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              107 Archival description results for Vermögen

              Landesarchiv Sachsen-Anhalt, I 601 (Benutzungsort: Merseburg) · Fonds · 1923 - 1949
              Part of State Archive Saxony-Anhalt (Archivtektonik)

              Note: The holdings contain archival material that is subject to personal protection periods in accordance with § 10 Para. 3 Sentence 2 ArchG LSA and until their expiration is only accessible by shortening the protection period in accordance with § 10 Para. 4 Sentence 2 ArchG LSA or by accessing information in accordance with § 10 Para. 4a ArchG LSA. Find aids: Findbuch 2015 (online searchable) Registraturbilddner: On 5 Oct. 1923 the sugar distribution company Halle-Rositz-Holland AG was founded in Halle (Saale). After the closure of the Holland sugar factory in Dessau-Alten (1932), the company was renamed Zuckervertriebsgesellschaft Halle AG (ZVG), with branches in Halle and Rositz/Altenburg. From 1942 ZVG and the Vereinigung mitteldeutscher Rohzuckerfabriken (VEMIRO) formed a dual company within the meaning of the Cartel Tax Regulation. The sugar distribution company coordinates the supply of raw sugar to the sugar refineries, the sale of sugar products, controlled the beet cultivation and was the sales organ of the raw sugar factories combined in VEMIRO, primarily in the Halle, Köthen and Zeitz/Altenburg regions. It belonged to the Berlin Sugar Industry Economic Group and to the Berlin Association of the German Sugar Industry. In the 1930s and 1940s, the company also provided foreign labour and forced labour for the refineries and sugar factories. In 1946 the company was expropriated, assigned to Industriewerke Sachsen-Anhalt and dissolved in 1947. Their tasks and assets were taken over by the Halle sugar refinery. Inventory information: From the administrative archive of the VEB Zuckerkombinat Halle, about 2 linear metres of ZVG documents were handed over to the Staatsarchiv Magdeburg in 1981, where the files were recorded on index cards and re-signed in 1984. The holdings were transferred in 1994 to the newly founded Landesarchiv Merseburg (later Landeshauptarchiv Sachsen-Anhalt, Merseburg Department), where the card index was retroconverted in 2011 in the scopeArchiv archive programme. 2015 saw the complete revision and reorganization of the archive holdings. Additional information: Corresponding stocks: - I 599 VEMIRO - I 601 Zuckerraffinerie Halle AG - Stocks of various sugar factories

              Staatsarchiv Hamburg, 113-6 · Fonds · 27.09.1939-29.02.1952
              Part of State Archives Hamburg (Archivtektonik)

              Administrative history: At the beginning of the war in 1939, following the passing of the Reichsleistungsgesetz (Reich Benefits Act) in the version of 1 September 1939 and of § 1911 of the BGB in the version of 11 October 1939 (cf. RGBl 1939 I, p. 2026 ff.), care and administration in absentia were ordered for Jewish property of all kinds, including stored goods, foreign holdings in German firms, real estate and stored stock. The property of Germans who were abroad at the time the law came into force could also be affected. These could be complete shiploads, e.g. from ships that were forced to turn back due to the danger of war. For example, the representatives of the Reich Office for Wood or the Reich Governor in Hamburg were charged with complete loads of wood that could not be assigned to owners or to the storage site of Hamburg at that time. The court-appointed caretakers and administrators were usually merchants and lawyers who were actually required to act for the benefit of their fosterlings. In the further course of the war, however, parts of the assets were transferred to the Reich or the "people's assets", so that not all caretakers took care of real clarification of the property situation or could not do so even in the absence of information, because documents were missing and could not be procured due to the war. The documents recorded in this inventory on the administration of assets of enemy foreigners, Germans staying abroad, and Jews who had fled abroad were first created in Dept. 5 of the State Administration in Hamburg (Economic, Agricultural, and Social Department), before they were transferred in the course of the war to the Joint Chiefs of Staff for Economic Affairs for the Wehrwirtschaftsbezirk X (Military Economic District X). It will not be possible to reconstruct in detail how they came from here to the office of the Great Criminal Chamber 8 (Economic Criminal Chamber) of the Regional Court. From here they were handed over to the State Archives in 1999 and - since they cannot be assigned to the Regional Court in accordance with the provenance - formed into the existing holdings. In addition to the individual care processes, there were also a few general administrative processes for the treatment of care. Archival history: The archive assistants Mr. Köppe and Mr. Nowak demetalized, relocated and recorded the mostly narrow individual processes under the guidance of the undersigned; Mr. Köppe subsequently recorded the archive records with "Findbuch"; they were revised and indexed by the undersigned. March 2006 Lorenzen-Schmidt

              Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, GU 120 Bü 255 · File · 27. März 1913
              Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

              27 March 1913, Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, GU 120 Karl Fürst von Urach Graf von Württemberg (1865-1925)

              Untitled
              BArch, R 2-ANH. · Fonds · (1938-) 1945-1958
              Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

              History of the Inventory Designer: The "Restverwaltung" (Residual Administration) was created in Berlin as an immediate post-war institution from a small group of former members of the Reich Ministry of Finance to compile overviews and compilations from preserved files of the RFM on behalf of the Allies. The "Restverwaltung" was elevated to the status of an office with its affiliation to the General Tax Directorate and the provision of the necessary funds by the order of the Finance Department of the Magistrate of the City of Berlin of 31 Jan. 1946. On 4 Dec. 1946, the Allied Commandant's Office ordered the closure of the Restverwaltung and the Magistrate of Berlin was instructed to "establish an office for the security and classification of the archives of the former Reich Finance Ministry ... to set up". The activities of the "Archive of the former Reich Ministry of Finance", which was established as a result, were initially limited to "providing information to the four occupying powers" (see: R 2 ANH./1). Later, the provision of information to German offices as well as to companies and private individuals was added. On the basis of an agreement between the Federal Ministry of Finance and the Senator for Finance of the State and the City of Berlin dated 2 June and 6 July 1951, the 'Archive' was incorporated into the Federal Ministry of Finance with effect from 1 April 1951 and, until its dissolution at the end of 1957/beginning of 1958, was referred to as the 'Archive of the Federal Ministry of Finance'. Inventory description: Inventory history In the 1960s, the files of the former Reich Ministry of Finance kept by the Restverwaltung and the archives of the Federal Ministry of Finance, as well as the documents resulting from their own activities, were partly transferred to the Federal Archives via the Federal Ministry of Finance and the Geheime Staatsarchiv. In addition, the holdings have been supplemented by those elaborations, especially statistical compilations, which have been compiled by the German working groups of the former Ministerial Collecting Center, Economic Division, from files of the former Reich Ministry of Finance and which have entered the Federal Archives. Characterisation of the contents: Based on the tasks of the authority, apart from a few files on the organisation and information on periods of employment, there are mainly documents and information for the four occupying authorities on the Reich budget and on financial matters of the Reich, on armaments financing, on German property abroad as well as on enemy and foreign property in Germany, including 12 volumes on the Aryanisation and smashing of the Petschek group. Citation style: BArch, R 2-ANH./...

              release from hostility
              BArch, R 2107-I/207 · File · Mai 1940
              Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

              Contains: Alphabetically sorted lists of names of affected persons Contains, among other things: Names of the 'Gruppe Deutscher Kolonialwirtschaftlicher Unternehmungen' (Group of German Colonial Economic Enterprises)

              BArch, R 15-IV · Fonds · 1934-1945(-1961)
              Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

              History of the Inventory Designer: The "Reichsstelle für Garten- und Weinbauerzeugnisse" (Reichsstelle) was established on 01 November 1936. The legal basis for the establishment was the Act on the Sale of Horticultural and Viticultural Products of 30 September 1936 (RGBL. I p. 854). The Reich Office carried out a state economic activity. Its main task was to monitor and direct the import of the products farmed, in terms of quantity, place and time, in accordance with the requirements of the internal market and, at the same time, to guide the pricing of these products in such a way as to avoid, as far as possible, disturbances resulting from the difference between world prices and domestic prices. The Reich Office was thus also involved in the internal market equalization process and in stock management. They were the only means by which horticultural and wine-growing products imported from a customs territory or a customs exclusion area could be placed on the market in the customs territory. All horticultural and wine-growing products to be imported from a customs foreign country or from a customs exclusion area which were subject to the Act on the Trade in Horticultural and Wine-growing Products of 30 September 1936 were therefore to be offered for sale to the Reich Agency. The takeover by the Reich Office was effected by means of a takeover certificate, the issuance of which the importer applied for from the Reich Office. The Reich agency was not obliged to take over the offered horticultural and wine-growing products. The import of the goods could therefore be stopped at any time. The horticultural and wine-growing products placed on the domestic market by the domestic producer were not subject to the restrictions of the Horticultural and Wine-growing Products Trade Act in view of the market organisation implemented for them. Only the products imported from a customs foreign country or a customs exclusion area were managed by the Reich Office. Its scope resulted from Article III of the seventh Regulation implementing and supplementing the Law on the marketing of horticultural and wine-growing products of 7 June 1940 (RGBl. I p. 862). The Imperial Agency mainly imported products from the following countries: - European countries of origin: Baltic States, Belgium, Bulgaria, Denmark, Finland, France, Greece, Italy, Yugoslavia, the Netherlands, Norway, Romania, Russia, Sweden, Switzerland, Slovakia, Spain, Hungary and Portugal. - Non-European countries of origin: Afghanistan, Egypt, Australia, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, China, Japan, India, Iran, Cameroon, Canada, Mexico, Palestine, Somalia, South African Union, Syria, Turkey, USA, West Indies and Cameroon. Imported products have been grouped into the following product groups: - Vegetables, fruit, tropical fruits, potatoes, vegetable seeds, flower seeds, tobacco seeds, caraway seeds, azaleas, cut flowers and reindeer lichen. The Reich Office was divided into main departments, departments and subject areas. The division into departments and their subdivision into subject areas resulted from the business allocation plan. The "Überwachungsstelle für Gartenbau-Erzeugnisse, Getränke und sonstige Lebensmittel" (Überwachungsstelle), which was established on 24 September 1934 (Deutscher Reichs- und Preußischer Staatsanzeiger 1934 No. 209), was merged with the Reichsstelle to form the "Reichsstelle für Garten- und Weinbauerzeugnisse als Überwachungsstelle" (Reichsstelle as Überwachungsstelle) by ordinance of 6 December 1938 (Deutscher Reichs- und Preußischer Staatsanzeiger 1938 No. 291). The merger brought together, as far as possible, bodies of the same or a similar nature from the two services, such as money, assets, staff and materials management, registers, the law firm, the post office and the branches located in the same place. The former Main Department III of the Reich Office and the country groups I - VI of the Surveillance Office were also merged, so that the applications for the issue of foreign exchange certificates and takeover certificates could be dealt with in one operation. The Reich Office as a supervisory office was now divided into 5 main departments, 6 departments, 21 subdivisions and 15 subject areas. The range of tasks of the Reich Office as such, however, remained unchanged in principle. In addition, the tasks of the supervisory authority remained essentially unchanged, namely the examination of applications for foreign exchange certificates submitted by importers from a formal and economic point of view, in particular in accordance with the rules on foreign exchange control, the import of vegetables, fruit, juices, wines, tea and live plants, and their allocation. It also issued foreign exchange certificates applied for and checked that the importers used the certificates issued in due time and in the proper manner. The tasks of the Reich Office as a supervisory authority were thus also determined by the Foreign Exchange Control Act. Pursuant to § 2 (2) of this Act, in addition to the foreign exchange offices, the monitoring offices also took their measures and made their decisions in accordance with guidelines drawn up by the Reich Office for Foreign Exchange Management in agreement with the Reich Minister for Economic Affairs and the Reich Minister for Food and Agriculture. These directives delimited the tasks of the supervisory authorities in that they supervised the import and payment of goods and controlled purchase prices. They also had to take measures in the field of internal management (e.g. processing and export bans). The Reich Office as well as the Surveillance Office were corporations under public law, i.e. legal entities of their own, which financed themselves and were not maintained from Reich funds. They were subject to the supervision of the Reich Ministry of Food and Agriculture. The Reichstelle, as the supervisory authority, also had to obtain approval for the scale of fees from this authority. Examples of chargeable events were the issue of foreign exchange certificates and the issue of expert opinions on private settlement transactions. However, the monitoring agency carried out book and company audits free of charge, unless the audit revealed that a company had violated official orders. After the outbreak of the war, the Reich Office was confronted with new tasks as a supervisory office with regard to the procurement of goods. All enemy states and a large part of the neutral states failed as suppliers, while the demand for food imports of all kinds grew steadily. As a result, prices abroad also rose sharply, so that the Reich Office's previous task of raising foreign prices to the German price level by means of differential amounts became illusory and was finally reversed in the opposite direction, namely that of reducing the price of imported goods. The other task, the territorial control of the import of goods, had already been transferred to a greater extent to the main associations (e.g.: Main Association of the German Horticultural Industry) at the outbreak of the war, so that only the area of responsibility of the supervisory authority remained. The Reich office as such was therefore closed at the beginning of July 1943. In the course of the effects of the war, the surveillance agency took on ever greater dimensions as the difficulties in procuring goods grew. After the end of the war, the assets of the Reichsstelle were liquidated by the Allies. The storage and import point in Hamburg was authorized by § 5 No. 2 of the Ordinance of the Central Office for Food and Agriculture of 17 August 1946 (Official Gazette for Food and Agriculture No. 2 of 24 August 1946) and by decree of the Food and Agriculture Council in Stuttgart of 04 July 1946 to liquidate the assets of the Reich Office, insofar as they were located in the American and British occupation zone. The branch office in Bavaria was handled by the office of the trade associations. A trustee was appointed to carry out the liquidation, who received his activity permit from the competent British supervisory authority and headed the 'Liquidation Office of the Reich Office for Horticultural and Viticultural Products as a Supervisory Office' in Berlin and the 'Liquidation Office of the Main Association of the German Horticultural Industry and Reich Office for Horticultural and Viticultural Products as a Supervisory Office - Munich Branch'. The final dispute over the assets of the former Reich offices within the four occupation zones was reserved for the decision of the Allied Control Council. Inventory description: Inventory description The files of the Reich Office for Horticultural and Viticultural Products were transferred to the Federal Archives in Koblenz in 1974 from the Oberfinanzdirektion Berlin, which was responsible for handling the Reich's food supply. The 248 files have a term from 1930 to 1973, whereby the mass of the files originated between 1936 and 1945. The documents contain above all documents which have arisen as a result of the Reich Office's business relations with the importers: agreements on quantities and prices for various products, currency certificates and takeover certificates, notes on business trips and company audits. The inventory can also be used to a limited extent as a substitute for the insufficient inventory of inventory R 3601 (Reich Ministry of Food and Agriculture) due to war damage. No cassations were made. A file plan for the Reich Office did not exist. There was also no registry in the Reich office. The order of the files and their filing was carried out by the employees of the Reich Office according to their respective tasks and priorities. The rules of procedure are therefore partly unconventional and unsystematic. Consequently, there are documents in the files with different thematic classifications. Only an order according to individual countries is recognizable. The classification in the finding aid is based on this order by country. Only a few files were prearchived with titles. The file titles were therefore formed according to the predominant factual content of the file. The units of description were, if necessary, indexed more deeply by means of contained annotations. Characterisation of content: The main focus of the text is on documents relating to the business activities of the Reich Office, in particular ministerial decrees and materials for foreign trade with European and non-European countries: BArch, R 15-IV/...

              BArch, R 2 · Fonds · (1849-) 1919-1945 (-1961)
              Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

              History of the Inventory Designer: The Reich Treasury Office, which emerged from the Finance Department (until 1877: Finance Office) of the Reich Chancellery in 1879, became the Reich Ministry of Finance (RFM) in 1919. The RFM initially took over the structure and the responsibilities transferred to the Reich Treasury for the Reich budget, currency, customs duties and excise duties. Only the administration of the Reich's own property, the exploitation of the Reich's property, above all by the army and navy, and the financial supervision of industrial enterprises and the Reich's holdings in industrial enterprises were temporarily transferred to the Reich Treasury, which was newly founded in March 1919 and dissolved again in 1923. The scope of duties of the Reich Ministry of Finance was considerably extended in the course of the Erzberger financial reform of 1919/1920, mainly through responsibility for property and transport taxes. The Länder had to leave their tax apparatus to the Reich, so that the RFM, as the head of the Reich Finance Administration, now had a uniform official substructure in the form of regional tax offices and local tax offices and main customs offices. Since the dissolution of the Reich Ministry for Reconstruction (1924), the RFM has also had comprehensive competence for handling the consequences of war. The RFM experienced a further increase in its tasks in connection with the abolition of the sovereignty of the Länder in 1934, as a result of which the finance ministries of the Länder were placed under the supervision of the RFM. Only the Prussian Ministry of Finance was able to retain its independence and was not incorporated into the RFM until September 1944 and only formally. Inventory description: Inventory history Until 1936, most of the files of the RFM that had been created until 1929 as well as numerous files of the "Neue Registratur" from 1930 onwards, including the household files of the Wehrmacht, the SS and the concentration camps, had already been handed over to the Reichsarchiv in Potsdam. Since only part of the war-related relocations were included, large parts of these files were destroyed during the air raid on Potsdam in April 1945, including almost all secret files after 1925 as well as numerous files of the new registry, in particular on official and pension matters, employee and worker questions. Losses have also occurred in the files stored by the Reichsarchiv. The household records of the Wehrmacht, the SS and the concentration camps mentioned above are considered destroyed today. Further losses of files have occurred due to the destruction of files in the authority itself and at the places of removal. This applies in particular to the files for the treatment of anti-grass roots and anti-rich, Jewish and confiscated assets of the "Eylert" and "Maedel" units of the RFM, which were moved to Sigmaringen. These files were most likely burned shortly before the end of the war together with the documents of the Sigmaringen tax office. After the end of the war, depending on the place of relocation, parts of the records were transferred to both the Federal Archive in Koblenz and the then German Central Archive in Potsdam (DZA). In the 1960s, the Federal Archives in Koblenz took over from the Federal Ministry of Finance, above all, the files of the registries running until 1945, which were initially kept by the "Restverwaltung" and from 1946 by the "Archiv des ehemaligen Reichsfinanzministeriums". The files of the Reich Archives that had been transferred to the Potsdam DZA were mainly the files of the Reich Archives in the Sraßfurt and Schönebeck potash shafts, as well as confiscated documents returned from the Soviet Union in 1955. Until 1990, the entire collection of the Reich Ministry of Finance was held in roughly equal parts in the Central State Archives of the GDR and in the Federal Archives in Koblenz. In both archives the tradition was recorded successively and recorded in provisional finding aids (indexes and card indexes). Due to the different overdelivery focal points of both sub-stocks, the respective classification of the sub-stocks was carried out according to different criteria. While the Potsdam part of the stock with a focus on traditions was structured according to the departmental structure until 1930, the Koblenz structure followed the uniform file plan of the Reich Finance Administration introduced in 1929. In addition, the records kept as holdings 21.01 in the Central State Archives of the GDR were divided into two signature sequences, depending on the time of their creation. A-signatures received files with provenance Reichsschatzamt created until 1919, B-signatures the files of the RFM. When the two parts of the records were merged in 1990, the different signature sequences had to be merged in order to clearly identify the individual files. The signatures of the Koblenz files were retained, the old A-signatures with 40000 and the B-signatures with 50000 were added. Since the year 2000, the two traditional parts of the book have been gradually merged into online sub-find books, starting with the budget files of the specialist departments. Content characterization: The overdelivery of the RFM more or less comprehensively covers the entire range of tasks of the authority with the following overdelivery focal points: - Preparation of the Reich's budget, in particular files on the preparation of the budget of the specialist departments, on the Army, Navy and Colonial budgets, on the debt management of the Reich as well as on Reich guarantees, Reich participations, export credits, on banks, currency and foreign exchange matters - Organisational and administrative matters of the Reich Finance Administration, Real Estate and Reich Construction Administration, in particular v.a. files for the accommodation of the offices of the Reich Finance Administration, the Reich Real Estate Register as well as files for the utilization of military real-estate - customs duties, in particular files on customs legislation, on the handling of the customs tariff for individual goods and on trade relations with foreign countries - Reich taxes and excise duties, in particular Files on income and sales tax, on the Reich Valuation Act and Bodenschätzungsgesetz as well as on excise duties on spirits, tobacco, sugar and sweetener - state taxes, state and municipal finances, financial equalisation - settlement of the First World War, in particular reparations, Saar and occupation matters - armaments financing and war damage of both world wars The inventory includes approx. 4000 personnel files mainly of employees of the higher service in the RFM (approx. 600) and in the subordinate area State of development: Indexes Temporary indexes for Koblenz partial tradition Online index of household files A - Ar (2007) Online index of household files B - Lu (2006) Online index of household files F (2007/2008) Publication index of household files PM-Su (2005) Publication index of household files Ve-WM (2003) Citation method: BArch, R 2/...

              BArch, R 2/30153 · File · 1942-1943
              Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

              Contains above all: Lists, mostly with details of the applicant, the debtor and the amount Contains also: Overview of the classified compilations of applications of German property in the British sphere of influence

              Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, GU 120 Bü 297 · File · 1910-1914
              Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)
              • Darin:<br />City map of Heliopolis, site maps of the Prince's properties description: Darin: - City map of Heliopolis, site maps of the Prince's properties 1910-1914, Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abteilung Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, GU 120 Karl Fürst von Urach Graf von Württemberg (1865-1925)
              Urach, Karl
              BMW bmw 1/6181 · File · 01.01.1930 - 31.12.1952
              Part of Protestant Regional Church Archive Berlin

              Contains among other things: Notes to letter of Rev. Anderson, Tanganyika of 17.1.1952; final report on the former property of the Berlin Mission Society in Tanganyika, 14.10.1952; movable and immovable property in East Africa; land ownership in East Africa, copy of 20.10.1930

              Berlin Missionary Society
              Owner K: Vol. 8
              BArch, R 26-VI/45 · File · 1941-1945
              Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

              Contains: Kohn, A.; Kohn, Andrija E.; Kohn, Hermann and Kohn, Regina; Kohn, Moritz; Kohn, Roza née Blumenstock; Kohn, Samuilo; Kohn, Tibor; Kojadinovic, Betti; Kolonialbank AG, owner: Alfred Kazes; Kolorit, owner: Jakob Zak Mandil; Kolosseum, owner: Dobrivoj Andjelkovic

              Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Generallandesarchiv Karlsruhe, 237 Zugang 1967-19 · Fonds · 1933-1945 (-1968)
              Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. General State Archive Karlsruhe (Archivtektonik)

              Content: With the "Verordnung über die Anmeldung des jüdischen Vermögens" (Ordinance on the Registration of Jewish Property) of 26 April 1938 (Reichsgesetzblatt 1938 I 414 f.), legal transactions with which Jews made dispositions over certain parts of their property became subject to approval. The main licensing authority in Baden was the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Economics. The ¿Ordinance on the Use of Jewish Property¿ of 3 December 1938 (Reichsgesetzblatt 1938 I, pp. 1709-1712) tightened this regulation in such a way that the licensing authority could expressly force the lawful owners to sell certain assets. In addition to ownership of commercial enterprises, real estate and securities, such conditions were also imposed on works of art with a value of over 1000 Reichsmark. The present inventory contains files on those individual cases in which the Baden Ministry of Finance and Economic Affairs approved or instructed the so-called "aryanisation" of assets (predominantly commercial enterprises and real estate). There are also applications from individual citizens for the acquisition of companies or properties whose "Aryanization" was planned. There is also evidence of files on companies that had been victims of boycott measures against Jewish companies in 1933 as well as lists of controlled assets from the period after 1945.Karlsruhe, in February 2016Lutz Bannert Inventory history: The documents of the present inventory came to the General State Archive (access 1967-19) as a delivery from the Karlsruhe Regional Council and initially formed the inventory 505 "Aryanization files". Because these files were mainly created at the Baden Ministry of Finance and Economics, they were re-signed at the end of the 1990s to 237 entries 1967-19. Files with a term beginning after 1945 were created at successor authorities of the Ministry of Finance, i.e. at the President of the State District of Baden, Economics Department, or at the Economics Department of the North Baden Regional Council. They contain negative responses to requests from restitution authorities, courts and Jewish successor organizations for "Aryanization" files. Due to the connection in content with the files of the Ministry of Finance, they were left in their present form. Access to the files was provided by a file that was converted at the end of 2015 and then processed into an online finding aid. Karlsruhe, February 2016Dr. Martin Stingl

              Geheimes Staatsarchiv Preußischer Kulturbesitz, I. HA Rep. 109, Nr. 1221 · File · 1927 - 1929
              Part of Secret State Archive of Prussian Cultural Heritage (Archivtektonik)

              approx. 150 sheets, contains among others: - Information of the Julius Alexander banking business Hamburg on the liquidation compensation values for German colonial companies, 1927 - American Release Act for Confiscated German Property, 1928 - Compensation Act and German Colonial Companies, 1928 - Arbitral Award of the International Hague Arbitral Tribunal, 1928 - German Property in Australia, 1928 - War Damage Conclusion Act of 30.3.1928 and the Reichsentschädigungsamt - Evaluation of the German ships confiscated in America, 1928 - Proposal for the Baltic Confederation of States and claims of German landowners for compensation in Estonia, 1928 - Stock Exchange and Reichschuldbuchforderungen, 1928 - Claims of the liquidation and violent victims, 1928 - German-English negotiations for the release of the confiscated German property in England, 1929: German-English Central Bank Conference - Protectorate Bond, 1929 - German-Polish Liquidation Agreement, 1929 - Release Negotiations with Canada, 1929 - Young Plan and Liquidation of German Property in Alsace-Lorraine, 1929.

              Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, GU 120 Bü 4 · File · 1901-1914
              Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

              1901-1914, Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, GU 120 Karl Fürst von Urach Graf von Württemberg (1865-1925)

              ALMW_II._32_80 · File · 1912-1936
              Part of Francke's Foundations in Halle

              Four fiches. Contains: FICHE No. 80 1 - 1912. Paul to "Official Brother" - "Hostile Measures against the Property of the Campaign Mission (and Missionaries)." (handwritten; 1 p.) - "Handover of the Campaign Mission and its provisional assumption by the Africa Inland Mission". (handwritten; 3 p.) - Memmingen 1913. Köberle to mission inspector - stenographic notes - Herrnsheim 1913. ? (2 letters) - Nuremberg 1913. The ev. -luth. Zentralmissionsverein für Bayern an Kollegium - 1913. ? an Missionsdirektor (2 p.; Maschinegeschrieben) - 1913. ? an Dekan (Köberle?) (2 p.; Maschinegeschrieben) - Ikusa 1913. Missionsrat der Kambamission an Kollegium (Nr. 32) (Maschinegeschrieben) - Briefwechsel zwischen Kambamission und Kollegium (gedruckt): Ikusa 1913 (Nr. 32); Leipzig 1913 (No. 96); Mulango 1913 (No. 34); Ikusa 1913 (No. 35); Leipzig 1913 (No. 99); Mulango 1914 (No. 39); Leipzig 1914 (No. 102) - Säuberlich: "Overview of the Mission Societies Working in Ukamba in British East Africa". (handwritten; 4 p.) - An Africa Inland Mission (English) - 1913. College to Campaign Mission Council (n. 96; typewritten; 3 p.) - Mulango 1913. Campaign Mission Council to College (n. 96; typewritten; 3 p.) - 1913. 34; typewritten; 6 p.; 2 copies; transcript) - Ikusa 1913. mission council of the Campaign mission to college (no. 35; typewritten; 1 p.) - Leipzig 1913. college to mission council of the Campaign mission to college (no. 35; typewritten; 1 p.) - Leipzig 1913. mission council to mission council of the Campaign mission to college (no. 35; typewritten; 1 p.) - Ikusa 1913. mission council to mission council of the Campaign mission to college (no. 35; typewritten; 1 p.) - Leipzig 1913. mission council to mission council of the Campaign mission to college (no. 35) 99; Machine scripts; 1 p.) - Mulango 1914. Missionaries of the Campaign Mission to College (No. 39; Machine scripts; 7 p.) - Leipzig 1914. College to American Council of the Africa Inland Mission (English; handwritten; 3 p.) - Leipzig 1914. Paul (concerning invitation to the annual festival; printed) - 1914. college to mission council of the Cambamission (copy; typewritten; 4 p.) - Ikusa 1914. Mission Council of the Campaign Mission to College (transcript; typed; 3 p.) - o.O. 1914. Africa Inland Mission to Hoffmann - Kijabe 1914. Africa Inland Mission to Hoffmann - Ikutha 1914. Mission Council of the Campaign Mission to College (no. 44; handwritten; 3 pages) - En route to India 1914. Hofmann to Field Director, Africa Inland Mission (transcript; English) - Leipzig 1915. Paul to Oldham - Ahmednagar 1915. Hofmann to General Director, Africa Inland Mission - Edinburgh 1915. Continuation Committee of the World Missionary Conference 1910 (Oldham) to Paul - Kijabe 1915. Africa Inland Mission (Hurlburt) to Hofmann - Ahmednagar 1915. Hofmann to Hurlburt (transcript; handwritten; English) - 1915. College to the Directorate of Africa Inland Mission (typed; 6 p.). FICHE No 80 2 - Continued - Ikutha 1915 Letters from Joseph and Benjamin - Edinburgh 1915 Continuation Committee of the ... (Oldham) to Paul (English) - Kijabe 1915. Africa Inland Mission to Hofmann - Ikutha, Kibwezi 1915. Waechter to Hofmann (English) - Leipzig 1915. Paul to Oldham; Hurlburt - 1915. An Hurlburt, Director of the African Inland Mission (English) - Leipzig 1915. Paul to Oldham (English) - Philadelphia 1915. Africa Inland Mission to Leipziger Mission (English original and translation) - Ikutha, Kibwezi 1916. Waechter an Hofmann (English) - 1916. Africa Inland Mission (Palmer) an Paul (English original and translation) - Excerpt from a letter by Palmer - 1916. Africa Inland Mission (Palmer) an Paul (English) - Mulango 1917. Africa Inland Mission (Wight) an Thermann (transcript; English) - "English measures against German mission property". (typewritten; ½ page) - 1917. "Communications of the Chamber of Commerce. Guidelines for the filing of foreign claims." (printed; 4 p.) - "Anmeldebogen" (Anmeldebogen) (Formular) (printed; 4 p.) - Leipzig 1917. Kollegium an Reichskommissar zur Erntung von Gewalttätigkeiten gegen deutsche Civilpersonen in Feindesland (betr. Kriegsschäden; transcript; Maschinegeschrieben; 5 p.) - Berlin 1917. State Secretary of the Reichs-Kolonialamt an Kollegium (3 letters) - Leipzig 1917. Kollegium an Staatssekretär der Reichs-Kolonialamtes - 1917. Auswärtiges Amt (concerning the alleged sale by the British authorities of private property of the Evangelical Church) 1917.Mulango 1917. Africa Inland Mission to Thermann (English; handwritten and typewritten) - Berlin 1918. Reichskanzler (Reich Economic Office) to "all federal governments, except Prussia, and the governor in Alsace-Lorraine". (copy) - Leipzig 1918. College to the Reichskommissar for the discussion of violence against German civilians in enemy territory - "Kamba - Mission" ; "German - East African Mission". (handwritten; 3 p.) - transcript "Public Auction of the Missionaries House of Myambani German Mission on 28th August 1918" - Machakos 1919. Wight an Pfitzinger (transcript; English) - 1920. secretariat of the Ev.-luth. Mission an Provincial Commissioner, Ukamba Province, Nairobi (English) - Verband der im Ausland Schadenigten Inlandsdeutschen e.V. "Ersatz von Schäden im Ausland für Inlandsdeutsche. Leaflet" (printed; 4 p.) - Mombasa 1920. Custodian of Enemy Property an Hoffmann (English) - London 1921. International Missionary Committee (Oldham) an Paul (English; 2 letters) - Leipzig 1921. Weishaupt / Paul an Oldham (2 letters) - "Possession of the Evangelical - Lutheran Mission to Leipzig in Ukamba, British - East Africa" (typewritten; 2 S´).) - Kitui 1921. translation from the Kamba "A Letter from Benjamin Mbathi to Missionary Hofmann"; "A Letter from Andreas Mbithuka attached to the above" (handwritten and typewritten; copy) - 1921. "Letter from Paul Koloboi to Miss. Pfitzinger" (translation from the Kamba; handwritten). FICHE NR. 80 3 - continuation (handwritten and copy with machine) - 1922. collegium to association of the inland Germans damaged abroad e.V. - Hamburg 1923. Bitter (managing director of the association "reconstruction in the foreign country" e.V.) to Schlunk (inspector of the North German mission society) (regarding compensation for war damages) - Leipzig 1923. Weishaupt to Schlunk - o.o., o.J. Kollegium an den Reichskommissar zur Verörterung von Gewalttätigkeiten gegen deutsche Civilpersonen in Feindesland (Betr. Kriegsschäden; Abschrift) - Berlin 1923-1928. Bitter an Mission zu Leipzig (16 letters) - Leipzig 1923. Kollegium Vollmacht für Bitter (2-fold) - 1923. "Lost property of the Evangelical Lutheran Mission to Leipzig in Ukamba, British - East Africa." (1923). (typewritten; 3 p.) - 1923-1928. Ev.-luth Mission to Leipzig to Bitter (11 letters) - Leipzig 1923. Mission Leipzig to the Federation of Domestic Germans Damaged Abroad - o.O., o.J. Ev.-luth. State Consistory to Paul - Berlin 1923. Deutscher Kolonialverein. Gesellschaft für nationale Siedlungs- und Auslandspolitik an Leipziger Mission - Leipzig 1923. Weishaupt an Kolonialverein (2 letters) - 1923. Kollegium "Wertangabe der auf den drei Stationen Jkutha, Mulango, und Myambani hinterlassenen ..."; "Gebäudewerte"- Vollmacht für Bittner - Berlin 1924. Verein Wiederaufbau im Auslande (Geschäftsführer Bitter) "Merkblatt über die Verwertung von E-Schatzanweisungen.". (Maschinegeschrieben; 2 p.) - Berlin 1924. Certified transcript of the settlement between the German Reich and the Leipzig Mission (Bevmächtigter Bitter) - Hamburg 1924. Bitter "An meine Mandanten" - Hamburg 1924. Association "Wiederaufbau im Auslande" e.V. "An unsere Mitglieder" - an unspecified newspaper clipping - Berlin 1925. The President of the Reichsentschädigungsamt für Kriegsschäden ("Nachentschädigungsbescheid") - Berlin 1927. Reichsausgleichsamt an Leipziger Mission - 1927. Leipziger Mission an Reichsausgleichsamt - Berlin 1928. President of the Reichsentschädigungsamt für Kriegsschäden an Paul - Tübingen 1928. Deutscher Evangelischer Missionsbund an Leipziger Mission - Berlin 1929. Reichsgleichsamt an Leipziger Mission - Vollmacht für Bitter (Vordruck) - Berlin 1929. Reichsentschädigungsamt für Kriegsschäden ("Final Compensation Notice"; "Property Damage"). FICHE NO. 80 4- - Continued - Transcript "Re: Evangelical Lutheran Mission High Court Cause No.44/16 Custodian of Enemy Property Cause No.23/16. Receipts" (typed, 1 p.) - Transcript "MEMO. Evangelical Lutheran Mission" (English) - 1929. Leipzig Mission to Bitter (3 letters) - 1929. College to Reich Equalization Office (3 letters) - Berlin and Hamburg 1929. Bitter to Leipzig Mission (4 letters) - Berlin 1929-1930. Reich Equalization Office to Leipzig Mission (4 letters) - 1929. Leipzig Mission to the Kreditbank für Ausland- und Kolonialdeutsche (2 letters) - Berlin 1929. Kreditbank für Auslands- und Kolonialdeutsche an Leipziger Mission (5 letters) - Berlin 1929. Reichsschuldenverwaltung an Leipziger Mission (2 letters) - 1929. ? an Reichsschuldenverwaltung - Hamburg-Leipzig 1929. Agreement between Leipziger Mission and Bitter - 1929. "Sales lists of the English government about sales of property in Ikutha, Mulango and Miambani during the war years". (handwritten; 3 p.; mostly English) - 1929. ? to Reichsausgleichsamt - London 1930. International Missionary Council to Ihmels (English; 2 letters) - 1930. International Missionary Council to Grimwood (English; copy) - stenographic notes - 1930-1931. "Re: Evangelical Lutheran Mission, Leipzig. Request for Cancellation List 4 Kenya Shs. 23000. an von Friedberg (English; 5 letters) - Berlin 1930-1931. remainder administration for Reich tasks at Leipziger mission (4 letters) - 1930 and 1932 and 1935. (Ihmels?) at Gibson; in Annex: Recording of Rev. Downing about a discussion between space, Downing and government representative (the latter in English; 3 letters) - o.o.., o.J. transcript "Friendly Agreement" between Africa Inland Mission (Downing) and Leipzig Mission (Raum) (English; 2-fold and translation) - 1931. ? to the Africa Inland Mission - 2 annexes "to the report of the Nairobi Consulate ... 1931" (English) - Berlin 1931. Foreign Office to Ihmels (2 letters) - Tübingen 1931. German Evangelical Mission Association to the mission societies working in the former D e u t s c h - O s t a f r i k a - Berlin 1931. Residual Administration for Reich Tasks to Leipzig Mission - o.O. 1924 "Colony and Protectorate of Kenya" (English; typed, 2 p.) - 1932. ? "On behalf of the Ev.-luth. Mission" to Restverwaltung für Reichsaufgaben - London 1932. International Missionary Council an Ihmels (English) - London 1934-1938. Goodman, Brown

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