 1934; - Schnee over Schleicher and Papen (1934); - Discussion with de Valera (1934); - Meetings of the World Association of League of Nations Societies in Geneva (1934); - Conference of the World Association of League of Nations Societies in Folkestone (1934); - Conference in Folkestone (1934); - Speech in Folkestone (hs. manuscript) (1934); - Discussion with State Secretary Vansittart from the British Foreign Office (1935); - Interview with Major v. Stephani from the "Stahlhelm" (1935); - Supervision of letter and telephone traffic and the police spying system (1935); - Ribbentrop and Rosenberg (1935); - Visit by Lord Buxton (1937); - The Deutsche Kolonialgesellschaft from its foundation in 1887 until its dissolution in 1936 (1937); - A few things about the Lord Mayor, and his wifea. about Konrad Adenauer, former Lord Mayor in Cologne (1937).

          Schnee, Heinrich
          BArch, R 1507 · Fonds · 1920-1934
          Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

          History of the Inventory Designer: Established in August 1920 as a domestic political information and news agency; unter‧richtete the Reich Government on all political endeavours and events affecting the internal situation of the German Reich; dissolved in 1929; tasks taken over by Nachrichtensam‧melstelle in the Reich Ministry of the Interior; in 1933 the office at Gehei‧men Staatspolizeiamt went to inventory description: Established in August 1920 as a domestic information and intelligence agency; informed the Reich government about all political endeavours and events affecting the internal situation of the Reich; dissolved in 1929; tasks were taken over by the intelligence collection agency in the Reich Ministry of the Interior; in 1933, the agency merged with the Secret State Police Office. Characterization of content: Part 1 (formerly: ZStA, 15.07): 1919-1933 (1.584): Administration of offices 1920-1930 (11), police and armed power, intelligence 1919-1930 (38), legal norms 1920-1930 (50), international negotiations and treaties 1920-1929 (6), surveillance of foreign activity in the Reich 1920-1930 (59), defence 1920-1930 (12), traffic with weapons 1920-1930 (23), economic conditions in their effects on public order 1920-1929 (19), political movement 1920-1933 (52), elections, election results, government formations 1920-1930 (19), parties 1920-1930 (8), the International 1925-1929 (2), organizations and movements of a political nature au‧ßerhalb of the parties 1920-1930 (126), Unions 1921-1929 (7), international Ver‧bindungen with economic organizations 1921-1927 (2), officers and Soldatenverei‧nigungen 1921-1930 (10), unemployed movement and demonstrations 1920-1925 (2), organizations, institutes and movements with specific individual goals 1920-1931 (13), pacifist movement 1922-1927 (2), press 1920-1924 (2), occupied as well as ceded territories, East Prussia 1920-1928 (12), foreign countries 1920-1929 (32), files on certain individual events 1922-1933 (55), collection of material on certain individuals 1920-1933 (978), personal files, etc.Dat. (44) Part 2 (formerly: BArch, R 134): 1920-1933 (99): Situation reports 1920-1929 (57), Reports of the News Collection Agency 1929-1933 (42) Part 3 (formerly: ZPA, St 12): 1919-1931 (297): Communist Party of Germany (KPD) 1919-1931 (203), Communist International and Foreign Communist Parties 1920-1927 (10), KPD-related Organisa‧tionen 1921-1930 (52), other parties and organizations 1920-1934 (16), photographic index of the news agencies of the countries 1924-1929 (2), personal files 1920-1933 (14) State of development: Part 1 (formerly: ZStA, 15.07): Findbuch (1940) Teil 2 (vormals: BArch, R 134): Publikationsfindbuch: Lageberichte (1920-1929) und Meldungen (1930-1933) des Reichskommissars für Überwachung der öffentlichen Ordnung und Nachrichtensammelstelle im Reichsministerium des Innern. Stock R 134 of the Federal Archives in Koblenz. Mikrofichesausgabe, edited by Ernst Ritter, Munich 1979 Part 3 (formerly: ZPA, St 12): Findbuch (1968) Zitierweise: BArch, R 1507/...

          Geheimes Staatsarchiv Preußischer Kulturbesitz, I. HA Rep. 129 A · Fonds
          Part of Secret State Archive of Prussian Cultural Heritage (Archivtektonik)

          Foreword On 24 February 1812 an alliance treaty was signed between Prussia and France (Paris Convention), which obliged Prussia to provide military support to France in all wars in Europe - except in Spain, Italy and Greece. The French troops were allowed to march through Prussia with food and horses. The French commanders received extensive powers, so that Prussia was in fact again under French occupation. Major General Friedrich Karl Heinrich Graf von Wylich und Lottum was entrusted with the implementation of the Paris Convention of 24 February 1812, as far as the supply of the reserve magazines at home and abroad and all negotiations with the French General Director Matthieu Graf Dumas were concerned. Major General Count von Wylich und Lottum had already been head of the old army catering system (field catering department, general catering department and general catering directorate) since November 1810. As General Commissioner he conducted the army catering negotiations with the French Marshal Louis-Nicolas Davout (Prince Eckmühl) in Szczecin in March and April 1812. After the return of the Major General Count von Wylich and Lottum to Berlin in April 1812, the office for feeding the French troops was set up, which was then called the General Commissariat for feeding the French and Allied troops. The present files originate from the negotiations between Major General Count von Wylich and Lottum and the French Marshal Davout (Prince Eckmühl) in Stettin (Stettiner Akten) and were not combined with the files of the office for the catering of the French troops. Only a few volumes of the Szczecin files were continued in Berlin, which were integrated into the GStA PK, I. HA Rep. 130 Generalkommissariat to feed the French and Allied troops. The holdings GStA PK, I. HA Rep. 129 A Registratur[by Friedrich Karl Heinrich Graf von Wylich and] Lottum about the catering of French troops (army catering negotiations) comprises 11 sections, most of which are still divided into several parts. An inventory file could not be found in the Secret State Archives of Prussian Cultural Heritage, which is why the details of the inventory history are unknown. For the inventory, there is a register of authorities, which was prepared by the secret registrar and privy councillor Schmidt. The collection was revised in October 1969 in the former Central State Archives of the GDR Merseburg office. In 2007, the register was entered into the Augias database by the archival inspector Verena Kohnke and revised, partly rearranged and classified by the undersigned. Some file titles and contained notes were checked and in some cases supplemented. In addition, the portfolio was re-signed in 2007 by Mr. Szal. How to order and quote: The archival documents listed here are stored in the external magazine. The yellow order forms must therefore be used. In addition, waiting times may have to be accepted for operational reasons. The files are to be ordered as follows: I. HA Rep. 129 A, No. to quote: GStA PK, I. HA Rep. 129 A Registratur[des Friedrich Karl Heinrich Graf von Wylich und] Lottum über die Mehrung der französischen Trots (Armeeverpflegungsverhandlungen), Nr. Volume: 0,4 lfm 45 VE (= Verzeichnungseinheit) Duration: 1812 Last assigned number: 45 Berlin, December 2011 Irina Fröhlich (Archivoberoberinspektorin) Findmaterial: Datenbank; Findbuch, 1 vol.

          Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, Q 1/2 Bü 57 · File · 1915-1919
          Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

          Contains: - Letter from Walther Schücking to the situation in Holland, mechanical, 10.6.1915 - Letter from Walther Schücking to the situation in Holland, manual, 18.6.1915 - Letter from Walther Schücking to the situation in Holland, manual, 26.6.1915 - Telegram from Walther Schücking with appointment arrangement, 26.6.1915 - Telegram from Rosenfeld, 30.6.1915 - Letter to Walther Schücking, manual 2.7.1915 - Report on a meeting of English deputies of Dutch politicians, mechanical, 12.-17.7.1915 - Letter from Walther Schücking, handschr., 23.7.1915 - Letter from Walther Schücking concerning a trip to The Hague, handschr., 23.7.1915 - Letter from Walther Schücking concerning a trip to The Hague, handschr.., 26.7.1915 - Letter to Walther Schücking, handschr., 27.6.1915 - Telegram from Walther Schücking because of a meeting, 26.7.1915 - Telegram from Walther Schücking because of a letter, 27.7.1915 - Letter from Walther Schücking because of his trip to Haag, handschr., 27.6.1915 - Telegram from Walther Schücking because of a meeting, 26.7.1915 - Telegram from Walther Schücking because of a letter, 27.7.1915 - Letter from Walther Schücking because of his trip to Haag, handschr., 31.7.1915 - letter from Walther Schücking with report from Frankfurt, handschr., 5.8.1915 - letter from Walther Schücking, handschr., 7.8.1915 - telegram from Walther Schücking because of a meeting, 8.8.1915 - letter from Dresselhuys because of a conversation, handschr.., 3.10.1915 - Letter from Walther Schücking, handschr., 4.10.1915 - Letter from Walther Schücking to Undersecretary of State Zimmermann on the Dutch Anti-War Council, masch., 10.10.1915 - Letter from Walther Schücking on the progress of the negotiations, handschr., 4.10.1915 - Letter from Walther Schücking to Undersecretary of State Zimmermann on the Dutch Anti-War Council, masch., 10.10.1915 - Letter from Walther Schücking on the progress of the negotiations, handschr., 25.11.1915 - Reports from Holland and Switzerland, mechanical, 7.5.1916 - Letter to Jagow about the situation in Holland, mechanical, 22.5.1916 - Letter from Jagow about the situation in Holland, handschr., 13.6.1916 - Telegram from Rutgers about a meeting, 21.6.1916 - Letter from Otto Rosenfeld about conversations in Holland, mechanical, 22.5.1916 - Letter from Jagow about the situation in Holland, handschr., 13.6.1916 - Telegram from Rutgers about a meeting, 21.6.1916 - Letter from Otto Rosenfeld about conversations in Holland, mechanical, 22.5.1916 - Letter from Jagow about the situation in Holland, mechanical, 21.6.1916 - Letter from Otto Rosenfeld about conversations in Holland, mechanical, 22.5.1916 - Letter from Jagow about the situation in Holland, mechanical, 22.5.1916 - L from Jagow about the situation in Holland, 22.6.1916 - Letter on Rosenfeld's report, masch., 22.6.1916 - Write to Rutgers on negotiations in London, masch., 25.6.1916 - Letter from Jong van Beekendonk on English foreign policy, masch., 26.6.1916 - Letter from Jong van Beekendonk with "Ein Aufruf an die Neutralen", masch., masch., 26.6.1916 - Letter from Jong van Beekendonk with "Ein Aufruf an die Neutralen", masch, 27.6.1916 - Letter with report from a trip to Holland, mechanical, 16.7.1916 - Letter from Zimmermann (AA) to the Dutch Anti-War Council, mechanical, 22.7.1916 - Letter from Rutgers to a court case, handschr.

          Haußmann, Conrad
          News from Ikutha
          ALMW_II._MB_1897_16 · File · 1897
          Part of Francke's Foundations in Halle

          Author: From Miss's diaries. Hofmann and Tremel. Scope: pp. 170-175. Contains, among other things: - "First, an ambassador from Dschandula." (SW: three villages of Dschandula) - "2. A military expedition of the English." (SW: Search for protection from English officials; meeting of the elders of Ikutha) - "3rd negotiations with the Wakamba."

          Leipziger Missionswerk
          BArch, R 1001/709 · File · (1842) Nov. 1888
          Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

          Enthält u.a.: Blockade der ostafrikanischen Küste. - Vereinbarung zwischen Deutschland und England vom 3./5. Dez. 1888 Treaty between Great Britain, Austria, France, Prussia and Russia for the suppression of the African Slave Trade, signed at London, December 20, 1841. London, 1842

          PAW 1812-1945 II-VI-33 · File · Dez. 1929 - Dez. 1930
          Part of Archive of the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities

          Contains: among others: Committee on Copyright - DS: Annual Report 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 for the 1929 rally of the Academic Senate of the D e u t s c h e U n P r a g e - Biography of G. v. Neumayer - Call and Activity Report of the Technical-Scientific Center for Teaching Materials - Deutsche Bauausstellung Berlin 1931 - Prize Task of the Moses Mendelssohn Foundation 1930 - H. Lüders' Journey to New York 1930 - Protest Letter of the Sevčenko-Gesellschaft Lemberg.

          PAW 1812-1945 II-VI-30 · File · 1927
          Part of Archive of the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities

          Contains: among others: Informations Sociales.- German-French Study Committee.- Term of protection of copyright.- Pacific Congress 1927.- 70. birthday O. Redlichs.- German Eastern Federation "Ostland", Weekly.- X. DS: Dotation Carnegie pour la Paix international - International Institute for African Languages and Culture (with DS) - House of Technology in Essen - Archive for Photograms of Musical Master Manuscripts - Entry of income from cathedral monasteries for academic purposes - DS: Deutsche Bauausstellung Berlin 1930.

          PAW 1812-1945 II-VI-22 · File · 1919
          Part of Archive of the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities

          Contains: among others: The Hungarian Academy of Sciences to all academies of the civilized world - International Geodesy - Academic Accounts - Support for Strasbourg Professors - Promotion of Esperanto - Foundation of the Federation "Academic Union" - Solar Eclipse in Bucaramanga - Declaration of Piety by Africans who studied in Germany.

          Stadtarchiv Worms, 242 · Fonds
          Part of City Archive Worms (Archivtektonik)

          Inventory description: Abt. 242 Gemeindearchiv Nieder-Flörsheim Scope: 162 archive boxes and 1 linear metre of oversized formats (= 763 units of description) = 21.5 linear metres (additional m. N) Duration: 1705 - 1945 Place of storage: Ernst-Ludwig-Schule Zur Ortsgeschichte The town of Nieder-Flörsheim was first documented in 768 in a deed of donation in the Lorscher Codex. "On 05.11.768 Gerolf and his brother Emino awarded their parents and their sister Seghelinda a farm ride, 10 days work of arable land and field suitable for planting a vineyard on it for the salvation of their souls. Mention of the vineyard proves that at that time the Franks were already engaged in viticulture and could dispose of their estates. The place used to be called Fletersheim, Flaridesheim, Ilersheim, Nieder-Flersheim. In addition to Lorsch, the Cyrikusstift Neuhausen also owned estates in Flörsheim. Nieder-Flörsheim belonged to the cathedral of Worms since the Middle Ages. In the 13th century Philipp von Falkenstein depressed the monastery and settled in the village. In 1349 the monastery took over the patronage of the Leiningen family and in 1400 it transferred half of the village to the Palatine Count Ruprecht III in ownership. The other half of the village and the bailiwick belong to the monastery of Neuhausen and when this monastery was abolished by Elector Frederick III in 1566, the other half of the village also came to the Palatinate. It was assigned to the Chief Alzey Office. In 1792 the southwest was again involved in the war, when French revolutionary armies occupied the left bank. Again it came to plunderings and tribute payments at money and Naturalien. The later Rheinhessen and the Kurpfalz formed the Donnersberg department, to which the 24 municipalities of Rheinhessen also belonged. Administrative reform and economic upturn in agriculture shaped people's lives. After Napoleon's defeat Nieder-Flörsheim came to the Grand Duchy of Hesse. 1816 Canton Pfeddersheim, 1835 district Worms, 1848 administrative district Mainz, 1850 administrative district Worms, 1852 - 1969 district Worms (1946 Rhineland-Palatinate). As part of the administrative reform, the municipalities of Nieder-Flörsheim and Dalsheim were merged to form the new municipality of Flörsheim-Dalsheim in 1969. The parish had a parish church dedicated to St. John which was first mentioned in a document in 1234. During the Palatinate division of the church in 1705, the church fell to the Reformed. The Catholics set up an oratory in the town hall. It became a branch of the Catholic Church in Dalsheim. The Lutherans were awarded a parish in Dalsheim. In Nieder-Flörsheim there were two schools, the Reformed with the school building and the Catholic school. The Israelite community built a synagogue in 1817 (Untergasse 10), but sold it to the Häußer family in 1920. The population grew in 1811 to 596 inhabitants. The archival material in the municipality of Nieder-Flörsheim was attempted to be arranged as early as 1838. From the letter of the district council of the district Worms it appears that Mr. Völker from Wersau (Odenwald) had been commissioned to order the municipal registration of Nieder-Flörsheim (No. 0156, s. 13.03.1838). In 1914 the teacher A. Trieb compiled a file index of the municipal archive Nieder-Flörsheim (see Dept. 206 No. 99). After the dissolution of the administrative district of Worms (1969), the two combined municipalities of Nieder-Flörsheim and Dalsheim initially retained their archives in the town hall (in contrast to all other municipalities of the VG which had already deposited their documents in the town archive of Worms). Only after lengthy negotiations with the municipality in 1998 was the valuable archive material handed over to the municipal archive by the municipality of Flörsheim-Dalsheim together with the archives of Dalsheim after the conclusion of a deposit contract. The relatively undisturbed and rich archive material, especially the older ones, was stored in the cellar of the Ernst-Ludwig-Schule, in contrast to many neighbouring communities in both places. The indexing of both community archives began in autumn 2009. First of all, the documents had been prepared in 2008 according to the order of the 1908 registration plan; in 2009/10 the files were successively brought to the Raschi-Haus for processing and processed there. The duration of the project essentially begins in the first third of the 18th century and usually lasts until 1945. The forests of Nieder-Flörsheim are particularly worth mentioning. The Nieder-Flörsheimer forest served the community as a source of income. Numerous records of timber auctions and counts can be found in the documents of the municipal treasury bills. For reasons of data protection, 2 files were provided with a blocking note for use in accordance with the provisions of the Land Archives Act. After completion of the new indexing (Sept. 2009 - April 2010), the holdings comprise 759 units of description (10.7.2012: 763), which are stored in 162 archive boxes. The files are in good condition. No cassations were made. Because of the different file plans, a new section 242-N was created for the files of the municipality from 1945 to 1969 until their merger with Dalsheim, which is to be used in addition. For Dept. 242 and 243 there is still an extensive and still unseen collection of printed matter, laws and other grey literature in the holdings, which would require separation and indexing. Supplementary archive departments in the city archive: -Abt. 35 Worms Health Department -Abt. 49 Pfeddersheim Municipal Archive -Abt. 180/10 Volksbank Worms-Wonnegau -Abt. 185 Family and company archive Ludwig C. Freiherr von Heyl -Abt. 241 Gemeindearchiv Dalsheim -Abt. 204 Worms Documentation/Collection Literature: BRILMAYER, Karl Johann, Rheinhessen in the past and present, Giessen 1905 KOßLER, Matthias, Chronicle of the territory of the municipality of Monsheim, Mainz 1992 Festschrift der Provinz Rheinhessen zur 100jahrfeier 1816-1916, Mainz 1916 GALLÉ, Völker, Rheinhessen. Discovery trips in the hills between Worms and Bingen, Mainz and Alzey, Cologne, 1992 KORB, Willi, Nieder-Flörsheim. From the history of a wine village in Rhinehesse. Studies commemorating the 1200th anniversary, Westhofen, 1968 Worms, April 2010 Magdalena Kiefel

          Stadtarchiv Worms, 243 · Fonds
          Part of City Archive Worms (Archivtektonik)

          Description of holdings: Abt. 243 Gemeindearchiv Dalsheim Scope: 187 archive cartons and 3 linear metres oversized formats (= 1090 units of registration) = 24 linear metres (additional m. N) Duration: 1618 - 1973 Location: cellar of the Ernst-Ludwig-Schule Zum Bestand The first inventory of the municipal archive of approx. 1811 is only incompletely preserved; completely preserved inventories (which obviously refer more to the current registry and do not list many old pieces, although they often show a numbering) date from the years 1831, 1837 and 1843, perhaps in connection with a circular of the government in Mainz concerning the order of the municipal archives of 1830 (No. 177 and 466). In the year 1906 a number of mentioned archival records were used by the War Court Council of Obenauer for the purpose of writing their own family history in the Haus- und Staatsarchiv Darmstadt (No. 52). A letter dated 01.04.1914 refers to the production of the comprehensive index of 1914 (no. 208) by teacher Trieb von Eppelsheim, in which the return of the municipal archive, which was also lent to Darmstadt for this purpose, is announced (no. 946). After the dissolution of the administrative district of Worms (1969), the two communities, which had been merged in the same year under the name "Flörsheim-Dalsheim", held back the respective archives in contrast to the other communities, which handed over their documents to the municipal archive of Worms as a deposit. It was not until 1997, after lengthy negotiations and the conclusion of a deposit contract, that they were handed over to the Worms Municipal Archives, where they first found their place in the cellar of the Adenauerring office building and then in the cellar of the Ernst Ludwig School. Between September 2009 and August 2010, they were gradually brought back to the city archives for indexing and, after processing, returned to the Ernst-Ludwig-Schule. At the same time, the archives of the neighbouring municipality of Nieder-Flörsheim, which were taken over at the same time in 1997, were processed, the indexing of which was also completed in summer 2010 (Dept. 242). During the processing, which followed the usual principles, the material was separated from the beginnings up to 1945 on the one hand (Dept. 243) and from the period from 1945 up to the creation of the association municipality in 1969 on the other hand (Dept. 243-N). The former was arranged according to the existing order according to the 1908 registry plan, the latter according to the 1953 file plan in the Findbuch and listed separately as a sub-collection of Dept. 243-N. The former was not listed in the Findbuch. The condition of the material was good except for two pieces where slight mildew was found (No. 245/2 and No. 602, stored at the end of the collection in its own cardboard archives). There were no cassations. Supplementary archive departments in the city archive: Abt. 242 Gemeindearchiv Nieder-Flörsheim Literature: BRILMAYER, Karl Johann, Rheinhessen in past and present, Gießen 1905 GALLE, Volker, Rheinhessen. Discovery trips in the hilly country between Worms and Bingen, Mainz and Alzey, Cologne 1992 Gauweiler, Wolfgang, 1200 years Dalsheim, Mainz 1966 KOBLER, Matthias, Chronicle of the area of the association community Monsheim, Mainz 1992 Worms, in August 2010 Martin Geyer, archivamtmann

          Mobilisation 1914: vol. 2
          BArch, RM 20/526 · File · 21. März 1919 - 27. Jan. 1920
          Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

          contains, among other things, demands by Germany concerning Kiautschou at the Peace Commission; proposals by the Navy for amendments and additions to the guidelines for German peace negotiators; article: "Die wirtschaftliche Ausbeutung des Saarbecken"; proposals by the R e i c h s m a r i n e a m t for the negotiations of pre-peace

          Order and classification: Formerly secret promotions were probably already taken from the general files by the file maker and kept separately, presumably in a so-called "iron cupboard". These procedures can now be found, if they still exist, in the rear part of the collection under the file title "Secret Doctorates". CH, 07.12.2017 Foreword: History of the registry trainer The Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences of Berlin University was established by decree of the Reich Minister of Science, Education and Popular Education with effect from 01 April 1936. The following institutes were transferred from the Faculty of Philosophy, which previously included both the humanities and the natural sciences, to the business area of the new faculty: Mathematical Institute Institute for Applied Mathematics Seminar for the Education of Students in Scientific Computing I. Physical Institute II. Physikalisches Institut I. Institute for Theoretical Physics II. Institute for Theoretical Physics Institute for Height Radiation Research Meteorological Institute Chemical Institute Physical-Chemical Institute Technological Institute Pharmaceutical Institute Museum of Natural History Mineralogical-Petrographic Institute Geological-Paleontological Institute Zoological Institute Zoological Museum Plant Physiology Institute Botanical Museum Geographical Institute and Museum of Oceanography The faculty also provided training: University observatory in Potsdam-Babelsberg Astronomisches Recheninstitut Deutsches Institut für Perlen- und Edelsteinforschung Botanischer Garten Geodätisches Institut (Potsdam) Geophysikalisches Institut (Potsdam) 1) Nothing significant changed in this composition until 1945. It should only be mentioned that in November 1942 an "Institute for Race Biology" was founded. The separation of the natural sciences from the humanities took place at a relatively late stage in Berlin. 2) The faculty's teaching staff consisted of 37 full professors 1 reading member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences 2 full honorary professors 20 honorary professors 3 civil servants extraordinary professors 47 non-official extraordinary professors 40 lecturers 3 assistant lecturers 1 lecturer In the winter semester 1944/45 the faculty consisted of 37 full professors 1 reading member: 34 full professors 10 released full professors 3 reading members of the Prussian Academy of Sciences 3 extraordinary professors 1 released extraordinary professor 1 visiting professor 14 honorary professors 1 released ordinary honorary professor 53 extraordinary professors 5 non-official extraordinary professors 46 lecturers 12 lecturers 12 lecturers The teaching staff included such outstanding and internationally known and respected university professors and researchers as M. Planck, M. v. Laue, E. Schrödinger, E. Schmidt, W. Nernst, W. Heisenberg, P. A. Thiessen and M. v. Ardenne. From April 1, 1936 to May 8, 1945 Prof. Dr. Ludwig Bieberbach was dean of the faculty. 1) See Official Gazette of the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Berlin, No. 7 of 1.4.1936, p. 149, 155 2) Negotiations had already taken place in 1923/24 because of the division of the philosophical faculty, but these were unsuccessful because of the negative attitude of the majority of the faculty members. Cf. to this: University Archive of the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Faculty of Philosophy - Dean's Office - No. 12, pp. 12/13, 30-42 Registratur- und Bestandsgeschichte 1st Registraturverhältnisse: The registry was administered by the dean's office. The order within the registry was done in the simplest way according to the alphabetical keyword system (e.g. "General" = A). Access 2: The holdings have been in the custody of the University Archives since its foundation (1954). It consists of 12 file units of business files and 239 volumes of habilitation and doctoral files. Since there is no list of files, it is not possible to determine whether the files have been handed down in their entirety. It must, however, be assumed that the greater part of the business files has been lost, while the habilitation and doctoral files are completely available. 3. archival treatment: The keyword order could not be used as a basis for the order of the stock. Three main groups were therefore formed. The order of the stock took place in August 1970 by the undersigned. The recording of the file units had already been carried out at an earlier date. Berlin in August 1970 signed Dipl.-Hist. Kossack, Head of Archive References: 1st archive: Archive of the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, holdings: Faculty of Philosophy - Dean's Office - No. 12 2nd publications: Official Gazette of the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Berlin, No. 7 of April 1, 1936 Staff Directory of the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Berlin, 127th Rectorate Year 1936/37 Course Catalogues of the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Berlin, 1936-1945 Inventory Structure: 1st Faculty Matters 2nd Faculty Matters 3rd Student Matters Period until: 1958 Period from: 1924 Citation Method: HU UA, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences.01, No. XXX. HU UA, MNF.01, No. XXX.

          ALMW_II._32_40 · File · 1925-1945
          Part of Francke's Foundations in Halle

          Nine fiches. Contains: FICHE NR. 40 1 - Tanga 1925. room to college (report no. 1) - Machame 1925. room to college (reports no. 2, 3; 2 letters) - Machame 1925. room and Gutmann to college with transcript of room (report no. 4) - o.O., o.J. room "Exposition, read at the committee meeting at Moshi, ... 1925." (English) - Shira 1925. room and Gutmann to college (report No. 5) - Machame 1925. room to college (report No. 6; supplement: "Inventory of movable objects in the Mission House to Shira"; confidential transcript of room) - Machame 1925. room to college (report No. 7) - Masama 1925. Gutmann and room to college (report No. 8) - Machame 1925. Room (Report No. 9; Supplements: Mbaga Lutheran Mission 1925 an Raum - partly German and partly English; Machame 1925. Room and Gutmann an "the Missionaries of the Luth. Mission in Tanganyika") - Arusha 1925. Gutmann, Room an Kollegium (Report No. 10) - Nkoaranga 1925. Reusch, Room, Gutmann an Kollegium (Report No. 11) - Machame 1925. Room an Kollegium (Reports No. 12-15). FICHE NO 40 2 - Continued - Masama 1925 Room, Gutmann to College (Report No 16) - Annexes to Report No 18: Room an "the Missionareis of the Augustana-Synod"; Mamba Mission Station 1925 to Room (English); Marangu 1925. Anderson an Raum (English); "To the Missionareis of our Tanganyikafield" (copy) - Machame 1925. Room to College (Report No. 17-22) - 1925 / 1926. 3 Telegrams - Machame 1926. Room to College (Report No. 23-24, 27-34) - Masama 1926. Room, Gutmann to College (Report No 25) - Machame 1926. Room to College (Report No 26) - Minutes of Missionary Meeting Room, Blumer, Reusch in Arusha 1926 - Machame 1926. Room to Mission Director (4 letters) - Dar es Salaam 1926. Education Office an Raum (English) - Daressalaam 1926. Office of the director of medical and sanitary services an Secretary of the Ev. Luth. Mission Machame - "Medical Practioners and Dentists" No. 7, 1926 (printed). FICHE No. 40 3 - Continued (Report No. 34) - Machame 1926. Room to Mission Director (2 letters) - Machame 1926-1928. Room to College (Reports No. 35-45, 47-50, 52, 53, 55-57) - 1926. 2 telegrams - Attachment Report No. 37: Reusch, Room 1926 (concerning "Steppe Mission") - Supplement Report No. 38: "Approximate cost estimate of the East African Mission for the year 1927" - "Minutes of a meeting of the Merumissionare ... 1926 in Arusha" - Supplement to Report No. 42: Marangu 1927. Rother - Supplement to Report No. 40: "Summary of an interview with Mr. Raum at Machame" 1927. Marangu 1927. Rother an Raum - Supplement to Report No. 40: Shigatini 1926. Fokken (concerning profitability of the industrial school) - Marangu 1927. Discussion Raum, Gutmann, Rother (concerning the industrial school). Purchase of a plot of land; school programme: girls' school, central school and industrial school, teachers' question; furnishing of the station with furniture; "Own acquisition of school land") - Machame 1927. Rißmann to Kollegium (concerning Request for assistance to purchase a mule) - Arusha 1927. Blumer an Raum - Machame 1927-1928. Room to Mission Director (10 letters) - 1928. Telegram - Moshi 1928. Room (Report No. 54) - Machame 1928. Room to College (without numbering). FICHE NR. 40 4 - Machame 1928. room to mission inspector (attached an English letter) - Machame 1928. room to mission director - Machame 1929. room to mission director (4 letters) - Machame 1929. transcript from a letter room - Machame 1929. room to mission inspector (2 letters) - Machame 1929. room to college (2 letters) - Machame 1930. Room to Mission Director (11 letters) - Transcript of an article by Broomfield, Zanzibar from "East African Standard" 1930: "A plea for the Retention of Swahili" (Engl) - Dar es Salaam 1930. Room to Mission Inspector - o.J. Telegram - Machame 1930. room to college ("Report on negotiations of the senior with the Field Director of Africa - Inland - Mission...in Kijabe...1930.") - Machame 1931. room to Mission Director - o.O., o.J. Translation of a friendly agreement between the Afrika Inland Mission and the Leipziger Lutherische Mission - Daressalaam 1931. Land Department to room (English; copy) - Shigatini 1931. Fuchs to Mission Director (7 letters) - Shigatini 1931. Fuchs to College - Shigatini 1931. Fuchs to Mission Council at H. Rother - Shigatini 1931. Fuchs to Mission Council members, copy for Mission Director. FICHE NR. 40 5 - continued - Shigatini 1931. Fuchs to Mission Director - Shigatini 1932. Fuchs to Mission Inspector (2 letters) - Shigatini 1932. Fuchs to Mission Director (5 letters) - Shigatini 1932. Fuchs ("Report on the visits of the stations Nkoaranga, Arusha and Naverera. 1932.") - Shigatini 1933. Fuchs to Mission Director (5 letters) - Shigatini 1933. Fuchs to Mission Inspector (3 letters) - Shigatini 1933. Fuchs to College - Neumoschi 1933. Fuchs to Mission Director - Shigatini 1934. Fuchs to Mission Director (2 letters) - Shigatini 1934. Fuchs to Mission Inspector - Machame 1934. ? to Mission Director - Machame 1934-1935. Room to Mission Director (6 letters) - Machame 1934. Room to "the congregations of the Evangelical Churches" 1934."luth. Mission on Kilimanjaro, Pare on Meru and in the steppe." - Machame 1934. room to "all mission members" - Machame 1934-1935. room to mission inspector (4 letters). FICHE NR. 40 6 - Continued - n.d. Room "A short report on the present situation of the Leipzig Ev. Luth. Mission in Tanganyika Territory" (English) - Machame 1935. Room (Circular No. 3/1935) - Machame 1935. Room to Mission Director (7 letters) - Machame 1935 Room ("Vote on the proposal of the Betheler Brothers for the establishment of a common pastoral school for the Lutheran missions in Tanganyika territory.") - open, o.J. Rorarius ("Thoughts for the establishment of a preacher school for the whole of East Africa") - Mlalo, Lwandai 1935. Personn ("Thoughts for a common preacher [shepherd] school for all Lutheran-style missions working in Tanganyika territory.") - Machame 1936. room to mission inspector - Machame 1936. room to mission director - Machame 1936. Mergner (concerning death of senior room) - Moshi 1936. Gutmann to mission director - Moshi 1936. Gutmann (circular 11/36) - Moshi 1936. Gutmann to college - Moshi 1936. Gutmann to Mission Director (5 letters) - Moshi 1936. Gutmann to "Doctor" (no details - possibly Mission Inspector Weishaupt) (3 letters) - Machame 1936. ? to Mission Inspector - Machame 1936. Gutmann to Mission Director - Machame 1936. Gutmann to Mission Inspector - Moshi 1936. Gutmann to College attn. Mission Inspector (2 letters) - Machame 1936. Expert opinion (concerning use of fulgurite and other cement asbestos products) - Moshi 1937. Gutmann to Mission Director (5 letters) - Moshi 1937. Gutmann to Mission Inspector Weishaupt (5 letters). FICHE NR. 40 7 - continued - Moshi 1937. Gutmann to Mission Director (11 letters) - Moshi 1937. Gutmann to Mission Inspector Weishaupt (7 letters) - Moshi 1937. Gutmann (Circular No.7) "An die Herren Missionare" - o.O., o.J. "Kumpokea tena Mkristo aliyeasi." "Kuungamanisha Wangao" - Moshi 1937. Gutmann to College at H. Mission Inspector (4 letters) - Moshi 1937. Gutmann to College at H. Mission Director and Mission Inspector (Land Purchase; Problems Catholic-Evangelical) - Moshi 1937. Gutmann to College attn. Mission Director (3 letters) - Moshi 1937. Gutmann to College - Moshi 1937. Gutmann (Circular) - Moshi 1937. Gutmann to Members of Mission Council - Nkoaranga 1937. Winkler to College (for theft damage) - Nkoaranga 1937. Winkler to Gutmann - Moshi 1938. Gutmann to College for the attention of Mission Inspector (3 letters) Marangu 1938. Rother to Mission Director (transcript) - Moshi 1938. Gutmann to Mission Inspector Weishaupt (2 letters) - Moshi 1938. Gutmann to Mission Director - Moshi 1938. Gutmann to College for the attention of Mission Director and Mission Director - Moshi 1938. Gutmann to College for the attention of Mission Director and Mission Director - Mission Director and Mission Director - Moshi 1938. FICHE NO 40 8 - Moshi 1938. Gutmann to Mission Director (4 letters) - Moshi 1938. Gutmann to Mission Inspector Weishaupt (2 letters) - Marangu 1938. Rother to Mission Director (7 letters) - Marangu 1938. Rother to Mission Director and Mission Inspector Küchler (3 letters) - Dodema 1938. Rother to Mission Director - Marangu 1938. Rother (Supplement to the Minutes of the Mission Council Meeting) - Marangu 1938. Rother to Mission Inspector Küchler (10 letters) - Marangu 1939. Rother to Mission Inspector (11 letters) - Großolbersdorf 1939. Everth to Mission Inspector - Das es Salaam 1939. Rother ("Memorandum of the Meeting of the Centra Education Committee" " A. European Education" " B. Native Education") - Zanzibar 1939. Rother to Mission Director - Marangu 1939. Rother to Director of Education - Altmoschi 1939. Rother to Mission Inspector - Marangu 1939. Rother to Mission Director - Machame 1939. Rother to Mission Director (transcript) - Koffiefontein 1945. Rother to Mission Director (transcript) - Sandhorst Hospital near Aurich 1947. Rother to Mission Inspector - Amsterdam 1905. Room to Mission Director - Antwerp 1925. Gutmann to Mission Director - o.O. 1920. Room to College. FICHE NO 40 9- - Continued - Masama 1925. Gutmann to Mission Director (2 letters) - Machame 1915. Room to Mission Director - Machame 1925. Room to Mission Director (4 letters) - Masama 1925. Gutmann to ? - Supplement to Letter Room 1925 - Mbaga 1925. Luth. Mission to Room.

          Leipziger Missionswerk
          BArch, R 8028 · Fonds · 1910-1930
          Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

          History of the Inventory Designer: Mirbach's Telegrafisches Büro (MTB) was founded at the beginning of the 20th century in the Rhineland as a small news agency by the editor Mirbach. Together with Professor Arthur Jung, he owned the "International Telegraph Agency (ITA)" in Cologne until November 1920. After separating from his cooperation partner Jung, Mirbach initially resumed work in his former correspondence office. The situation in the German Reich at that time played an important role in the further development of the MTB. After the defeat of the Imperial German Empire in World War I, the newly created Saar region, consisting of the southern part of the Rhine Province as well as the Saarpfalz and the western part of the Bavarian Palatinate, was separated from the German Empire by the territorial provisions of the Treaty of Versailles. In 1920 it was placed under French administration with a mandate from the League of Nations. The occupation of the Saar region by French troops was accompanied by the spread of French propaganda (1). This was mainly due to the purchase of some German newspapers, such as the "Südwestdeutsche Abendzeitung" by the French military administration (2). Renamed "Neuer Saar Kurier", the newspaper now appeared bilingual and was supplied with information by French news services. The German Reich government and the Foreign Office felt compelled to counteract France's efforts to separate the Palatinate. Similar efforts of the occupying powers could also be observed in the other ceded territories of Alsace-Lorraine, Rhineland, Eupen-Malmedy, Posen, North Schleswig, in parts of Upper Silesia and in the border regions. In order to counteract the propaganda of the occupying powers, the Reich government agreed to the proposal of the publishing director Kristian Kraus to create an intelligence service that would supply the ceded and occupied as well as the border regions with news from the German Reich. Kraus had been organizing the intelligence service for the Saar region and occupied areas of the Rhineland on behalf of the Reich government since 1919. This intelligence service should be further developed. Mirbach's telegraphic office was considered at that time to be the "management of the Rheinische Korrespondenz"(3). Kraus was interested in taking over the MTB, as he explains in a letter to the press department of the Reich government. After the negotiations between Kraus, Mirbach and the government the MTB was integrated into the "Reichsstelle zur Versorgung der besetzten und abgetretenen deutschen Gebiete mit deutschen Nachrichten". From 1920 to 1929, Kraus was the managing director and literary director of this Reich office, also known as the "Allgemeines Politisches Informationsbüro G.m.b.H." (General Political Information Office G.b.H.), based in Berlin (4). At the same time, the news agency Polwona was founded, also managed by Kraus, which opened several branches in the occupied and ceded German territories (5). These news agencies were outwardly issued as private-sector enterprises, but were financially dependent on the Reich. Daily messages were transmitted by telephone from Berlin to the Polwona branches. These were established in Frankfurt am Main (Frankfurter Depeschenbüro), Mannheim (Oberrheinisches Nachrichtenbüro), Saarbrücken (Saarkorrespondenz), Cologne (Mirbachs Telegraphisches Büro), Königsberg (Norel - Ost Korrespondenz) and Flensburg (Korrespondenzbüro Nordschleswig) (6). From there, the news was forwarded to the provincial press in the area. Thus the citizens in the occupied or ceded territories remained informed about politics, economy and current issues in the German Reich and were also strengthened in their sense of belonging to the German Reich. In return, the branches had the task of sending news from the occupied territories to Berlin, in particular interviews with important representatives of the occupying powers. Comments: (1) BArch R 8028 / 1 fol. 139, 166. (2) BArch R 8028/ 1 fol. 139. (3) BArch R 8028/ 1 fol. 92. (4) BArch (former BDC, RKK/ RSK Personal- und Sachakte, Kraus, Kristian. (5) BArch R 8028/ 1 fol. 180. (6) BArch R 8028/1 fol. 42. Abbreviations: MTB - Mirbach's Telegraphic Office Polwona - Political West - East - News Agency O.N.B. - Upper Rhine News Agency W.T.B. - Wolff's Telegraphic Office S.C.B. - is not clearly identifiable from the files, probably "Saar Correspondenz Büro" "Dako" - "Danziger Korrespondenzbüro" Description of the holdings: Inventory history The holdings were confiscated by the Red Army towards the end of the Second World War and handed over to the German Central Archive (later: Central State Archive of the GDR based in Potsdam) in the 1950s in the course of file returns from the Soviet Union. The inventory signature there was 61 Mi 1. With the transfer to the Federal Archives, the inventory signature was changed to R 8028. Archive processing In the course of the processing of the inventory, a finding index was created in the Central State Archives of the GDR, on the basis of which the present finding aid book with the database BASYS-S was compiled. The existing classification has been adopted. In the course of processing, series and tape sequences were created. After the inspection of the files some editorial and contentwise revisions at the data records already existing in BASYS -S were made. There were no cassations or additions. Citation BArch R 8028/........................................................... State of development: Online-Findbuch (2008) Citation method: BArch, R 8028/...