1.Weltkrieg
154 Dokumente results for 1.Weltkrieg
Brigade Staff: At the beginning of the war, the brigade belonged to the 29th Infantry Division. The infantry regiments 112 and 142 belonged to it. They belonged during the war to the range of the following higher staffs:01.08.1914 to 27.01.191529. Infantry division28.01.1915 to 06.03.191528. Infantry division07.03.1915 to 07.07.191629. Infantry division08.07.1916 to 13.08.1916 "Division Fortmüller", XII. and VIII. Reserve Corps13.08.1916 to 18.08.191628. Reserve Division18.08.1916 to 11.11.191829. Infantry Division12.11.1918 to 13.11.1918General Command of the I. Bavarian Army Corps14.11.1918 to 15.12.1918232. Infantry Divisionfrom 16.12.1918demobilisation.The commanding generals were: From 1913 to 26.10.1914 Major General Karl Stenger27.10.1914 to 01.05.1917 Major General Otto von Diepenbroick-Grüter01.05.1917 until the demobilisation of Colonel Albert von Hahnke In the Free State of Baden the new formation of the Baden People's Army began on 13 January 1919 with the acceptance of volunteers. As a reaction to the so-called "Spartacus Uprising" in February 1919, the Reich and Badische Volksregierung had further voluntary associations set up at all units in addition to the existing voluntary formations. Inventory history: After the end of the war, the files remained with the settlement office of the infantry regiment 142. From January 1920, the establishment of an archive of the XIV Army Corps began, in which the archives of the settlement offices were brought together. In autumn 1920 the corps archive moved to the infantry barracks in Heilbronn. From January 1921, the Corps Archives entered the portfolio of the Reich Ministry of the Interior under the name Aktenverwaltung XIV, before being incorporated into the Reichsarchiv in Potsdam as the Heilbronn archive branch on April 1, 1921. As a result of the merger of the Heilbronn and Stuttgart branches of the Reich Archives, the holdings were transferred to Stuttgart in 1924. The Württembergische Archivdirektion, which took over the administration of the holdings of the Heeresarchiv Stuttgart after the end of World War II, handed over the records of the XIV Army Corps to the Generallandesarchiv Karlsruhe between 1947 and 1949. The infantry brigade for the period before the First World War is preserved in fonds 456 F 62. A very detailed history of the fonds is contained in the preface of the Deputy General Command of the XIV Army Corps (fonds 456 F 8). 105 fascicles with a circumference of 2.50 running metres are in the fonds. References: Die Badener im Weltkrieg 1914/18, edited by Wilhelm Müller-Loebnitz, Karlsruhe 1935.German Military History in six volumes 1648-1939, edited by the Militärgeschichtlichen Forschungsamt Freiburg, Munich 1983.Fenske, Hans: Die Verwaltung im Ersten Weltkrieg, in: Deutsche Verwaltungsgeschichte, vol. 3, Stuttgart 1984, p. 866-908.Fischer, Joachim: Zehn Jahre Militärarchiv des Hauptstaatsarchivs Stuttgart, in: Zeitschrift für Württembergische Landesgeschichte 37 (1978), p. 362-368.Jäger, Harald: Das militärische Archivgut in der Bundesrepublik für die Zeit von 1871 bis 1919, in: Militärgeschichtliche Mitteilungen 1968/2, S. 135-138.Overview of the holdings of the Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, edited by Joachim Fischer (published by the Staatliche Archivverwaltung Baden-Württemberg, vol. 31), Stuttgart 1983.
- description: Contains, among other things: Missionsangelegenheiten Outbreak and course of the First World War Contains among others:<br />Missionsangelegenheiten<br />Outbreak and course of the First World War 1914-1934, Bundesarchiv, BArch N 1783 Eich, Wilhelm
History of the Inventor: By cabinet order of 14.3.1899 the Admiral Staff Department of the High Command of the Navy was made independent and directly subordinated to the Emperor as the Admiral Staff of the Navy. In terms of peace, the actual tasks of the admiral's staff included the operative planning of warfare at sea, the collection and processing of news about foreign navies as well as the economy and military policy of foreign states. Furthermore, the Admiral Staff worked on all tactical matters of the fleet, the training and further education of Admiral Staff officers as well as the travel plans for all naval forces abroad. During the war, military-political affairs and censorship tasks were added. To steer the entire naval warfare, the naval warfare command was set up on 28.8.1918 as a mobile part of the Admiral Staff. From 15.11.1918 the authority was subordinated to the Reichsmarineamt and was dissolved on 15.7.1919. Inventory description: By cabinet order of 14 March 1899, the Admiral Staff Department of the Navy High Command was made independent and directly subordinated to the Emperor as the Navy Admiral Staff. In terms of peace, the tasks of the admiral's staff included the operative planning of warfare at sea, mobilization, naval war games, naval war history, the collection and processing of news about foreign navies as well as the economy and military policy of foreign states. The Admiral Staff dealt with all tactical matters of the fleet, the training and further education of Admiral Staff officers and the travel plans for all naval forces abroad. During the war, military-political affairs and censorship tasks were added. On 28 August 1918, the naval warfare command was set up as a mobile part of the admiral's staff to control the entire naval warfare. From 15 November 1918 the authority was subordinated to the Reichsmarineamt and was dissolved on 15 July 1919. Content characterization: Considerable losses of files occurred during the Revolution days of 1918 and in the months thereafter. Documents on intelligence gathering, espionage and counter-espionage were extensively destroyed as early as 1919. On the other hand, files in the following subject areas have been handed down well: Organisation, cipher service, mobilization work, theatres of war in the Baltic and North Seas, foreign warfare, news about European and non-European countries and weapons-related matters. Archival records on the trade war with submarines and the related military-political questions are to be emphasized. From the 1st World War also the files of the representatives of the Admiral Staff at the Supreme Army Command and at Army Commands are to be mentioned. State of development: Invenio Scope, Explanation: Inventory without increment 350 m 6710 AE Citation method: BArch, RM 5/...
History of the Inventor: The Technical Office, established in 1933, set up testing facilities for weapons and equipment at various locations that existed until 1945. Inventory description: KOMMANDO DER ERPROBUNGSSTELLEN According to the provisions of the Versailles Treaty of 1919, the German Reich was prohibited from developing and constructing aircraft for military purposes. Nevertheless, as early as 1920, the Reichswehr Ministry (RWM) set up units with the task of carrying out preparatory work for the creation of development and testing sites for an air force. For example, a "Air Defence" (TA) unit was set up in the Truppenamt (TA) and an aeronautical unit in the Inspektion für Waffen und Gerät (IWG). After the merger of the IWG with the Waffenamt (Wa.A) of the RWM at the beginning of 1927, the aeronautical department became the department 6 F of the testing group (Wa.Prw. 6 F). He was in charge of the development departments disguised as civil engineering offices as well as the test groups in Johannisthal and Rechlin. The testing thus fell within the competence of the testing department of the Weapons Office. At the end of November 1928, the procurement department was also taken over by the Wa.L.Prw. Group. At the end of July 1939, in order to better meet the growing requirements, the Aviation Group in the Weapons Office (Wa.L) was divided into three groups: "Development of aircraft (Wa.L. I)", "Development of equipment" (Wa.L. II) and "Testing" (Wa.L. III). There was also a group on "Procurement" and a group on "Defense Economics and Armaments". On February 8, 1933, on the orders of Reichswehr Minister Blomberg, the Air Protection Office (LA) was formed, which was now also to be responsible for the development, testing and procurement of aircraft, aircraft engines and special aircraft equipment. He was assigned the aviation group in the weapons office, now known as Wa.Prw. 8, as Division L 2. After the transfer of the air-raid protection office to the newly created Reich Aviation Ministry (RLM) in May, the aviation technology department was initially subordinated as the Technical Department (B II) to the General Office (LB) of the RLM, but then, in the course of the reclassification of the RLM to the Technical Office (LC) on October 1, 1933, and, like the latter, directly subordinated to the Secretary of State for Aviation, Colonel General Milch. It was divided into the departments LC I (Research), LC II (Testing) and LC III (Procurement). Colonel Wimmer, as head of the Technical Office, remained responsible for aviation technology, while Captain Freiherr von Richthofen, who headed the LC II department from June 1934, was in charge of the technical aspects of the test centres (e-places). Until the Luftwaffe was unmasked in March 1935, the tests were carried out by the "Test Centres of the Reich Association of the German Aviation Industry" disguised as civilian. The "Commando der Fliegererprobungsstellen" (Command of Pilot Test Centres), which had been established in 1934 and was based in Rechlin, now appeared as the central testing authority. At the head of the command was the commander of the testing stations (K.d.E.), who was at the same time head of the E station Rechlin and superior of the chief of the E station Travemünde. His supervisor was the head of department LC II (Testing). In December 1936, the E posts Rechlin and Travemünde as well as Tarnewitz were directly subordinated to the new Chief of the Technical Office, Colonel Udet, in 1937 and charged with the development and technical testing of the Luftwaffe equipment. In the course of a reorganization of the entire RLM, the Technical Office was directly subordinated to Göring. As a result, Udet changed the organizational structure of the Technical Office again in May 1938 and dissolved the office of Commander of the Test Laboratories. The E posts now received independent command offices, which were technically subordinate to the head of the Technical Office. On February 1, 1939, the Technical Office, the Supply Office and the "Industry and Economy" group of offices were merged to form the new General Airworthiness Inspectorate (GL) and once again placed under the authority of the State Secretary for Aviation. Lieutenant General Udet was appointed General Airworthiness Officer and was now responsible for the management and control of the entire aviation technology as well as for the securing of the entire air force requirement while retaining his function as Chief of the Technical Office. After his suicide on 17 November 1941, the former Secretary of State for Aviation at the RLM, Generalfeldmarschall Milch, assumed these offices in personal union. In autumn 1941 a new command of the testing stations (Kdo.d.E) was established. In technical and operational terms, it was subordinate to the Commander of the Test Centres (K.d.E ), who in turn was subordinate to the Chief of the Technical Office and worked closely with the responsible development departments C to E of the Technical Office (GL/C). This post was held by Major Petersen until the end of the war. After the General Aircraft Master's Office was dissolved on 27 July 1944, the business area and thus the entire technical air armament was transferred to the Chief of Technical Air Armament (Chief TLR). The office was subordinated to the General Staff of the Luftwaffe and thus to the High Command of the Luftwaffe (OKL). The commander of the testing stations was now directly under the command of the Chief of Technical Air Armament, but was then subordinated to the commander of the Ersatzluftwaffe (BdE-Lw) shortly before the end of the war. Until 1945 the following E-positions were established and partially dissolved: Rechlin, Travemünde, Tarnewitz, Peenemünde, Udetfeld, Madüsee, Werneuchen, Süd (Foggia), Munster-Nord, Jesau, Arktis-Finsee, Cazeaux (Süd) and Karlshagen. In addition, a large number of test commands and test squadrons were set up from 1941 onwards, some of which were formed only briefly for the testing of individual aircraft types and quickly dissolved again after testing. ERPROBUNGSSTELLEN Torpedowaffenplatz der Luftwaffe Gotenhafen-Hexengrund (ca. 1942-1945) On April 2, 1942, the Luftwaffe Torpedowaffenplatz was repositioned as a branch office. He was subordinate to the General Airworthiness Officer (Technical Office) in terms of military service and discipline. He was assigned to Luftgaukommando I in terms of war classification, economy and administration. With effect from 1 May 1944, the Torpedowaffenplatz was then placed under the command of the E units. He was responsible for the testing of air torpedoes and associated dropping devices. Jesau (1943-1944) This E-Stelle was founded in 1943 as an outpost of the Peenemünde-West testing station. The main task of the E-Stelle Jesau was the execution of surveying work for distance and proximity fuses as well as the testing of the rocket-powered aircraft Messerschmitt Me 163. In August 1944 the E-Stelle Jesau was dissolved. Munster-Nord (1935-1945) As early as 1916, a test and production facility for gas ammunition was set up in Munster-Breloh for the first time on 6,500 hectares. From 1935, manufacturing and testing facilities for chemical warfare agents were again built on the site and the Munster-Nord Army Experimental Station, which was subordinate to the Army Ordnance Office, was set up. Both the Luftwaffe and the Weapons Office use the area for technical testing of high attack bombs and low attack spray containers. Peenemünde-West, later Karlshagen (approx. 1939-1945) After the start of construction work at the end of July 1937, Peenemünde-West started operations on 1 April 1938. Uvo Pauls was in charge until September 1, 1942, succeeding Major Otto Stams and Major Karl Henkelmann at the end of 1944. The task of the E unit was the testing of rocket engines and rocket-propelled, remote-controlled dropping weapons (e.g. Fi 103, Hs 298). The central group of the test centre was the air traffic control, which was responsible for the deployment of the aircraft fleet. She was also assigned a weather station. The following test groups were active at the experimental site, working on different tasks: E 2: Aircraft and missile systems with rocket propulsion, including support of the troop test commands (Fi 103 and Hs 117) E 3: Engines and fuels E 4: Radio and radio control systems E 5: Equipment (power supply, control systems, image station, measuring base) E 7: Drop systems, target and target training equipment E 8: Ground systems The E station was moved to Wesermünde air base near Bremerhaven in April 1945. Rechlin (approx. 1925-1945) Already planned in 1916, the "Flieger-Versuchs- und Lehranstalt am Müritzsee" started operations in 1918 during the First World War. Due to the provisions of the Treaty of Versailles, however, the installations there were dismantled again at the beginning of the 1920s. As part of the camouflaged continuation of pilot testing in the Weimar Republic, a test airfield was built in Rechlin from 1925. On the initiative of Hauptmann Student, the German Aviation Research Institute (DVL) in Berlin-Adlershof set up a new "Department M" specifically for this purpose. The "Luftfahrtverein Waren e.V.", founded in 1925, acquired the necessary area on behalf of the Reich and took over the operation of the new airfield. Factory and flight operations began in the summer of 1926. From 1927/28 Albatros Flugzeugwerke GmbH in Berlin-Johannisthal leased the facility, which was now called the "Testing Department of Albatros Flugzeugwerke Johannisthal". After the Reichsverband der Deutschen Luftfahrt-Industrie (RDL) had taken over the site at the insistence of the Reichswehr troop office at the end of 1929, it was continued under the camouflage name "RDL Erprobungsstelle Staaken". After the National Socialists came to power in 1933, the facilities in Rechlin were rapidly expanded to become the largest testing station (E station) for aviation equipment. From 1935, the E-Stelle Rechlin was regarded as a showpiece of the Luftwaffe. Until the end of the war, four large building complexes with different uses were built on the huge area: Group North management and technical administration, air base command and weather station; Testing of airframes (from 1936), of radio and navigation equipment, of aircraft on-board devices and equipment, aeromedical tests as well as high-frequency and ionospheric research Group South Testing of engines, of materials as well as of fuels and lubricants East Group Testing of ammunition for on-board weapons and drop-weapons West Group Military testing (only 1935-1938), test group and shipyard, fracture recovery, training workshop Initially, the focus of testing activities in Rechlin was on flight and engine testing. This included the flight testing of the engines, the measurements on the individual engine components as well as the creation of complete aircraft types. Other areas of activity include the testing of aircraft equipment - from on-board instruments to rescue and safety equipment, hydraulic systems - and radio and navigation equipment. From 1933 the testing of weapons was also carried out in Rechlin. The main focus was on the testing of ammunition for firearms as well as the testing of drop ammunition within the framework of flight testing. After the beginning of the 2nd World War, prey planes were thoroughly tested there and the results evaluated. In addition to the purely technical testing of all land aircraft and their equipment, new aircraft types are tested for their military suitability, especially after the start of the war. For this purpose, the Lärz Test Command was set up, to which these aircraft types were assigned for operational testing. From mid-1944 the testing of the new jet aircraft Me 262, Ar 234 and He 162 received highest priority. The E-Stelle Rechlin has undergone several organisational changes during its existence. An overview of the structure and filling of positions is attached as an annex. This is a compilation from the publication of Beauvais. South (Foggia) (c. 1941-1942) In the second half of 1941, the E-Stelle Süd started operations at the airfield in Foggia, Italy. It was intended for the testing of air torpedoes and underwater weapons, which had to be carried out in Grosseto due to unfavourable conditions. At the end of February 1942, it was decided to move the E-Stelle Süd to the French town of Cazaux, southwest of Bordeaux, and operations began at the airfield in May 1942. The test flights were used for the ballistic measurement of various types of bombs or dropping containers, the testing of target devices and bomb droppings. The commander of the E post was Captain Henno Schlockermann. After Allied air raids in March and September 1944, during which the installations were severely damaged and several test aircraft destroyed, operations had to be restricted and then discontinued altogether. By order of 10 October 1944, the E post was officially closed. Tarnewitz (1937-1945) Construction work began in 1935, and two years later the Tarnewitz electric power station was officially put into operation. The task of the new unit was to test new weapon systems for Luftwaffe aircraft. In addition to machine guns and bombs, this also included the newly developed rocket weapons. The various tasks were performed by the groups W 1 (installation), W 2 (ballistics and sights), W 3 (mountings and air discs) and W 4 (on-board weapons and ammunition). From 1938, the E post was subdivided into the specialist groups machine guns and ammunition, including rocket testing (IIA), mountings and air discs (II D), ballistics and sights (II E), installation of weapons in aircraft (II F). Travemünde (1928-1945) In 1928 a seaplane test centre (SES) was founded in Travemünde under the camouflage name "Reichsverband der Deutschen Luftfahrtindustrie Gruppe Flugzeugbau". Originally planned and established after World War I as a secret testing ground for independent naval aviation, the Travemünde testing ground was subordinated to the RLM in 1934 after the National Socialists seized power and expanded further. The focus of the testing activities in Travemünde was the testing of seaplanes and their equipment, naval mines and air torpedoes as well as special ships and boats for maritime flight operations. This also included testing seaplanes, landing on icy and snowy ground, landing attempts on aircraft carriers and rescue measures on the open sea with the aircraft. The E post was divided into the following groups in 1933: A: Navigation, radio, seaman's equipment, special installations B: Operation of aircraft, ships, docks, catapults and vehicles, ground services E: Flight service, holding pilots ready F: Aircraft testing, preparation, execution and evaluation of measurements, reports, assessments G: Testing of on-board devices, radio measuring devices, laboratory, precision mechanical workshop, photo service, duplication K: Administration, personnel, material, buildings, installations M: engines, propellers, aggregates, workshop and test benches Udetfeld (1940-1945) The Udetfeld electric power station was set up in 1940 near Beuthen/Oberschlesien. At the beginning it was led by Major Werner Zober, later by Lieutenant Colonel Rieser. The test leader was Fl.Stabsingenieur Rudolf Noch. The task of the E-Stelle was the testing of small explosive and incendiary bombs, parachute bombs and special detonators as well as the acceptance blasting of all German bomb types. At times she was also engaged in the testing of parachutes and ejection seats. For this purpose it was equipped step-by-step with a measuring base, several discharge points and a picture position. Last tests and measurements took place until shortly before the invasion of the Soviet army at the end of January 1945. The E-Stelle was dissolved by order of 15 February 1945 and its tasks taken over by the E-Stelle Rechlin. Werneuchen (1942-1945) The E post was established in April 1942 at the air base in Werneuchen. She was responsible for the testing and development of search and target devices for air and sea reconnaissance and worked closely with the Aeronautical Radio Research Institute in Oberpfaffenhofen. Field stations for testing ground radio measuring instruments were located in Weesow and Tremmen. The flight testing of newly developed equipment was initially carried out by the test squadron of the Technical Test Command (TVK), and was then transferred to the newly formed night fighter group 10. Their tasks also included the development and testing of equipment for the defence against interference and deception by the enemy air forces. In Werneuchen, the night hunt radio measuring devices FuG 202 "Lichtenstein", the ship's target search device FuG "Hohentwiel" as well as the ground search devices "Würzburg-Riese" and "Freya" were tested. In February 1945, the E-Stelle was moved to Stade and renamed to E-Stelle Stade in April 1945. The E post was commanded by Major i.G. August Hentz until April 1944, then until its dissolution by Major i.G. Cerener. ERPROBUNGSKOMMANDOS und ERPROBUNGSSTAFFELN Erprobungskommando 4 (ERPROBUNGSSTAFFELN Test Command 4) Set-up by order of 1 December 1944 by air fleet 10. Troop testing of the X4 guided missile and testing of operational procedures and tactical capabilities. Test Command 15 Formed from the Experimental Squadron Hs 293 and intended for troop testing of the Gleitbombe Hs 293. Test Command 16 Set up on the Command Path in April 1942 in Peenemünde-West, at the beginning of September budgeting and transfer to Zwischenahn, then in October to Brandis. Testing of the rocket-propelled hunter Me 163 B "Komet". Dissolution on 14 February 1945. Tasks were to be taken over by Jagdkommando 400, which also received the operational aircraft. Erprobungskommando 17 Transfer of the 2./Kampfgruppe 100 from Hannover-Langenhagen to the French Chartes, renaming into E-Kommando XY in January 1942 and temporarily into E-Kommando 100 (March to May 1942), then budgeted as E-Kommando 17. Further development of the X- and Y-process and deployment against England. Mid-September 1942 Renamed 15th Combat Squadron, 6th Experimental and Training Command, 18, set up on 1 August 1942 in Pillau and subordinated to the General of the Air Force by the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy (Ob.d.M.). Testing of the aircraft types intended for the aircraft carrier "Graf Zeppelin" including the instruction and training of the flying and ground personnel on this equipment. Test Command 19 Deployment on 1 July 1942 at the Castel Benito airfield near Tripoli on the Command Way. Testing of the aircraft types Bf 109 and Fw 109 for tropical suitability as fighter and battle planes. Personnel of the supplementary groups of the fighter squadron 27 and 53, respectively. Test and training command 20 formation on 1 October 1942 in Travemünde (later Kamp). Testing of on-board special aircraft as well as instruction and training of flying and ground personnel for on-board special aircraft. Test and Training Command 21 Set up on 1 August 1942 in Garz/Usedom. Personnel and equipment of the disbanded II. combat squadron 3. troop testing of the bomb PC 1400X. Test and teaching command 22 Set up autumn 1942 in Lärz. Testing of the Fw 190 fighter bomber version with long range (Jaborei). Personnel of the combat squadron 40, of the fighter squadrons 2 and 26 as well as of a destroyer school. Spring 1943 Transfer to St. André in France and use for the formation of the I./Schlachtkampfgeschwader 10. Test and training command 24 formation on 1 March 1943 in Mark-Zwuschen. Testing of aircraft types suitable for reconnaissance purposes, including equipment (navigation and heading devices). Dissolution in October 1944, assumption of the tasks and the personnel by the experimental association OKL. Test Command 25 Set-up in accordance with the order of 17 April 1943. Troop testing of the aircraft required for day hunting, aircraft radio measuring equipment, weapons and combat procedures as well as deployment within the framework of the Reich Defence. Reclassification into hunting group 10 with the same tasks. Test Command 26 Set-up in accordance with the order of 29 December 1943 by renaming the 11th (Pz.)/battle squadron at the airfield of the Udetfeld E station. Dissolution on 14 February 1945 and transfer of personnel to General der Schlachtflieger. Assumption of the tasks of the supplementary squadron of the Schlachtgeschwader 151. Experimental squadron 36 Set up in Garz according to the order of 10 August 1943 by renaming the 13th/fighting squadron 100. Testing of the suitability for troops of the successor models of the Hs 293 as well as briefing of observers on the He 177 equipped with the Kehlgerät FuG 203. Dissolution on 12 July 1944. Transfer of the personnel to the E-Kommando 25 for the continuation of the testing of the fighter missiles. Test Command 40 The Fliegerforstschutzverband was formed on 5 March 1940 as an independent association from the "Pest Control Group" of the Flugkommando Berlin, which had existed since 1936. It was mainly used for forest pest control and from October 1941 also took over malaria control in the occupied territories. Numerous spraying and pollination flights were carried out for this purpose. Another focus of his activities was the sowing of agricultural and forestry seeds and the spreading of artificial fertilizers. After being placed under the command of the E units on 1 January 1944, the Fliegerforstschutzverband was renamed E-Kommando 40. By order of 3 September 1944, the command stationed in Göttingen was dissolved and the remainder of the command was transferred to Coburg in November 1944, where it was used to set up E-command 41. Erprobungskommando 41 Formation on January 22, 1945 from remaining parts of the Erprobungskommando 40 and subordination in military service under Luftgaukommando VII and operational under Luftflottenkommando Reich. Test Command 100 See Test Command 17 Test Command Bf 109 G Report of arrival at Rechlin on 15 March 1942. Equipped with eleven Bf 109 G-1 and seven pilots in July. No more data. Test Command Ta 152 Positioning on the Command Way on 2 November 1944 in Rechlin. In accordance with the order of January 9, 1945, the deployment was extended until April 1945, and the deployment was reorganized into a group staff with a staff company as well as four task forces and a technical testing squadron. No formation of the four operational squadrons due to takeover of troop testing of the aircraft type Ta 152 by III/Jagdgeschwader 301. Dissolution on January 23, 1945. Test command Ta 154 formation on December 9, 1943 at the air base Hannover-Langenhagen. Testing of the front suitability of the aircraft type Ta 154. Dissolution according to the order of August 1, 1944. Transfer of personnel to the E-command Me 262. Test command He 162, deployment order of January 9, 1945 for an E-command in group strength (but not with this designation). Implementation of the operational testing of the aircraft type He 162 by I./Jagdgeschwader 1. Experimental squadron He 177 deployment on 1 February 1942 in Lärz. Testing of the aircraft type He 177. Dissolution on September 20, 1943. Transfer of personnel to combat squadron 40. Test squadron Ju 188 set up on March 1, 1943 in Rechlin. Transfer at the end of July 1943 to Chièvres near Brussels. Used for 4th/combat squadron 66th test squadron Me 210 set up in late spring 1942 in Lechfeld, relocated in July 1942 to Evreux in France. Operational testing of the aircraft type. After temporary renaming into 16th/fighter squadron 6 and 11th/destroyer squadron 1, finally reclassification into test squadron Me 410. Test squadron Ar 234 set up summer 1944 (July) in Lärz. Operational testing of the aircraft type Ar 234 B as a bomber. Personnel of the combat squadron 76th Erprobungskommando Me 262, deployment on 9 December 1943 at the Lechfeld air base. First testing of the V-model Me 262 and personnel supply of the III./Zerstörergeschwader 26 in April 1944. Starting from August 1944 formation of Einsatzkommandoos among other things in Lärz. At the end of September use of parts of the E-command, the III./ZG 26 to form the E-command "Novotny" and a new E-command 262 in Lechfeld. Official dissolution of E-command 262 on 2 November 1944. Test command Do 335 set up on 4 September 1944 by command of the E-positions. Troop testing of the aircraft type Do 335 as a mosquito night fighter, fighter, reconnaissance and combat aircraft. Relocation to Rechlin on 20 November. Revocation of the dissolution order of 14 February 1945. Test command JU 388 set up on 15 July 1944 in Rechlin. Testing the Ju 388 as a night hunter. Dissolution on 14 February 1945. Transfer of personnel to Combat Wing 76, E-Command Do 335 and various units. Test squadron Me 410 See test squadron Me 210. Troop testing of the aircraft type Me 410. Integration as 9th squadron of the combat squadron 101 and renaming into 12./KG 2 in October 1943 and finally April 1944 into 13./KG 51. Test squadron 600 formation according to order of April 1, 1945, intended for testing the rocket-driven interceptor Ba 349 "Natter". No further data known. Test command "Kolb", order of 20 November 1944. No further information known. Test command "Nebel" (Fog), order of 26 July 1944, for the testing and production of the Me 264 aircraft type, then from December 1944 also for the testing of long-range aircraft. Etatisierung des E-Kommandoos Ende Februar 1945. Lehr- und Erprobungskommando (W) After Colonel Wachtel had already been commissioned since April 1943 to carry out the war operation of the Fieseler Fi 103 (camouflage designation Flak sight FZG 76), the establishment of the Erprobungskommando began in June 1943. In military service it was subordinated to the higher commander of the anti-aircraft artillery schools and in questions of training and testing to the general of the anti-aircraft weapon. It was supplied by Luftgaukommando III, to which it belonged in terms of war classification. On 15 August 1943, the Wachtel Command formed the Flak Regiment 155 (W), which was soon transferred to France. Sonderkommando Fähre (Siebel) The Sonderkommando Fähre was responsible for the provision and operation of air force ferries for the transport of air force goods. (The information on the E-positions and E-commands were published in abbreviated form by Heinrich Beauvais/Karl Kössler/Max Mayer/Christoph Regel: Flugerprobungsstellen bis 1945. Johannisthal, Lipezk, Rechlin, Travemünde, Tarnewitz, Peenemünde-West. Bonn 1998). Characterisation of content: The collection mainly comprises work and test reports as well as correspondence between the command of the test centres and the test centres themselves and superior departments and various companies. Most of the test reports are for the two E posts Rechlin (approx. 200 AU) and Travemünde (approx. 160 AU). About 60 volumes of files with pollination and spray reports including the corresponding maps have been handed down by the Fliegerforstschutzverband. Of the remaining e-positions, only minor fragments of files have been preserved. The seven file volumes of the command of the e-offices, which deal with organizational matters of the e-offices and e-commands, are to be emphasized. State of development: Online-Findbuch 2007 Scope, Explanation: 573 AE Citation method: BArch, RL 36/...
History of the Inventory Designer: Dr. Wilhelm Albers General Physician born on 02 November 1859 in Uelzen, died on 17 December 1919 in Lüneburg 29 March 1879 - 15 February 1883: Kaiser Wilhelm Academy for Military Medical Education 1891 - 1895: Doctor in the Surgical Department of the Charité in Berlin 17 July 1900 - 04 March 1904: East Asian Expeditionary Corps of the East Asian Occupation Brigade until 17 September 1904 December 1901: Chief Physician Feldlazarett 2 in Beijing and Feldlazarett 1 in Tientsin 18 December 1901 - 04 March 1904: Brigadier Physician 1910: Chief Physician and Division Physician of the 5th Division in Frankfurt/Oder 1914-1918: Corps Physician of the XXIIth Reserve Corps (consisting of 43rd and 44th Reserve Divisions), at the beginning of the First World War on the Western Front, from June 1915 on the Eastern Front. Editing note: Index inventory description: Lectures from his time in East Asia. 6 volumes field letters to his wife, 3 volumes with letters of family members and 12 volumes diary entries from the First World War as a corps doctor of the XXII reserve corps citation method: BArch, N 686/...
History of the Inventory Designer: The All-German Association was founded on 9 April 1891 under the name "Allgemeiner Deutscher Verband" with its headquarters in Mainz as a reaction against the German-English Zanzibar Treaty. The main tasks were to revive German national consciousness, to support German nationality abroad and to promote German interests in Europe and overseas, especially German colonial policy. In 1894 the name was changed to Alldeutscher Verband. In 1918 the seat was moved to Berlin. The association's programme was expansionist and nationalistic. Especially in the Habsburgs' Austro-Hungarian Empire, anti-Semitism and anti-Slavism were already pronounced before the First World War. With his ideological aim he acted as an intellectual precursor of Hitler's fascism. In March 1939 he was dissolved by Reinhard Heydrich on the grounds that his programme had now been fulfilled. Processing note: Findbuch (1960/70) Inventory description: Inventory history In 1942, the last chairman of the association, Dr. Heinrich Class, handed over the remains of the association archive to the Reichsarchiv. In 1943 further files of Prof. Calmbach (Stuttgart) were added to the Reichsarchiv. In 1950, the German Central Archive in Potsdam (later Zentrales Staatsarchiv Potsdam) took over the AV documents, which had been stored out together with other holdings of the Reichsarchiv during the Second World War. Due to a lack of old finding aids, there is no information about possible war-related losses. Archive evaluation and processing As a result of the first simple indexing of the documents in the German Central Archive in Potsdam, a finding index was created in 1960 which described 720 file units with a circumference of 9.2 linear metres. In 1970 the collection was reworked, partly refoliated, renumbered and redefined in terms of content. As a result, a preliminary finding aid book was created, which was technically processed in the period from 2003 to 2005. The search book can now be searched online on the website of the Federal Archives. Characterisation of the contents: Main points of the tradition: Foundation, organisation and history of the association, meetings of the board, meetings of the executive committee, general correspondence by year, relations and relationships with organisations and persons, publications and situation reports of the office, submissions and public declarations 1895-1933, collections, war target movement in the 1st World War. World War II, Ethnic and Anti-Semitic Movement, Position on Christianity, Position on State and Government during the Weimar Republic, Relations with Austria-Hungary, Anschluss Österreichs, Verhältnis zum Ausland Erschließungszustand: Findbuch (o.Dat.), Online-Findbuch (2005) Citation method: BArch, R 8048/...
Contains among other things: "The Belgian-English Question" Memorandum of an unknown author (printed as "Um des teuer deutschen Blut und Vaterlandes Willen", 1915); Memorandum of an unknown author on the question of war guilt (Fragment, 30 p.), ca. 1915; "Meine Londoner Mission" Memorandum of the Ambassador in London Prince Karl Marx Lichnowsky, 1916 Also contains: "Die Irische Republik", unknown author, ca. 1917-1918
Erzberger, Matthias89 sheets, Contains: Weddings April 1910 - October 1919 (with name index) Prussian Army (from 1806/07): Army Division: Army Inspection No. 1 Gdansk: Army Corps No. 1 Königsberg/ East Prussia: - Grenadier Regiment No. 1 (1st East Prussian) Crown Prince, 1913 - Grenadier Regiment No. 3 (2nd East Prussian) King Friedrich Wilhelm I., 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 43 (6th East Prussian) Duke Karl von Mecklenburg-Strelitz, 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 44 (7th East Prussian) Count Dönhoff, 1913, 1915 - Infantry Regiment No. 45 (8th East Prussian), 1915 Army Corps No. 17 Gdansk: - Infantry Regiment No. 129 (3rd West Prussian), 1910 - Infantry Regiment No. 175 (8th West Prussian), 1910 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 72 (Grand Master), 1914 Army Corps No. 20 Allenstein: - Infantry Regiment No. 18 (1st West Prussian), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 175 (1st West Prussian), 1910 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 72 (Grand Master), 1914 Army Corps No. 20 Allenstein: - Infantry Regiment No. 18 (1st West Prussian), 1910 - Infantry Regiment No. 17 (1st West Prussian), 1910 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 72 (Grand Master), 1914 Army Corps No. 20 Allenstein: - Infantry Regiment No. 18 (1st West Prussian) Posensches) by Grolman, 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 59 (4th Posensches) Freiherr Hiller von Gärtringen, 1912 Army Inspection No. 2 Berlin: Gardekorps Berlin: - Intendantur, 1917 - 1918 - Military Training Area Zossen, 1913 - Guard Division No. 59 (4th Posensches) 1, 1914 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 3, 1915 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 5, 1918 - Guard Fusililier Regiment - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 1 Emperor Alexander, 1916 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 3 Queen Elisabeth, 1912 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 3, 1915 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 5, 1918 - Guard Fusililier Regiment - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 1 Emperor Alexander, 1916 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 3 Queen Elisabeth, 1912 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 5, 1915 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 3 Queen Elisabeth, 1912 5, 1910 - Training Infantry Regiment, 1914 - 1916 - Cuirassier Regiment Gardes du Corps, 1910 - Guard Ulanen Regiment No. 2, 1911 - 1914 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 1, 1913 - 1916 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 2, 1911 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 3, 1914 - 1915 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 4, 1910 - Airship Battalion (Division) No. 1, 1910 - Half Battalion (Division), 1910 - 1918 Army Corps No. 12 (1st Saxon) Dresden: - Rifleman (Fusilier) Regiment No. 108 Prince George, 1910 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 19 (2nd Saxon), 1912 Army Inspection No. 3 Hanover: Army Corps No. 7 Münster: - Hussar Regiment No. 8 (1st Westphalian) Emperor Nikolaus II of Russia, 1912 Army Corps No. 9 Hamburg-Altona: - Artillery Depot Schwerin/Mecklenburg, 1912 - Infantry Regiment No. 85 (Holstein) Duke of Holstein, 1912 - Fusililier Regiment No. 86 (Schleswig-Holstein) Queen, 1911 Army Corps No. 10Hannover: - District Command Celle, 1913 Army Inspection No. 4 Munich: Army Corps No. 3 Berlin: - Commandantur Döberitz, 1916 - Artillery Depot Jüterbog, 1912 - Grenadier Regiment No. 12 (2nd Brandenburg) Prince Carl of Prussia, 1910, 1913, 1915 - Füsilier Regiment No. 35 (Brandenburg) Prince Heinrich of Prussia, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 48 (5th Brandenburg) von Stülpnagel, 1913 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 3 (1. Brandenburgisches) Generalfeldzeugmeister, 1910 - Bezirkskommando Berlin, 1914 Army Inspection No. 5 Karlsruhe: Army Corps No. 8 Koblenz: - Infantry Regiment No. 28 (2. Rheinisches) von Groeben, 1913 Army Corps No. 14 Karlsruhe: - Artillery Depot Rastatt, 1910 Army Inspection No. 7 Saarbrücken: Army Corps No. 16 Metz: - Infantry Regiment No. 173 (9th Lorraine), 1910, 1914 - Ulan Regiment No. 8 Frankfurt/Main: - Rail Regiment No. 2, 1919 - Rail Regiment No. 3, 1913 Army Corps No. 21 Saarbrücken: - Ulan Regiment No. 11 (2nd Brandenburg) Count Haeseler, 1912 Army Inspection No. 8 Berlin: Army Corps No. 5 Posen: - Füsilier Regiment No. 37 (West Prussian) von Steinmetz, 1915 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 20 (1st Posensches), 1913 Army Corps No. 6 Breslau: - Grenadier Regiment No. 10 (1st Silesian) King Friedrich Wilhelm II, 1912 Inspection of the field artillery Berlin: - Feldartillerie-Schießschule Jüterbog, 1912 Other army: - Eisenbahn-Regiment Nr. 3, 1913 - Gewehrprüfungskommission, 1913 - Marine-Artilleriedepot Cuxhaven, 1910 - Schutztruppe für Südwestafrika, 1916 - S.M.S. Stettin (Small Cruiser), 1913 - S.M.S. Thuringia (battleship), 1912 - S.M.S. Württemberg (liner), 1913 - Torpedo Division No. 1, 1911 - Second Sailor Division Wilhelmshaven, 1910 Troops 1. World War II: - Army No. 4, stage motor vehicle convoy No. 36, 1915 - Replacement Machine Gun Company No. 3 Borsigwalde, 1916 - Fortress Boat Department Tilsit, 1915 - Guard Reserve Field Artillery Regiment No. 1, 1916 - Infantry Division No. 54, Field Hospital 3, 1916 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 77, 1915 Temporary Reichswehr 1919/1920: - Infantry Regiment No. 12 (Infantry Regiment No. 30, 4th Rheinisches Graf Werder), 1919;
426 pages, Contains: Christenings 1918 - 1928 (with name index) - military community - retired officers - magistrate Berlin, 1921 - Schutzpolizei Berlin, 1921 - Wachtruppe Berlin, 1922, 1925 - Reichskolonialamt, Kommando der Schutztruppe, 1919 - 1920 - Reichsarchiv, 1921 - 1922 - Charite, 1919 - 1923 Prussian Army (from 1806/07): Chief of the Army: - War Ministry, 1918 - 1919 - Large General Staff, 1918 - 1919 - Riding Corps of Military Police, 1918 - 1919 - Riding Corps of Military Police, Settlement Office, 1920 - Castle Guard Company, 1918 Military Division: Army Inspection No. 1 Gdansk: Army Corps No. 1 Königsberg/East Prussia: - Füsilier Regiment No. 33 (East Prussian) Count Roon, 1919 Army Corps No. 17 Gdansk: - Infantry Regiment No. 129 (3rd West Prussian), 1919 Army Corps No. 20 Allenstein: - Infantry Regiment No. 152 (German Order), 1919 Army Inspection No. 2 Berlin: Gardecorps Berlin: - Generalkommando, 1919 - Generalstab, 1919 - Intendantur, 1918 - 1919 - Abwicklungsamt, 1920 - Garde-Regiment zu Fuß Nr. 3, 1919 - Garde-Füsilier-Regiment, Abwicklungsstelle, 1920 - Garde-Grenadier-Regiment Nr. 1 Kaiser Alexander, 1918 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 2 Kaiser Franz, 1918 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 3 Queen Elisabeth, 1918 - Guard Machine Gun Department No. 2, 1918 - Guard Shooter Battalion, 1918 - Training Infantry Regiment, 1918 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 2, 1918 - Railroad Regiment No. 1, 1918 - Telegraph Battalion No. 1, 1918 - Guard Train Department, 1919 - Garrison Hospital No. 1 Berlin, 1919 Army Inspection No. 3 Hanover: Army Corps No. 7 Münster: - Ulan Regiment No. 5 (Westphalian), 1918 - Pioneer Battalion No. 7 (1st Westphalian), 1918 Army Corps No. 10 Hanover: - Infantry Regiment No. 77 (2nd Hannoversches), 1918 - Dragoon Regiment No. 19 (Oldenburg), 1918 Army Inspection No. 4 Munich: Army Corps No. 3 Berlin: - General Command, 1919 - Intendantur, 1918 - Artillery Depot Berlin, 1918 - 1919 - Infantry Regiment No. 52 (6th Brandenburgisches) of Alvensleben, 1918 - Infantry Regiment No. 64 (8th Brandenburgisches) Prince Friedrich Karl of Prussia, 1919 Army Inspectorate No. 5 Karlsruhe: Army Corps No. 8 Koblenz: - Infantry Regiment No. 25 (1st Brandenburg) Rhenish) of Lützow, 1919 - Infantry Regiment No. 28 (2nd Rhenish) of Groeben, 1919 Army Corps No. 14 Karlsruhe: - Telegraph Battalion No. 4, 1918 Army Inspection No. 6 Stuttgart: Army Corps No. 11 Kassel: - Infantry Regiment No. 32 (2nd Thuringian), 1919 - Infantry Regiment No. 71 (3rd Thuringian), 1918 Army Inspection No. 7 Saarbrücken: Army Corps No. 16 Metz: - Field Artillery Regiment No. 34 (2nd Lorraine), 1918 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 8 (Rhine), 1919 Army Corps No. 21 Saarbrücken: - Infantry Regiment No. 70 (8th Rhine), 1919 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 31 (1st Lower Alsace), 1919 Army Inspection No. 8 Berlin: Army Corps No. 2 Stettin: - Infantry Regiment No. 140 (4th West Prussian), 1919 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 15 (2nd Pomeranian, 2nd West Prussian until 1910), 1918 Army Corps No. 5 Poznan: - Infantry Regiment No. 154 (5th Lower Silesian), 1919 Army Corps No. 6 Breslau: - Hussar Regiment No. 4 (1st Lower Silesian) Silesian) by Schill, 1918 Other army: - Admiral Staff, 1918 - 1920 - Artillery Examination Commission, 1918 - 1919 - Artillery Workshop Berlin Spandau, 1918 - Clothing Procurement Office, 1918 - First Shipyard Division Kiel, 1919 - Fireworks Laboratory Berlin Spandau, 1919 - Foot Artillery School, 1918 - 1919 - Garrison Regiment Berlin, 1918 - General Inspection of the Engineering and Pioneer Corps, Fortresses, 1919 - General Inspection of Military Education, 1919 - General Inspection of Military Transportation, 1918 - Großer Generalstab, Abwicklungsamt, 1920 - Ingenieurkomitee, 1918 - Inspektion der Infanterieschulen, 1918 - Inspektion der Luftschiffertruppen, 1919 - Kaiser-Wilhelms-Akademie für das militärärztliche Bildungswesen, 1919 - War Ministry, Winding-up Office, 1919 - Line Command Berlin, 1919 - Military Forge Berlin, 1921 - 1927 - Military Gymnasium (until 1881 Central Gymnasium), 1927 - Reichsmarineamt, 1918 - 1919 - S.M.S. Berlin (Kleiner Kreuzer), 1918, 1925 - S.M.S. Alsace (liner), 1928 - S.M.S. Kronprinz (liner), 1918 - S.M.S. Nymphe (Kleiner Kreuzer), 1928 - Torpedoboot S 23, 1921 - NCO School Wetzlar, 1918 - Second Shipyard Division Wilhelmshaven, 1918 1st World War Troops: - Army Corps No. 3, Replacement machine-gun troops, 1918 - Brigade Kurland, Border Guard East, 1919 - German Medical Commission for Bulgaria, 1918 - Railway Bridge Company, 1918 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 277, 1918 - Field Army, General Staff, 1918 - 1919 - Field Hospital No. 377, 1918 - Field Airship Department No. 16, 1918 - Field Post No. 204, Goods Collection Point, 1918 - Döberitz Airfield, Aircraft Maintenance, 1918 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 7, 1918 - Guard Reserve Corps, 1918 - Group Radio Division No. 507, 1918 - Army Group Crown Prince Rupprecht, High Command, 1918 - Infantry Division No. 91, 1918 - Infantry Division No. 187, 1919 - Infantry Division No. 224, 1918 - Landwehr-Division Nr. 1, 1918 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 385, 1918 - Fliegertruppen Inspektion, 1918 - 1919 - Reserve-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 261, 1918 - Unterseebootsflottille im Mittelmeer, 1918 - Waffen- und Munitionsbeschaffungsamt, 1918 Provisional Reichswehr 1919/1920: - Brigade-Nachrichten-Abteilung Nr. 15, 1920 - Flak Division XIX Plauen/Vogtland, 1919 - Voluntary Troop Division Hasse (later Reichswehr-Regiment Hasse), 1919 - Guard Cavalry Corps, 1919 - Guard Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 1, 1920 - Army Processing Office Prussia, 1919 - Motor Battalion No. 15, 1920 - Motor Company No. 103, 1919 - Military Telegraph Department Berlin, 1919 - Reichswehr Artillery Regiment No. 15, 1920 - Reichswehr Command Post Prussia, 1919 - Reichswehr Brigade No. 3, Staffing No. 3, 1919 - Reichswehr Brigade No. 15, 1919 - Reichswehr Driving Department No. 15, 1920 - Reichswehr Infantry Regiment No. 29, 1919 - 1920 - Reichswehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 30, 1920 - Reichswehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 31, 1920 - Reichswehr-Luftschiffer-Abteilung Nr. 20, 1919 - Reichswehr-Pionier-Bataillon Nr. 16, 1920 - Reichswehr-Regiment Nr. 15, 1919 - Reichswehr-Schützen-Regiment Nr. 4, 1920 - Reichswehr-Schützen-Regiment Nr. 15, 1919 Reichswehr 1921 - 1935: - Artillery Leader No. 3 Berlin, 1922, 1925 - Artillery Regiment No. 2 (Prussian), 1925, 1927 - Artillery Regiment No. 3 (Prussian), 1921 - 1927 - Artillery Regiment No. 5 (Prussian), 1925, 1927 - Artillery Regiment No. 6 (Prussian), 1928 - Artillery Regiment No. 8 (Prussian), 1928 - Driving Department No. 3 (Prussian) Berlin Lankwitz, 1920, 1928 - Gruppen-Kommando 1 Berlin, 1919 - 1928 - Heeresbekleidungsamt Berlin, 1926 - Heeresunterkunftsamt Berlin, 1922, 1925 - Heeresverpflegungsamt, 1926 - Heereszeugamt Berlin Spandau, 1925 - 1928 - Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 3 (Prussian), 1920 - 1921 - Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 5 (Prussian), 1921 - 1928 - Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 7 (Prussian) Neisse, 1921, 1923 - Infantry Regiment No. 8 (Prussian) Frankfurt/Oder, 1926 - Infantry Regiment No. 9 (Prussian), 1921 - 1928 - Infantry Regiment No. 10 (Saxon), 1924 - Infantry Regiment No. 11 (Saxon), 1927 - Infantry Regiment No. 13 (Württemberg), 1928 - Infantry Regiment No. 16 (Prussian) Oldenburg, 1928 - Inspection of the intelligence troops, 1922, 1927 - 1928 - Inspection for weapons and equipment, 1920 - 1927 - Commandant's Office Berlin - Navy Headquarters, 1920 - 1928 - News Department No. 3 (Prussian) Potsdam, 1921 - 1925 - News Department No. 6 (Prussian), 1925 - Pioneer Workshop Berlin Schöneberg, 1926 - Reich Military Court, 1920 - Reichswehr Infantry Regiment No. 16, 1920, 1922 - Reichswehrministerium, 1919 - 1928 - Reiter Regiment No. 3 (Prussian), 1926 - Reiter Regiment No. 4 (Prussian) 1920 - Reiter Regiment No. 8 (Prussian), 1921 - Reiter Regiment No. 11 (Prussian) Ohlau, 1928 - Sanitätsstaffel Berlin, Sanitäts-Abteilung Nr. 3 (Prussian), 1920 - 1928 - Shooting range Kummersdorf, 1924, 1928 - Wehrkreis-Kommando III Berlin, 1919 - 1928;
216 sheets, Contains: Weddings 1917 - 1923 (with name index) - Military Community - Retired Officers - Guard Regiment Berlin, 1921 Prussian Army (from 1806/07): Chief of the Army: - War Ministry, 1917 - 1920 - Large General Staff, 1917 - 1920 - Castle Guard Company, 1919 Army Division: High Command in the Marches, 1918 Army Inspection No. 1 Gdansk: Army corps no. 1 Königsberg/East Prussia: - Artillery depot Königsberg/East Prussia, 1919 - Hunter regiment on horse no. 9, 1918 - Füsilier Regiment No. 33 (East Prussian) Graf Roon, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 44 (7th East Prussian) Graf Dönhoff, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 45 (8th East Prussian), 1917 Army Corps No. 17 Gdansk: - Infantry Regiment No. 61 (8. Pommersches) of Marwitz, 1920 - Infantry Regiment No. 141 (Kulmer), 1918 - 1919 - Infantry Regiment No. 175 (8. Westpreußisches), 1918 - 1. Leibhusaren-Regiment Nr. 1, 1917 - Feldartillerie-Regiment Nr. 72 (Hochmeister), 1918 - Bekleidungsamt Gdansk, 1920 Armeekorps Nr. 20 Allenstein: - Intendantur, 1917, 1919 - Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 146 (1. Masurian), 1918 - Infantry Regiment No. 150 (1st Armed Forces), 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 79 (3rd East Prussian), 1917 - Pioneer Battalion No. 23 (2nd West Prussian), 1917 Army Inspection No. 2 Berlin: Guard Corps Berlin: - Intendantur, 1918 - 1919 - Abwicklungsamt, 1919 - Guard Division No. 2, 1918 - 1919 - Guard Infantry Division No. 4, 1917 - Guard Cavalry Brigade No. 3, 1917 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 2, 1918 - 1919 - Guard Cavalry Brigade No. 3, 1917 - Guard Cavalry Brigade No. 3, 1917 - Guard Cavalry No. 3, 1917 - Guard Cavalry No. 3, 1917 - Guard Cavalry Brigade No. 3, 1917 2, 1919 - 1920 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 4, 1918 - 1919 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 5, 1917 - 1919 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 1 Emperor Alexander, 1918 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 2 Emperor Franz, 1918 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 3 Queen Elisabeth, 1917 - 1919 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 5, 1918 - Guard Hunter Battalion, 1918 - Guard Machine Rifle Division No. 2, 1918 - Guard Shooter Battalion, 1918 - Training Infantry Regiment, 1917 - 1918 - Cuirassier Regiment Gardes du Corps, 1917 - Guard Dragoon Regiment No. 5, 1918 - Guard Hunter Battalion, 1918 - Guard Machine Rifle Division No. 2, 1918 - Guard Rifleman Battalion, 1918 - Training Infantry Regiment, 1917 - 1918 - Cuirassier Regiment Gardes du Corps, 1917 - Guard Dragoon Regiment No. 1 Queen Victoria of Great Britain and Ireland, 1918 - Guard Dragoon Regiment No. 2 Empress Alexandra of Russia, 1918 - 1919 - Guard Ulan Regiment No. 2, 1917 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 1, 1917 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 3, 1917 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 4, 1918 - Railway Regiment No. 1, 1917 - Kriegsbekleidungsamt, 1918 - Hauptsanitätsdepot Berlin, 1918 - 1919 Army Corps No. 19 (2nd Saxon) Leipzig: - Field Artillery Regiment No. 68 (6th Saxon), 1918 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 77 (7th Saxon), 1918 Army Inspection No. 3 Hanover: Army Corps No. 7 Münster: - Infantry Regiment No. 13 (1st Westphalian) Herwarth von Bittenfeld, 1918 - Füsilier Regiment No. 39 (Lower Rhine) General Ludendorff, 1917, 1919 - Infantry Regiment No. 53 (5th Westphalian), 1918 - Infantry Regiment No. 56 (7th Westphalian) Bird of Falckenstein, 1918 - Hussar Regiment No. 11 (2nd Westphalian), 1918 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 7 (Westphalian), 1917 - Pioneer Battalion No. 24 (2nd Westphalian), 1917 Army Corps No. 9 Hamburg-Altona: - Infantry Brigade No. 81, 1917 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 20 (Lauenburgish), 1918 - Train Battalion No. 9 (Schleswig-Holstein), 1919 Army Corps No. 10 Hanover: - Füsilier Regiment No. 73 (Hannoversches) Prince Albrecht of Prussia, 1918 - Infantry Regiment No. 74 (1. Hannoversches), 1917 Army Inspection No. 4 Munich: Army Corps No. 3 Berlin: - General Command, 1917 - 1919 - Intendantur, 1917 - 1919 - Intendantur, Settlement Office, 1920 - Kommandantur Berlin, 1917 - 1920 - Kommandantur Jüterbog, 1919 - Artillery Depot Berlin Spandau, 1917 - 1918 - Artillery Depot Berlin, 1917 - 1920 - Artillery Depot Jüterbog, 1917 - Leib-Grenadier-Regiment No. 8 (1st Brandenburg) King Friedrich Wilhelm III, 1917 - 1919 - Grenadier Regiment No. 12 (2nd Brandenburg) Prince Carl of Prussia, 1917 - 1919 - Infantry Regiment No. 20 (3rd Brandenburg) Count Tauentzien von Wittenberg, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 24 (4th Brandenburg) Grand Duke Friedrich Franz II. von Mecklenburg-Schwerin, 1917 - 1919 - Füsilier Regiment No. 35 (Brandenburg) Prince Henry of Prussia, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 48 (5th Brandenburg) of Stülpnagel, 1919 - Infantry Regiment No. 52 (6th Brandenburg) of Alvensleben, 1917 - 1918 - Hunter Battalion No. 3 (Brandenburg), 1918 - Cuirassier Regiment No. 6 (Brandenburg) Emperor Nicholas I. of Russia, 1919 - Ulan Regiment No. 3 (1st Brandenburg) Emperor Alexander II of Russia, 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 54 (Neumärk), 1917 - Pioneer Battalion No. 3 (1st Brandenburg), 1917 - Pioneer Battalion No. 3 (1st Brandenburg) of Russia, 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 54 (Neumärk), 1917 - Pioneer Battalion No. 3 (1st Brandenburg), 1917 - Pioneer Battalion No. 3 (1st Brandenburg) Brandenburgisches) von Rauch, 1917 - Pionier-Bataillon Nr. 28 (2nd Brandenburgisches), 1917, 1919 - Bezirkskommando Berlin, 1919 - Bezirkskommando Calau, 1917 - Bekleidungsamt, 1918 Armee-Inspektion Nr. 5 Karlsruhe: Army Corps No. 8 Koblenz: - Hunter Regiment on Horse No. 7, 1917 - Hunter Regiment on Horse No. 8, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 28 (2nd Rheinisches) of Groeben, 1917 - 1918 Army Corps No. 14 Karlsruhe: - Generalkommando, 1918 - Artillery Depot Rastatt, 1917 - Hunter Regiment on Horse No. 7, 1917 - Hunter Regiment on Horse No. 8, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 28 (2nd Rheinisches) of Groeben, 1917 - 1918 Army Corps No. 14 Karlsruhe: - Generalkommando, 1918 - Artillery Depot Rastatt, 1917 - Hunter Regiment on Horse No. 7, 1917 - Artillery Depot Rastatt, 1917 - Hunter Regiment No. 7, 1917 - Hunter Regiment No. 1917 5, 1920 - Leib-Grenadier Regiment No. 109 (1st Baden), 1917 Army Corps No. 15 Strasbourg i. Alsace: - Infantry Regiment No. 99 (2nd Upper Rhine), 1919 - Infantry Regiment No. 136 (4th Lorraine), 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 143 (4th Lower Alsace), 1919 - Infantry Regiment No. 172 (3rd Lower Alsace), 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 172 (2nd Lower Alsace), 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 143 (4th Lower Alsace), 1919 - Infantry Regiment No. 172 (3rd Lower Alsace), 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 143 (4th Lower Alsace), 1919 - Infantry Regiment No. 172 (3rd Lower Alsace) Oberelsässisches), 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 51 (2nd Oberelsässisches), 1920 Army Inspection No. 6 Stuttgart: Army Corps No. 4 Magdeburg: - Artillery Depot Halle/Saale, 1918 - Division No. 8, Military Court of War, 1918 - Infantry Regiment No. 26 (1st Magdeburgisches) Fürst Leopold von Anhalt-Dessau, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 27 (2nd Magdeburgisches), 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 27 (2nd Magdeburgisches), 1918 - Division No. 8, Military Court of War, 1918 - Infantry Regiment No. 26 (1st Magdeburgisches) Fürst Leopold von Anhalt-Dessau, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 27 (2nd Magdeburgisches), 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 27 (2nd Magdeburgisches) Magdeburg) Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia, Settlement Office, 1920 - Füsilier Regiment No. 36 (Magdeburg) General Field Marshal Count Blumenthal, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 72 (4th Thuringian), 1917, 1919 - Hussar Regiment No. 10 (Magdeburg), 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 40 (Altmärkisches), 1919 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 75 (Mansfelder), 1917 Army Corps No. 11 Kassel: - Hunter Regiment on Horse No. 2, Motor Car Telephone Construction Train No. 2906, 1918 - Infantry Regiment No. 71 (3rd Thuringian), 1917 Army Corps No. 13 (Württemberg) Stuttgart: - Field Artillery Regiment No. 13 (1st Württemberg) King Karl, 1917 Army Inspection No. 7 Saarbrücken: Army Corps No. 18 Frankfurt/Main: - General Command, 1917 - Infantry Brigade No. 49, 1918 - Infantry Regiment No. 81 (1st Kurhessian) Landgrave Friedrich I. von Hessen-Kassel, 1918 - 1919 - Infantry (Life Guard) Regiment No. 115 (1st Grand Ducal Hessian), 1918 - Life Dragon Regiment No. 24 (2nd Grand Ducal Hessian), 1919 - Pioneer Battalion No. 21 (1st Nassau), 1917 - Railway Regiment No. 2, 1917, 1919 Army Corps No. 21 Saarbrücken: - Infantry Regiment No. 70 (8th Rhineland), 1918 Army Inspection No. 8 Berlin: Army Corps No. 2 Szczecin: - General Command, 1918 - Division No. 3, 1920 - Grenadier Regiment No. 2 (1st Pomerania) King Friedrich Wilhelm IV.., 1918 - Infantry Regiment No. 140 (4th West Prussian), 1918 - Cuirassier Regiment No. 2 (Pomeranian) Queen, 1917 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 15 (2nd Pomeranian, 2nd West Prussian until 1910), 1917 - Pioneer Battalion No. 2 (Pomerania), 1917 Army Corps No. 5 Posen: - Directorate, 1919 - Grenadier Regiment No. 6 (1st West Prussian) Count Kleist von Nollendorf, 1918 - Grenadier Regiment No. 7 (2nd West Prussian) King Wilhelm I., 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 46 (1st Lower Silesian) Graf Kirchbach, 1917 - 1918 - Infantry Regiment No. 50 (3rd Lower Silesian), 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 58 (3rd Poznan), 1919 - Infantry Regiment No. 154 (5th Lower Silesian), 1918 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 5 (1st Lower Silesian) by Podbielski, 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 20 (1st Posensches), 1917 Army Corps No. 6 Breslau: - Hussar Regiment No. 6 (2nd Silesian) Graf Goetzen, 1918 - Ulan Regiment No. 2 (Silesian) by Katzler, 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 42 (2nd Lower Silesian) by Katzler, 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 42 (2nd Lower Silesian) by Breslau: - Hussar Regiment No. 6 (2nd Silesian) Graf Goetzen, 1918 - Ulan Regiment No. 2 (2nd Lower Silesian) by Katzler, 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 42 (2nd Lower Silesian) by Breslau Schlesisches), 1918 Inspection of Hunters and Archers Berlin: - Reitendens Feldjägerkorps, 1918 - 1919 General Inspection of the Engineering and Pioneer Corps and the Fortresses of Berlin, 1917 General Inspection of the Engineering and Pioneer Corps and the Fortresses of Berlin, Liquidation Office, 1919 Feldzeugmeisterei: - Artillery Depot Inspection Berlin, 1918 Other Army: - Artillery Examination Commission, 1917 - 1919 - Artillery Workshop Berlin Spandau, 1917 - Artillery Workshop Gdansk, 1920 - Clothing Examination Commission, 1919 - First Sailor Division Kiel, 1917 - First Shipyard Division Kiel, 1917 - 1919 - Gendarmerie Brigade No. 3 Berlin, 1917 - 1918 - Generalkriegskasse, 1918 - 1919 - Generalmilitärkasse, 1918 - 1919 - Gewehrfabrik Berlin Spandau, liquidation agency, 1920 - Gouvernement Libau/Latvia, 1918 - Hauptkadettenanstalt Berlin, 1917 - Ingenieurkomitee, 1918 - 1919 - Inspection of the railway troops, 1918 - Inspection of the field artillery shooting schools, 1919 - Inspection of the air force troops, 1917 - 1919 - Inspection of the airship troops, 1917 - 1918 - Inspection of the infantry schools, 1918 - Inspection of the military penal institutions, 1918 - Inspection of the intelligence troops, 1917 - 1918 - Directorate General of the air forces, 1919 - Director of Military Transport, 1918 - 1919 - Kaiserliche Schutztruppen, Oberkommando, 1917 - 1918 - Kaiserliche Werft Wilhelmshaven, 1918 - Kaiser-Wilhelms-Akademie für das militärztliche Bildungswesen (before 1895 Medizinisch-Chirurgisches Friedrich-Wilhelms-Institut [Pépinière]), 1919 - Kommandanturgericht Berlin, 1920 - Navy, Admiral Staff, 1917 - 1920 - Naval Station of the North Sea Wilhelmshaven, 1917 - Military Railway Directorate, Disbanding Command, 1919 - Military Telegraph Department Berlin, 1918 - Military Gymnasium (until 1881 Central Gymnasium), 1917 - News Review Commission, 1919 - Pioneer Battalion No. 25 (2. Nassauisches), 1920 - Reichsmarineamt, 1917 - 1919 - Schießplatz Berlin Tegel, 1920 - Schutztruppe für Deutsch-Ostafrika, 1918 - 1920 - Schutztruppe für Kamerun, 1918 - 1919 - Schutztruppe für Südwestafrika, 1918 - 1920 - prison Berlin Tegel, 1917 - NCO school Ettlingen, 1917 - NCO pre-school Annaburg, 1919 - NCO pre-school Sigmaringen, 1918 - Traindepot-Direktion Nr. 1, 1917 - 1918 - Traininspektion, 1919 - Training area Kummersdorf, 1920 - Second shipyard division Wilhelmshaven, 1917 - 1919 Foreign troops: Austrian Army: - S.M.S. Donau (escort ship), 1918 Turkey: - Ministry of War, 1918 Troops 1st World War: - Army No. 2, Provision Column No. 3, 1917 - Army No. 3, Radio Operator Small Division 3, 1917 - Army Medical High Command von Mackensen, 1918 - Army Telephone Department No. 8, 1917 - Army Telephone Department No. 17, 1917 - Army Telephone Park No. 8, 1917 - Army Telephone Park No. 13, 1917 - Army Telephone Park No. 22, 1917 - Army Air Base No. 11, 1917 - Army Corps No. 2, Landwehr Pioneer Company No. 2, 1918 - Army Corps No. 3, Replacement Machine Gun Company No. 1, 1919 - Army Corps No. 4, Artillery Ammunition Column No. 5, 1917 - Army Corps No. 5, Replacement Machine Gun Company No. 4, 1918 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 32, 1918 - Armierungs-Bataillon Nr. 43, 1918 - Armierungs-Bataillon Nr. 102, 1918 - Armierungs-Bataillon Nr. 193, 1917 - Artillerie-Meßschule Wahn, 1918 - German Military Mission, 1918 - German Red Cross, Lazarett, 1917 - Division Commander Nr. 6, 1918 - Replacement Field Artillery Regiment Zossen, 1918 - Replacement Pioneer Battalion No. 5, 1917 - Replacement Lake Battalion No. 1, 1918 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 241, 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 249, 1919 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 273, 1917 - Field Pilot Department No. 267, 1917 - 1918 - Field Army, General Staff, 1917 - Field Gendarmerie, Staff No. 160, 1917 - Field Hospital No. 217, 1917 - Field Hospital No. 313 (Saxon), 1918 - Field Hospital No. 377, 1917 - Field Airship Department No. 12, 1917 - Telephone Department No. 225, 1917 - Telephone Department No. 621, 1917 - Telephone Replacement Department No. 6, 1917 - Telephone Replacement Department No. 603, 1917 - Telephone Train No. 1539, 1918 - Aircraft Replacement Department No. 621, 1917 - Telephone Replacement Department No. 621, 1917 - Telephone Replacement Department No. 603, 1917 - Telephone Train No. 1539, 1918 - Aircraft Replacement Department No. 1539, 1918 - Aircraft Replacement Department No. 1539, 1917 - Aircraft Replacement Department No. 603, 1917 - Telephone Replacement Department No. 617, 1917 - Telephone Replacement Department No. 1917, 1917 - Telephone Replacement Department No. 6, 1917 - Telephone Rep. 87, 1918 - Foot Artillery Battalion No. 93, 1917 - Foot Artillery Battalion No. 108, 1918 - Foot Artillery Battalion No. 406, 1918 - Guard Replacement Division, Field Recruit Depot, 1917 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 5, Replacement Division, 1917 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 6, Replacement Section, 1917 - Guard Foot Artillery Regiment No. 1, 1917, 1919 - Guard Foot Artillery Regiment No. 1, Operations Office, 1919 - Guard Foot Artillery Regiment No. 2 Jüterbog, 1918 - Guard Grenadier Replacement Battalion, 1919 - Guard Infantry Division No. 1, 1917, 1919 - Guard Foot Artillery Regiment No. 1, Operations Office, 1919 - Guard Foot Artillery Regiment No. 2 Jüterbog, 1918 - Guard Grenadier Replacement Battalion, 1919 - Guard Infantry Division No. 1, 1917, 1919 4, Field Recruit Depot, 1917 - Guard Infantry Regiment No. 6, 1918 - Guard Mine Launcher Company No. 1, 1917 - Guard Corps, Replacement Machine Gun Company No. 3, 1917 - Guard Corps, Replacement Machine Gun Company No. 5, 1918 - Guard News Replacement Department, 1917 - 1918 - Guard Reserve Pioneer Battalion, 1918 - Guard Reserve Regiment No. 2, 1917 - 1918 - Guard Train Battalion, 1919 - Guard Train Replacement Department No. 1, 1918 - Garrison Pioneer Company No. 381 Berlin, 1917 - 1919 - General Command for Special Use No. 65, 1918 - Group Radio Operator Department No. 507, 1918 - Group Radio Operator Department Lüttnitz/Saxony, 1919 - Port Command No. 520, 1917 - Army Group German Crown Prince - Immobile Motor Vehicle Depot No. 8, 1918 - Infantry Division No. 1, Field Hospital No. 13, 1918 - Infantry Division No. 240, Field Recruit Depot, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 202, 1918 - Infantry Regiment No. 335, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 336, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 357, 1918 - Infantry Regiment No. 396, 1918 - Infantry Regiment No. 408, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 426, 1918 - Infantry Regiment No. 443, 1917 - 1918 - Infantry Regiment No. 451, 1917 - Inspection of the Minenwerferpark- und Beschusstruppen, 1917 - Jäger-Ersatz-Bataillon No. 3 Lübben, 1918 - Hunting Squadron No. 10, 1917 - Cavalry News Division No. 3, 1917 - Kraftfahr-Ersatz-Abteilung I, 1917 - War Office, 1917 - War Hospital No. 123, 1917 - War Hospital Virton/Belgium, 1918 - Landsturm Infantry Battalion Guben (III.10), 1917 - 1918 - Landstorm-Infanterie-Bataillon Lingen (X/4), 1917 - Landstorm-Infanterie-Ersatz-Bataillon (III/24), 1917 - Landstorm-Infanterie-Ersatz-Bataillon, Freienwalde (III/30), 1917 - Landwehr-Fußartillerie-Bataillon Nr. 21, Battery Nr. 1, 1918 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 24, 1917 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment No. 47, 1917 - Light Ammunition Column No. 1078, 1918 - Light Ammunition Column No. 1402, 1918 - Light Measuring Troop 61, 1918 - Naval Pioneer Battalion No. 1, 1917 - Machine Rifle Sniper Department No. 4, 1917 - Military Mission for Turkey, 1919 - Military Economic Group 13, District Office Kiejdany/Lithuania, 1918 - Military Telegraph Department Berlin, 1917 - Military Telegraph Department Heim, 1918 - Minenwerfer-Ersatz-Bataillon Nr. 7, 1918 - Minenwerfer-Ersatz-Regiment Nr. 1 Markendorf, 1918 - Ober-Etappen-Inspektion Aleppo/Türkei, 1918 - Pferdedepot Nr. 47, 1917 - Reserve-Dragoner (Schützen)-Regiment Nr. 12, 1917 - 1918 - Reserve-Fußartillerie-Regiment Nr. 11, 1917 - Reserve-Garnison-Lazarett II Berlin, 1917 - Reserve-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 20, 1917 - Reserve-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 53, 1918 - Reserve-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 59, 1918 - Reserve-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 64, 1917 - 1918 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 80, 1918 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 90, 1918 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 91, 1917 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 93, 1917 - 1918 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 203, 1917 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 205, 1917 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 261, 1917 - Reserve Corps No. 3, General Command, 1918 - Reserve Corps No. 23, Field Directorate, 1917 - 1918 - Reserve Landwehr Infantry Regiment No. 46, 1917 - Sanitätsamt Berlin, 1918 - 1919 - Sanitäts-Kompanie No. 2, 1918 - Sanitäts-Kompanie No. 237, 1917 - Scheinwerfer-Ersatz-Bataillon Berlin Spandau, 1918 - Heavy 15 cm Cannon Battery No. 12, 1917 - Heavy Coastal Mortar Battery No. 7, 1917 - Torpedo Division No. 1 Kiel, 1918 - 1919 - Torpedo Division No. 1 Wilhelmshaven, 1918 - Torpedoboot S.M.S. No. 122, 1917 - Torpedoboot S.M.S. No. 172, 1917 - Truppen-und Trainfeldgerät, 1918 - Submarine No. 88, 1917 - Untersee-Bootsflottille No. 1, 1917 - Untersee-Bootsflottile Mittelmeer, 1918 - Waffen- und Munitionsbeschaffungsamt, 1917 - 1918 Temporary Reichswehr 1919/1920: - Processing Office of the General Directorate of the Army Workshops Berlin, 1919 - Army Command Southern Border Guard, 1919 - Procurement Office for News Equipment Berlin Schöneberg, 1919 - Brigade News Department No. 110, 1919 - Flugzeugmeisterei Adlershof, 1919 - Freikorps Lützow, 1919 - Freiwilliges-Regiment Reinhardt Berlin, 1919 - Garde-Kavallerie-Schützen-Division, 1919 - Heeresabwicklungsamt Preußen, 1920 - Infanterie-Geschütz-Batterie Nr. 29, 1919 - Kriegsabwicklungsamt für das Feldeisenbahnwesen, 1919 - Landesschützen-Abteilung Nr. 9 Berlin, 1919 - Lazarett Charlottenburg Castle, 1920 - Naval Brigade No. 2 Wilhelmshaven, Regiment No. 3, 1920 - Naval Regiment No. 2, 1919 - Reichswehr Artillery Regiment No. 15, 1919 - 1920 - Reichswehr Emergency Office Prussia, 1919 - Reichswehr Brigade No. 3, 1920 - Reichswehr Brigade No. 15, 1920 - Reichswehr Brigade No. 15 Berlin, telephone department no. 115, 1919 - 1920 - Reichswehr-Brigade no. 30, 1919 - Reichswehr-Gruppenkommando, Gruppen-Funker-Abteilung, 1919 - Reichswehr-Infanterie-Regiment no. 5, 1920 - Reichswehr-Infanterie-Regiment no. 30, 1919 - Reichswehr-Infanterie-Regiment no. 33, 1920 - Reichswehr-Infanterie-Regiment no. 37, 1919 - Reichswehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 115, 1920 - Reichswehr-Kavallerie-Regiment Nr. 15, 1920 - Reichswehr-Pionier-Bataillon Nr. 5, 1920 - Reichswehr-Regiment Nr. 59, 1920 - Reichswehr-Schützen-Regiment Nr. 4, 1920 - Republikanische Soldatenwehr (Polizei), Kompanie Nr. 1, 1919 - Scharfschützenkorps Prey, Maschinengewehr-Abteilung Nr. 103, 1920 - Protection Regiment Greater Berlin, 1920 Reichswehr 1921 - 1935: - Artillery Regiment No. 3 (Prussian), 1922 - Artillery School Jüterbog, 1921 - Division No. 3 Berlin, 1921 - 1923 - Group Medical Depot Berlin, 1922 - Infantry Regiment No. 5 (Prussian), 1921 - 1922 - Infantry Regiment No. 9 (Prussian), 1921, 1923 - Infantry Regiment No. 18 Paderborn, 1921 - Inspection for weapons and equipment, 1920 - 1923 - Kraftfahr-Abteilung Nr. 3 (Preußische), 1921, 1923 - Kommandantur Berlin, 1921 - 1923 - Nachrichten-Abteilung Nr. 3 (Preußische), 1921 - 1922 - Marineleitung Berlin, 1921 - 1923 - Minensuch-Halbflottille Nr. 8, 1921 - Pionierwerkstatt Klausdorf, 1923 - Reichswehr-Gruppenkommando I Berlin, 1919 - 1923 - Reichswehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 29 Berlin, 1919 - 1921 - Reichswehrministerium, 1919 - 1923 - Reiter-Regiment Nr. 8 (Prussian), 1920 - Reiter-Regiment Nr. 10 (Prussian), 1921 - Sanitäts-Abteilung Nr. 3 (Prussian), 1920 - 1923 - Wehrkreis-Kommando III Berlin, 1920 - 1922;
264 sheets, Contains: Dead December 1905 - December 1914 (name index see GStA PK, VIII. HA, MKB, No. 514) - Military Community - Retired Officers - Invalids Prussian Army (from 1806/07): Chief of the Army: - Military Cabinet, 1911 - Ministry of War, 1906 - 1914 - Large General Staff, 1906 - 1914 - Lifeendarmerie, 1914 - Castle Guard Company (until 1861 Guard NCO Company), 1906 - 1907, 1910 - 1914 Army Division: - Gouvernement Berlin, 1909, 1912 Army Inspection No. 1 Gdansk: Army Corps No. 1 Königsberg/East Prussia: - Provision Office Gumbinnen, 1913 - Artillery Depot Königsberg/East Prussia, 1909 - Grenadier Regiment No. 1 (1st East Prussian) Crown Prince, 1914 - Grenadier Regiment No. 3 (2nd East Prussian) King Friedrich Wilhelm I., 1909, 1914 - Grenadier Regiment No. 4 (3rd East Prussian) King Frederick the Great, 1911, 1914 - Füsilier Regiment No. 33 (East Prussian) Count Roon, 1906 - 1908, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 41 (5th East Prussian) East Prussian) from Boyen, 1913 - 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 43 (6th East Prussian) Duke Karl von Mecklenburg-Strelitz, 1910, 1913 - 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 44 (7th East Prussian) Count Dönhoff, 1913 - 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 45 (8th East Prussian) East Prussian), 1909, 1914 - Ulan Regiment No. 12 (Lithuanian), 1911 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 16 (1st East Prussian), 1908, 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 37 (2nd Lithuanian), 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 52 (2nd East Prussian), 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 52 (2nd East Prussian), 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 16 (1st East Prussian), 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 37 (2nd East Prussian), 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 52 (2nd East Prussian), 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 52 (2nd East Prussian), 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 16 (1st East Prussian) East Prussian), 1914 - Pioneer Battalion No. 1 (East Prussian) Prince Radziwill, 1909 - Halfinvalidenabteilung, 1913 Army Corps No. 17 Danzig: - Intendantur, 1913 - Grenadier Regiment No. 5 (4th East Prussian) King Friedrich I., 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 21 (4th Pommersches) of Borcke, 1907, 1911, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 61 (8th Pommersches) of Marwitz, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 128 (Gda?sk), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 129 (3rd West Prussian), 1913 - 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 141 (Kulmer), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 175 (8th West Prussian), 1913 - 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 176 (9th West Prussian), 1914 - Hussar Regiment No. 5 (Pomeranian) Prince Blücher of Wahlstatt, 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 72 (Grand Master), 1914 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 11 (1st West Prussian), 1914 - District Command Stolp, 1907 - Telegraph Battalion No. 5, 1913 - 1914 Army Corps No. 20 Allenstein: - Infantry Regiment No. 18 (1st West Prussian) Posensches) by Grolman, 1909, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 59 (4th Posensches) Freiherr Hiller von Gärtringen, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 146 (1st Masurian), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 147 (2nd Masurian), 1907 - Infantry Regiment No. 148 (5th West Prussian), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 150 (1st Ermländisches), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 151 (2nd Masurian), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 151 (2nd West Prussian), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 150 (1st Ermländisches), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 151 (2nd Masurian), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 151 (2nd West Prussian), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 150 (1st Warm Warm Warm), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 151 (2nd Warm Prussian) Ermländisches), 1906, 1913 - 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 152 (Teutonic Order), 1910, 1914 - Cuirassier Regiment No. 5 (West Prussian) Duke Friedrich Eugen von Württemberg, 1910 - Ulanen Regiment No. 4 (1. Pommersches) by Schmidt, 1909 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 35 (1. Westpreußisches), 1907 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 73 (Masurisches), 1909 - District Command Deutsch Eylau, 1907 Army Inspection No. 2 Berlin: Gardecorps Berlin: - Intendantur, 1906 - 1910, 1914 - Proviantamt Berlin, 1907 - 1908 - Proviantamt Berlin Tempelhof, 1909 - Garnisonverwaltung Berlin, 1906 - 1914 - Garde-Division Nr. 1, 1907, 1911 - Garde-Feldartillerie-Brigade Nr. 1, 1909, 1913 - Guard Division No. 2, 1908 - 1909, 1912 - Guard Cavalry Division, 1913 - 1914 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 1, 1909 - 1910 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 2, 1906 - 1914 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 2, 1906 - 1914 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 2 3, 1906 - 1914 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 4, 1906 - 1914 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 5, 1910, 1914 - Guard Füsilier Regiment, 1906 - 1914 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 1 Emperor Alexander, 1906 - 1914 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 4, 1906 - 1914 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 5, 1910, 1914 - Guard Füsilier Regiment, 1906 - 1914 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 1 Emperor Alexander, 1906 - 1914 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 5, 1910 - Guard Füsilier Regiment No. 1914 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 1914 2 Emperor Franz, 1906 - 1914 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 3 Queen Elisabeth, 1914 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 4 Queen Augusta, 1906 - 1914 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 5, 1906, 1914 - Guard Hunter Battalion, 1906, 1914 - Guard Machine Gun Division No. 2, 1909 - Guard Shooter Battalion, 1908 - 1913 - Training Infantry Battalion, 1914 - Cuirassier Regiment Gardes du Corps, 1909, 1913 - Guard Cuirassier Regiment, 1906 - 1914 - Guard Dragoon Regiment No. 1 Queen Victoria of Great Britain and Ireland, 1906 - 1914 - Garde-Dragoner-Regiment No. 2 Empress Alexandra of Russia, 1906 - 1913 - Guard Ulan Regiment No. 1, 1906, 1909, 1913 - Guard Ulan Regiment No. 2, 1906 - 1914 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 1, 1906 - 1914 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 2, 1911 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 3, 1907 - 1914 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 4, 1910 - Guard Foot Artillery Regiment, 1910 - 1911 - Guard Pioneer Battalion, 1906 - 1914 - Railway Regiment No. 3, 1907 - 1914 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 4, 1910 - Guard Foot Artillery Regiment, 1910 - 1911 - Guard Pioneer Battalion, 1906 - 1914 - Railway Regiment No. 3, 1907 - 1914 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 4, 1910 - Guard Pioneer Battalion, 1906 - 1914 1, 1906 - 1914 - Railway Battalion No. 4, 1914 - Telegraph Battalion No. 1, 1907 - 1914 - Kriegstelegraphenschule Berlin, 1914 - Kavallerie-Telegraphenschule, 1906, 1911 - 1913 - Airship Battalion (Department) No. 4, 1914 - Telegraph Battalion No. 1, 1907 - 1914 - Kriegstelegraphenschule Berlin, 1914 - Kavallerie-Telegraphenschule, 1906, 1911 - 1913 - Airship Battalion (Department) No. 4, 1914 - Airship Battalion (Department) No. 1, 1914 - Telegraph Battalion No. 1, 1907 - 1914 - Kriegstelegraphenschule Berlin, 1914 - Kavallerie-Telegraphenschule, 1906, 1911 - 1913 - Airship Battalion (Department) No. 1, 1906 - 1913 - Airship Battalion No. 1, 1914 - Airship Battalion No. 2, 1913 - Airship Battalion No. 1, 1914 - Airship Battalion No. 2, 1913 - Airship Battalion No. 1, 1914 - Airship Battalion No. 2, 1913 - Airship Battalion No. 2, 1913 - Airship Battalion No. 2, 1914 - Airship Battalion No. 2, 1914 1 Döberitz, 1913 - 1914 - Kraftfahr-Bataillon Berlin, 1912 - 1914 - Guard Train Battalion, 1908 - 1914 - Apparel Office, 1906 - 1908, 1911 - 1914 - Halfinvalidenabteilung, 1908, 1914 - Garrison Hospital Berlin, 1906 - 1913 - Garrison Hospital Potsdam, 1907 - Field Hospital, 1914 Army Corps No. 12 (1st Saxon) Dresden: - (Leib-) Grenadier-Regiment Nr. 100 (1st Saxon), 1914 - Grenadier-Regiment Nr. 101 (2nd Saxon) Kaiser Wilhelm, King of Prussia, 1914 - Infantry-Regiment Nr. 103 (4th Saxon) Grand Duke Friedrich II of Baden, 1914 - Rifleman's Regiment No. 108 Prince George, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 178 (13th Saxon) Saxon), 1911 - Infantry Regiment No. 182 (16th Saxon), 1914 - Train Battalion No. 12 (1st Saxon), 1909 Army Corps No. 19 (2nd Saxon) Leipzig: - Infantry Regiment No. 107 (8th Saxon) Saxon) Prince Johann Georg, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 134 (10th Saxon), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 181 (15th Saxon), 1914 Army Inspectorate No. 3 Hanover: Army Corps No. 7 Münster: - Cavalry Brigade No. 13 Münster, 1906 - 1907 - Infantry Regiment No. 15 (2nd Westphalian) Prince Friedrich of the Netherlands, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 53 (5th Westphalian), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 57 (8th Westphalian) Duke Ferdinand von Braunschweig, 1914 - Jäger Battalion No. 7 (Westphalian), 1907, 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 43 (Klevesches), 1906 Army Corps No. 9 Hamburg-Altona: - Infantry Regiment No. 75 (1st Hanseatic) Bremen, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 76 (2nd Hanseatic) Hamburg, 1908, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 84 (Schleswigsches) of Manstein, 1906, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 85 (Holstein) Duke of Holstein, 1913 - 1914 - Fusilier Regiment No. 86 (Schleswig-Holstein) Queen, 1909, 1914 - Fusilier Regiment No. 85 (Schleswig-Holstein) of Manstein, 1906, 1914 - Fusilier Regiment No. 86 (Schleswig-Holstein) Queen, 1914 - Fusilier Regiment No. 86 (Schleswig-Holstein) of Manstein, 1906, 1914 - Fusilier Regiment No. 86 (Schleswig-Holstein) Queen, 1909, 1914 - Fusilier Regiment No. 86 (Schleswig-Holstein) 90 (Großherzoglich-Mecklenburgisches), 1906 - Hunter Battalion No. 9 (Lauenburgisches), 1914 - Dragoner Regiment No. 17 (1. Großherzoglich-Mecklenburgisches), 1914 - Dragoner Regiment No. 18 (2. Großherzoglich-Mecklenburgisches), 1913 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 20 (Lauenburgisches), 1913 - 1914 - Pioneer Battalion No. 9 (Schleswig-Holsteinisches), 1914 Army Corps No. 10 Hannover: - Fusilier Regiment No. 73 (Hannoversches) Prince Albrecht of Prussia, 1913 - 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 77 (2nd Hannoversches), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 78 (East Frisian) Duke Friedrich Wilhelm of Brunswick, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 79 (3rd Hannoversches) by Voigts-Rhetz, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 91 (Oldenburgisches), 1910, 1914 - Dragoon Regiment No. 16 (2nd Hannoversches), 1908 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 46 (Lower Saxony), 1910, 1913 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 62 (East Frisian), 1906 - Train Battalion No. 10 (Hannoversches), 1910 - Army Inspection No. 4 Munich, 1910 - Infantry Regiment No. 91 (Oldenburgisches), 1914 - Dragoon Regiment No. 16 (2nd Hannoversches), 1908 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 46 (Lower Saxony), 1910, 1913 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 62 (East Frisian), 1906 - Train Battalion No. 10 (Hannoversches), 1910 - Army Inspection No. 4 Munich, 1910 Army Corps No. 3 Berlin: - General Command, 1913 - Intendantur, 1907, 1911, 1914 - Proviantamt Schwedt/Oder, 1911 - Artillery Depot Berlin, 1908 - Artillery Depot Küstrin, 1909 - Landwehr-Inspektion Berlin, 1907 - 1912 - Leib-Grenadier-Regiment No. 8 (1st Brandenburg) King Frederick William III.., 1906, 1912, 1914 - Grenadier Regiment No. 12 (2nd Brandenburgisches) Prince Carl of Prussia, 1908, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 20 (3rd Brandenburgisches) Count Tauentzien von Wittenberg, 1906, 1912, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 24 (4th Brandenburgisches) Prince Carl of Prussia, 1908, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 20 (3rd Brandenburgisches) Count Tauentzien von Wittenberg, 1906, 1912, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 24 (4th Brandenburgisches) Brandenburgisches) Grand Duke Friedrich Franz II. of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, 1906, 1914 - Füsilier Regiment No. 35 (Brandenburgisches) Prince Heinrich of Prussia, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 48 (5th Brandenburgisches) of Stülpnagel, 1910, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 52 (6th Brandenburg) of Alvensleben, 1909, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 64 (8th Brandenburg) Prince Friedrich Karl of Prussia, 1912, 1914 - Hunter-Battalion No. 3 (Brandenburg), 1911 - Cuirassier Regiment No. 6 (Brandenburg) Emperor Nikolaus I. of Russia, 1906, 1913 - Dragoner Regiment No. 2 (1st Brandenburg), 1908, 1912 - Ulan Regiment No. 3 (1st Brandenburg) Emperor Alexander II. of Russia, 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 3 (1st Brandenburg Field Artillery Master General, 1907 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 18 (2nd Brandenburg Field Artillery Master General, 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 54 (Neumärkisches), 1908, 1914 - Pioneer Battalion No. 3 (1st Brandenburg Field Artillery Regiment No. 18 (2nd Brandenburg Field Artillery Regiment No. 54 (Neumärkisches), 1908, 1914 - Pioneer Battalion No. 3) Brandenburgisches) von Rauch, 1909, 1912 - Bezirkskommando Berlin, 1906 - 1914 - Bezirkskommando Guben, 1908 - Bezirkskommando Jüterbog, 1911 - Bezirkskommando Prenzlau, 1911 - Train-Bataillon Nr. 3 (Brandenburgisches), 1907, 1914 - Halbinvalidenabteilung, 1914 Armeekorps Nr. 1 (Bavarian) Munich: - Infantry Regiment No. 1 King, 1911 - Infantry Regiment No. 8 Grand Duke Friedrich II. of Baden, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 9 Wrede, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 20 Prince Franz, 1909 - Engineering Inspection, 1914 Army Inspection No. 5 Karlsruhe: Army Corps No. 8 Koblenz: - General Staff, 1913 - Cuirassier Regiment No. 8 (Rhineland) Count Geßler, 1911 - Hussar Regiment No. 7 (1st Rhineland) King Wilhelm I., 1913 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 23 (2nd Rhineland), 1908 - Telegraph Battalion No. 3, 1913 Army Corps No. 14 Karlsruhe: - Füsilier Regiment No. 40 (Hohenzollernsches) Prince Karl Anton von Hohenzollern, 1908 - Infantry Regiment No. 114 (6th Baden) Emperor Frederick III.., 1907 - Infantry Regiment No. 142 (7th Baden), 1913 - Leib-Dragoner Regiment No. 20 (1st Baden), 1910 - Dragoner Regiment No. 21 (2nd Baden), 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 66 (4th Baden), 1907 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 14 (Baden), 1910 - Telegraph Battalion No. 4, 1909 - 1910 Army Corps No. 15 Strasbourg i. Alsace: - Hunter Regiment on Horseback No. 3, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 99 (2nd Upper Rhine), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 171 (2nd Upper Alsace), 1910, 1914 - Dragoon Regiment No. 15 (3rd Silesian), 1913 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 10 (Lower Saxony), 1911 - Pioneer Battalion No. 3, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 99 (2nd Upper Rhine), 1914 - Dragoon Regiment No. 15 (3rd Silesian), 1913 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 10 (Lower Saxony), 1911 - Pioneer Battalion No. 15 (1st Alsatian), 1912 - Pioneer Battalion No. 19 (2nd Alsatian), 1908 Army Inspection No. 6 Stuttgart: Army Corps No. 4 Magdeburg: - Commandantur Halle/Saale, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 26 (1st Magdeburg) Prince Leopold von Anhalt-Dessau, 1911 - Infantry Regiment No. 27 (2nd Alsatian), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 27 (1st Magdeburg), 1911 - Infantry Regiment No. 26 (1st Magdeburg), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 27 (2nd Magdeburg), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 26 (1st Magdeburg), 1911 - Infantry Regiment No. 27 (2nd Magdeburg), 1911 - Infantry Regiment No. 27 (Infan) Magdeburg) Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia, 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 93 (Anhaltinian), 1907 - Infantry Regiment No. 153 (8th Thuringian), 1912 - Cuirassier Regiment No. 7 (Magdeburg) of Seydlitz, 1913 - Hussar Regiment No. 12 (Thuringian), 1906 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 4 (Magdeburg) Encke, 1914 Army Corps No. 11 Kassel: - Infantry Regiment No. 32 (2nd Thuringian), 1911, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 71 (3rd Thuringian), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 83 (3rd Kurhessisches) by Wittich, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 94 (5th Thuringian) Grand Duke of Saxony, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 167 (1st Upper Alsace), 1914 - Hunter Battalion No. 11 (Kurhessian), 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 11 (1st Kurhessian), 1909, 1911 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 55 (2nd Thuringian), 1907 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 18 (Thuringian), 1914 Army Corps No. 13 (Württemberg) Stuttgart: - Grenadier-Regiment No. 119 (1st Württemberg) Queen Olga, 1914 - Infantry-Regiment No. 122 (4th Württemberg) Emperor Franz Josef of Austria, King of Hungary, 1914 - Infantry-Regiment No. 125 (7th Württemberg) Württemberg) Emperor Friedrich, King of Prussia, 1914 - Dragoon Regiment No. 25 (1st Württemberg) Queen Olga, 1911 - Ulan Regiment No. 19 (1st Württemberg) King Karl, 1913 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 29 (2nd Württemberg) Prince Regent Luitpold of Bavaria, 1914 Army Inspection No. 7 Saarbrücken: Army Corps No. 16 Metz: - Infantry Regiment No. 98 (Metzer), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 135 (3rd Lorraine), 1913 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 33 (1st Lorraine), 1911 Army Corps No. 18 Frankfurt/Main: - Fusililier Regiment No. 80 (Kurhessisches) von Gersdorff, 1908 - Infantry Regiment No. 115 (1st Grand-Ducal-Hessian), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 118 (4th Grand-Ducal-Hessian) Prince Carl, 1914 - Leib-Dragoner Regiment No. 24 (2nd Grand-Ducal-Hessian), 1912 - Pioneer Battalion No. 21 (1st Nassauian), 1908 - Railway Regiment No. 2, 1906 - 1913 - Railway Regiment No. 3, 1906 - 1912 Army Corps No. 21 Saarbrücken: - Infantry Regiment No. 97 (1st Upper Rhine), 1909 - Infantry Regiment No. 137 (2nd Lower Alsatian), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 138 (3rd Lower Alsatian), 1914 - Ulan Regiment No. 11 (2nd Brandenburg) Count Haeseler, 1911 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 8 (1st Rheinisches) von Holtzendorff, 1911 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 31 (1st Unterelsässisches), 1911, 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 67 (2nd Unterelsässisches), 1912 Army Inspection No. 8 Berlin: Army Corps No. 2 Stettin: - Grenadier Regiment No. 2 (1st Pommersches) King Friedrich Wilhelm IV, 1909, 1911, 1914 - Grenadier Regiment No. 9 (2. Pommersches/Kolbergsches) Graf Gneisenau, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 14 (3. Pommersches) Graf Schwerin, 1914 - Füsilier Regiment No. 34 (Pommersches), 1909, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 49 (6th Pommersches), 1906, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 54 (7th Pommersches) of the Goltz, 1911, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 140 (4th West Prussian), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 149 (6th West Prussian), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 149 (7th Pommersches) of the Goltz, 1911, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 140 (4th West Prussian), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 149 (6th Pommersches), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 149 (6th Pommersches) of the Goltz, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 140 (4th West Prussian) West Prussian), 1906 - 1907, 1913 - 1914 - Cuirassier Regiment No. 2 (Pomeranian) Queen, 1914 - Dragoon Regiment No. 3 (Grenadier Regiment on Horseback Neumärkisches) Freiherr von Derfflinger, 1913 - Ulan Regiment No. 9 (2nd Class) Pommersches), 1913 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 17 (2. Pommersches), 1908 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 38 (Vorpommersches), 1914 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 2 (1. Pommersches) of Hindersin, 1908 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 15 (2nd Pomeranian, until 1910 2nd West Prussian), 1914 - Pioneer Battalion No. 2 (Pomeranian), 1915 - District Command Belgard, 1907 Army Corps No. 5 Poznan: - Regiment Königs-Jäger on Horseback No. 1, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 19 (2nd Posensches) by Courbière, 1914 - Füsilier Regiment No. 37 (West Prussian) by Steinmetz, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 46 (1st Lower Silesian) Graf Kirchbach, 1911, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 47 (2nd Lower Silesian) King Ludwig III of Bavaria, 1907 - Fortress Machine Rifle Formation Division No. 6 Poznan - Infantry Regiment No. 58 (3rd Poznan), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 154 (5th Poznan) Lower Silesian), 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 56 (2nd Posensches), 1908 - Pioneer Battalion No. 29 (Posensches), 1914 Army Corps No. 6 Wroclaw: - Grenadier Regiment No. 10 (1st Silesian) King Frederick William II, 1908 - Grenadier Regiment No. 11 (2nd Silesian) King Frederick III, 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 51 (4th Lower Silesian), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 62 (3rd Upper Silesian), 1906, 1913 - 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 156 (3rd Silesian), 1914 - Hunter Battalion No. 6 (2nd Silesian), 1911 - Leib-Kürassier Regiment No. 1 (Schlesisches) Großer Kurfürst, 1912, 1914 Generalinspektion der Kavallerie, 1912 Inspection of Field Artillery Berlin: - Feldartillerie-Schießschule Jüterbog, 1909 - 1912 Generalinspektion der Fußartillerie Berlin, 1910 - 1911 - Fußartillerie-Schießschule Jüterbog, 1908, 1913 - Fußartillerie-Brigade Nr. 1 Berlin, 1907 - Rear Fireworks School, 1908 - 1909 General Inspection of the Engineering and Pioneer Corps and Fortresses of Berlin, 1913 General War Department: - Inspection of the Infantry Schools, 1913 - Military Gymnasium (until 1881 Zentral-Turnanstalt), 1906, 1910, 1913 - NCO School Potsdam, 1910 - Artillery Examination Commission, 1906 - 1914 - Military Veterinary Academy, 1907, 1911, 1913 - Military Riding Institute Hanover, 1909 - Fireworks Laboratory Berlin Spandau, 1911 Army Administration Department: - Generalmilitärkasse, 1908 - 1910, 1914 Ersatz-, Versorgungs- und Justizdepartement: - Inspection of military prisons, 1908 - Kaiser-Wilhelms-Akademie für das militärärztliche Bildungswesen (before 1895 Medizinisch-Chirurgisches Friedrich-Wilhelms-Institut [Pépinière]), 1906 - 1914 - Kriegsakademie, 1908 - 1913 Feldzeugmeisterei: - Artillery Depot Inspection Berlin, 1913 - 1914 Other Army: - Railway Brigade, 1906 - 1912 - First Sailor Division Kiel, 1914 - First Shipyard Division Kiel, 1908 - Fortress Inspection No. 7 Cologne, 1914 - Fortifikation Posen, 1914 - Garrison Administration Berlin Schöneberg, 1906 - 1912 - Gendarmerie Brigade No. 2 Szczecin, 1912 - Gendarmerie Brigade No. 3 Berlin, 1907 - 1912 - Gendarmerie Brigade No. 2 Szczecin, 1912 - Gendarmerie Brigade No. 3 Berlin, 1907 - 1912 - Gendarmerie Brigade No. 3 Szczecin, 1912 - Gendarmerie Brigade No. 2 Szczecin, 1912 - Gendarmerie Brigade No. 2 Szczecin, 1912 - Gendarmerie Brigade No. 2 Szczecin, 1912 - Gendarmerie Brigade No. 2 Szczecin, 1912 - Gendarmerie Brigade No. 2 Szczecin, 1912 6 Wroclaw, 1913 - General Inspectorate of Military Education, 1907 - Main Cadet Institute Berlin, 1913 - Engineering Committee, 1907 - 1911, 1914 - Inspection of War Schools, 1911 - Inspection of Transport Troops, 1907 - Directorate General of Transport Troops, 1913 - Cadet Corps, 1907 - Imperial Schutztruppen, Oberkommando, 1909, 1914 - Landgendarmerie Berlin, 1906 - 1908, 1911 - Landwehrbezirk Berlin, 1908 - 1914 - Landwehrbezirk Jüterbog, 1908 - Landwehrbezirk Lauban, 1911 - Landwehrbezirk Rybnik, 1913 - Landwehrbezirk Stade, 1910 - Landwehrbezirk Strasbourg i. Alsace, 1911 - Navy, Admiral Staff, 1906 - 1911, 1914 - Naval Cabinet, 1909, 1911 - Naval Station of the Baltic Sea Kiel, 1907 - Naval Airship Department, 1913 - Sailor Artillery Department No. 4 Cuxhaven, 1909 - Senior Military Examination Commission, 1907, 1914 - East Asian Detachment, 1907 - Pioneer Inspection No. 1 Berlin, 1908, 1912 - Reichsmarineamt, 1906 - 1914 - Reichsmilitärgericht, 1908 - 1910, 1913 - Schutztruppe für Deutsch-Ostafrika, 1910 - 1913 - Schutztruppe für Südwestafrika, 1906 - 1909, 1912 - 1913 - See-Bataillon Nr. 1 Kiel, 1908 - See-Bataillon Nr. 2 Wilhelmshaven, 1911 - 1912, 1914 - S.M.S. Augsburg (Small Cruiser), 1912 - S.M.S. Friedrich the Great (Battleship), 1914 - S.M.S. Hamburg (Small Cruiser), 1906 - S.M.S. Elector Friedrich Wilhelm (Liner), 1906 - S.M.S. Schleswig-Holstein (liner), 1914 - S.M.S. Württemberg (liner), 1914 - Telegraph Battalion No. 6, 1914 - Train Directorate No. 6, 1914 - Train Directorate No. 6, 1914 - S.M.S. Württemberg (liner), 1914 - Telegraph Battalion No. 6, 1914 - Train Directorate No. 6, 1914 - Telegraph Battalion No. 6, 1914 2 Berlin, 1907 - Vereinigte Artillerie- und Ingenieurschule, 1906 - Verkehrstechnische Prüfungskommission, 1914 - Verkehrstruppen, Versuchs-Kompanie, 1907 - Versuchsanstalt für das Militärflugwesen Döberitz, 1912 - Second Sailor Division Wilhelmshaven, 1912 - 1914 - Second Shipyard Division Wilhelmshaven, 1911 Foreign troops: Austrian Army: - Dragoon Regiment No. 3 (Friedrich August King of Saxony), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 62 (Hungarian) Ludwig III King of Bavaria, 1914 - Landwehr Infantry Regiment No. 9 (Leitmeritz), 1914 - Landwehr Infantry Regiment No. 13 (Olomouc), 1914 Troops 1st World War: - Army No. 4, Stage Inspection - Army Corps No. 3, Artillery Ammunition Column No. 4 - Army Corps No. 6, Munitions Column Division No. 2 - Artillery Ammunition Column No. 5 - Brigade Replacement Battalion No. 10 - Replacement Battalion No. 21 - Replacement Air Force Division No. 1 Döberitz - Replacement Infantry Regiment No. 113 - Replacement Regiment No. 113 1 - Fortress Artillery Regiment Poznan, Munitions Column No. 3 - Johannisthal Volunteer Naval Air Corps - Guard Replacement Battalion No. 6 - Guard Replacement Division - Foot Guard Replacement Regiment No. 1 - Guard Landstorm Battalion Zossen - Guard Reserve Foot Artillery Regiment No. 2 - Guard Reserve Corps, Sanitary Company No. 3 - Guard Replacement Battalion No. 6 - Guard Reserve Foot Artillery Regiment No. 2 - Guard Reserve Corps, Sanitary Company No. 3 3 - Guard Reserve Regiment No. 2 - Guard Train Replacement Department - Prison Camp Cottbus, 1914 - Infantry Ammunition Column No. 3 Königsberg/East Prussia - Prisoners of War, English - Prisoners of War, French - Prisoners of War, Russians - War Medical Column No. 2 - Landstorm Battalion Guben - Landstorm Battalion No. 2 1 - Landstorm Battalion No. 2 Frankfurt/Oder - Landstorm Battalion No. 3 - Landstorm Battalion No. 12 - Landstorm Battalion No. 64 - Landstorm Infantry Battalion No. 3 - Landstorm Infantry Replacement Battalion Perleberg - Landwehr Brigade, Replacement Battalion No. 9 - Landwehr Infantry Regiment No. 3 - Landwehr Infantry Regiment No. 3 4 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 5 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 6 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 7 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 8 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 9 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 18 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 20 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 21 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 24 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 31 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 33 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 34 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 35 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 46 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 48 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 49 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 51 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 52 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 55 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 74 - Marine-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 1 - Militär-Fliegerschule Berlin Johannisthal - Mobiles Ersatz-Regiment Nr. 1 - Munitions-Kolonne Saatwinkel/bei Berlin Spandau - Munitions-Kolonne Nr. III.7 - Pioneer Replacement Battalion No. 18 - Reserve Field Artillery Regiment No. 14 - Reserve Field Artillery Regiment No. 50 - Reserve Guard Foot Artillery Regiment No. 2 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 1 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 2 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 3 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 5 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 7 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 9 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 18 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 20 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 24 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 27 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 31 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 32 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 34 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 35 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 36 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 45 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 48 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 49 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 51 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 56 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 59 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 61 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 64 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 71 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 75 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 76 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 83 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 84 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 86 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 90 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 93 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 94 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 116 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 133 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 140 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 152 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 162 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 201 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 202 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 203 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 152 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 162 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 201 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 202 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 203 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 203 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 201 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 203 - Reserve Infantry Reg No. 201 - Reserve Infantry Reg No. 203 - Reserve Infantry Reg No. 203 - Reserve Infantry Reg No. 203 - Reserve Infan Reg Reg No. 203 - Reserve Infan Reg Reg Reg Reg No. 203 204 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 205 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 210 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 225 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 227 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 228 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 229 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 240 - Reserve Hunter Battalion No. 228 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 227 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 228 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 229 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 240 - Reserve Hunter Battalion No. 228 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 227 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 228 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 228 - Reserve Infantry Reg No. 240 - Reserve Hunter Battalion No. 228 - Reserve Infan Reg No. 228 - Reserve Infan Reg No. 227 - Reserve Infantry Reg No. 240 - Reserve Battal No No. 228 2 - Reserve Hunter Battalion No. 17 - Reserve Hunter Regiment No. 15 - Reserve Corps No. 9 - Reserve Corps No. 25, Infantry Ammunition Column No. 51 - Reserve Hospital III Jüterbog - Reserve Regiment No. 12 - Heavy Provision Column No. 3 - Shipyard Branch Company Gdansk..;
213 sheets, Contains: Baptisms 1913 - 1917 (with name index) - military community - retired officers Prussian army (from 1806/07): Chief of the army: - military cabinet - ministry of war - large general staff - riding field fighter corps - castle guard company (until 1861 guard NCO company) Army division: Army inspection No. 1 Gdansk: Army Corps No. 1 Königsberg/East Prussia: - Grenadier Regiment No. 1 (1st East Prussian) Crown Prince - Füsilier Regiment No. 33 (East Prussian) Count Roon - Infantry Regiment No. 44 (7th East Prussian) Count Dönhoff - Infantry Regiment No. 44 (7th East Prussian) Count Dönhoff - Infantry Regiment No. 33 (7th East Prussian) Count Roon - Infantry Regiment No. 44 (7th East Prussian) Count Dönhoff - Infantry Regiment No. 33 (7th East Prussian) 45 (8th East Prussian) - Machine Gun Division No. 5, 1917 - Ulan Regiment No. 12 (Lithuanian) - Field Artillery Regiment No. 1 (1st Lithuanian) Prince August of Prussia - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 1 (East Prussian) of Linger - Pioneer Battalion No. 1 (East Prussian) Prince Radziwill - Pioneer Battalion No. 18 (Samländisches) Army Corps No. 17 Gdansk: - Infantry Regiment No. 61 (8th Pomerersches) of the Marwitz - Infantry Regiment No. 141 (Kulmer) - Infantry Regiment No. 175 (8th West Prussian) - 1st Leibhusaren Regiment No. 1 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 11 (1st West Prussian) Army Corps No. 20 Allenstein: - Infantry Regiment No. 59 (4th Posensches) Freiherr Hiller von Gärtringen - Infantry Regiment No. 146 (1st Masurian), 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 147 (2nd Masurian) - Infantry Regiment No. 150 (1st Ermländisches) - Hunter Battalion No. 1 (East Prussian) Count Yorck von Wartenburg, 1916 - 1917 - Cuirassier Regiment No. 5 (West Prussian) Duke Friedrich Eugen von Württemberg - Dragoon Regiment No. 11 (Pomerersches) von Wedel, 1916 - 1917 - Ulanen Regiment No. 4 (1. Pomerersches) by Schmidt - Field Artillery Regiment No. 35 (1. Westpreußisches) - Field Artillery Regiment No. 82 (2. Masurisches) - Pioneer Battalion No. 23 (2. Westpreußisches) Army Inspection No. 2 Berlin: Gardekorps Berlin: - Generalkommando - Intendantur - Proviantamt Berlin - Garnisonverwaltung Nr. 2 Berlin, 1917 - Military Training Area Döberitz, 1916 - 1917 - Guard Infantry Division No. 4, 1916 - 1917 - Guard Cavalry Division - Guard Cavalry Brigade No. 3 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 1 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 1 2 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 3 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 4 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 5 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 1 Emperor Alexander - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 2 Emperor Franz - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 3 Queen Elisabeth - Guard Machine Gun Division No. 2 - Cuirassier Regiment of the Gardes du Corps - Guard Cuirassier Regiment - Guard Dragoon Regiment No. 2 Empress Alexandra of Russia - Guard Ulan Regiment No. 3 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 1 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 2 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 2 3, 1917 - Guard Foot Artillery Regiment - Guard Pioneer Battalion - Railway Regiment No. 1 - Telegraph Battalion No. 1 (Cavalry Telegraph School) - Airship Battalion No. 1 - Guard Train Battalion - Half Battalion Division Army Corps No. 12 (1. Saxon) Dresden: - (Leib-) Grenadier Regiment No. 100 (1. Saxon) - Schützen- (Füsilier-) Regiment No. 108 Prince Georg Army Corps No. 19 (2. Saxon) Leipzig: - Infanterie-Regiment No. 106 (7. Saxon) King George - Pionier-Bataillon No. 22 (2. Saxon), 1917 Army-Inspection No. 106 (7. Saxon) King George - Pioneer-Bataillon No. 22 (2. Saxon), 1917 Army-Inspection No. 106 (7. Saxon) 3 Hannover: Army Corps No. 7 Münster: - General Command - Infantry Regiment No. 13 (1st Westphalian) Herwarth von Bittenfeld - Infantry Regiment No. 159 (8th Lorraine) - Field Artillery Regiment No. 22 (2nd Westphalian) - Pioneer Battalion No. 7 (1st Westphalian) Westphalian), 1917 Army Corps No. 9 Hamburg-Altona: - Intendantur - Infantry Regiment No. 75 (1st Hanseatic) Bremen - Infantry Regiment No. 85 (Holstein) Duke of Holstein - Fusilier Regiment No. 86 (Schleswig-Holstein) Queen - Fusilier Regiment No. 90 (Grossherzoglich-Mecklenburgisches), 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 24 (Holsteinisches) - Field Artillery Regiment No. 45 (Lauenburgisches) - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 20 (Lauenburgisches) - Pioneer Battalion No. 9 (Schleswig-Holsteinisches) Army Corps No. 10 Hannover: - Infantry Regiment No. 79 (3rd Hannoversches) by Voigts-Rhetz - Hussar Regiment No. 17 (Braunschweig) - Field Artillery Regiment No. 10 (1st Hannoversches) by Scharnhorst - Field Artillery Regiment No. 62 (East Frisian) - Train Battalion No. 10 (Hannoversches) Army Inspection No. 4 Munich: Army Corps No. 3 Berlin: - General Staff - General Command - Leib-Grenadier Regiment No. 8 (1st Brandenburg) King Friedrich Wilhelm III - Grenadier Regiment No. 12 (2nd Brandenburg) Prince Carl of Prussia - Infantry Regiment No. 20 (3rd Brandenburg) Count Tauentzien von Wittenberg - Infantry Regiment No. 24 (4th Brandenburg) Grand Duke Friedrich Franz II von Mecklenburg-Schwerin - Füsilier Regiment No. 35 (Brandenburg) Prince Heinrich of Prussia - Infantry Regiment No. 52 (6. Brandenburg) of Alvensleben - Infantry Regiment No. 64 (8. Brandenburg) Prince Friedrich Karl of Prussia - Field Artillery Regiment No. 3 (1. Brandenburg) Field Artillery Master - Field Artillery Regiment No. 18 (2. Brandenburg) Field Artillery Master - Field Artillery Regiment No. 54 (Neumark) - Pioneer Battalion No. 28 (2. Brandenburg) of Alvensleben - Infantry Regiment No. 64 (8. Brandenburg) Brandenburgisches), 1914 - 1917 - Telegraph Battalion No. 2 - Garrison Hospital Küstrin Army Inspection No. 5 Karlsruhe: Army Corps No. 8 Koblenz: - Infantry Regiment No. 25 (1st Rheinisches) of Lützow - Infantry Regiment No. 28 (2nd Rhineland) of Groeben - Infantry Regiment No 69 (7th Rhineland) - Field Artillery Regiment No 23 (2nd Rhineland) - Field Artillery Regiment No 59 (Bergisches) - Airship Battalion No 3 Army Corps No 14 Karlsruhe: - Cavalry Brigade No. 28 - Infantry Brigade No. 58, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 113 (5th Baden), 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 114 (6th Baden) Emperor Friedrich III - Dragoon Regiment No. 22 (3rd Baden) - Infantry Brigade No. 28 - Infantry Brigade No. 58, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 113 (5th Baden), 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 114 (6th Baden) Emperor Friedrich III - Dragoon Regiment No. 22 (3rd Baden) Badisches) Prince Karl - Field Artillery Regiment No. 14 (1st Badisches), 1916 - 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 50 (3rd Badisches), 1917 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 14 (Badisches) - Telegraph Battalion No. 4 Army Corps No. 15 Strasbourg i. Alsace: - General Staff - Infantry Regiment No. 136 (4th Lorraine) - Infantry Regiment No. 171 (2nd Upper Alsatian) - Dragoon Regiment No. 15 (3rd Silesian) - Pioneer Battalion No. 15 (1st Silesian) (Alsatian) - Pioneer Battalion No. 19 (2nd Alsatian) Army Inspectorate No. 6 Stuttgart: Army Corps No. 4 Magdeburg: - Infantry Regiment No. 26 (1st Magdeburg) Prince Leopold of Anhalt-Dessau - Infantry Regiment No. 165 (5th Hannoversches), 1901 - Hussar Regiment No. 10 (Magdeburg), 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 4 (Magdeburg) Prince Regent Luitpold of Bavaria - Field Artillery Regiment No. 40 (Altmärkisches) - Pioneer Battalion No. 4 (Magdeburg) Army Corps No. 11 Kassel: - General Staff - Infantry Regiment No. 32 (2nd Thuringian) - Infantry Regiment No. 71 (3rd Thuringian) - Infantry Regiment No. 82 (2nd Thuringian) Kurhessian) - Hussar Regiment No. 14 (2nd Kurhessian) Landgrave Friedrich II of Hesse-Homburg - Field Artillery Regiment No. 47 (2nd Kurhessian) - Pioneer Battalion No. 11 (Kurhessian) Army Corps No. 13 (Württemberg) Stuttgart: - General Staff - Grenadier Regiment No. 119 (1st Württemberg) Queen Olga - Infantry Regiment No. 121 (3rd Württemberg) Alt-Württemberg - Infantry Regiment No. 122 (4th Württemberg) Württemberg) Emperor Franz Josef of Austria, King of Hungary - Infantry Regiment No. 124 (6th Württemberg) King Wilhelm I - Infantry Regiment No. 125 (7th Württemberg) Emperor Friedrich, King of Prussia - Infantry Regiment No. 125 (7th Württemberg) Emperor Friedrich, King of Prussia - Infantry Regiment No. 124 (6th Württemberg) 126 (8th Württemberg) Grand Duke Friedrich of Baden - Ulan Regiment No. 20 (2nd Württemberg) King Wilhelm I - Landwehr Division No. 2 (Württembergische), 1917 Army Inspection No. 7 Saarbrücken: Army Corps No. 16 Metz: - General Command - Division No. 34, 1917 - Hunter Regiment on Horseback No. 12, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 98 (Metzer) - Infantry Regiment No. 130 (1st Lorraine) - Infantry Regiment No. 135 (3rd Lorraine) - Dragoon Regiment No. 135 (3rd Lorraine) 13 (Schleswig-Holstein) - Ulanen Regiment No. 14 (2nd Hannoversches) - Field Artillery Regiment No. 33 (1st Lorraine) - Field Artillery Regiment No. 69 (3rd Lorraine) - Field Artillery Regiment No. 70 (4th Lorraine) - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 16 (Lorraine) - Pioneer Battalion No. 16 (1st Lorraine) Army Corps No. 18 Frankfurt/Main: - Infantry Regiment No. 88 (2nd Nassau) - Infantry Regiment No. 116 (2nd Grand-Ducal-Hessian) Kaiser Wilhelm - Infantry Regiment No. 118 (4th Lorraine) Grand-Ducal-Hessian) Prince Carl - Dragoon Regiment No. 6 (Magdeburg) - Field Artillery Regiment No. 61 (2nd Grand-Ducal-Hessian) - Field Artillery Regiment No. 63 (2nd Nassauian) Army Corps No. 21 Saarbrücken: - Division No. 42, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 97 (1st Nassau Army) - Infantry Regiment No. 97 (2nd Nassau Army) - Division No. 42, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 97 (1st Nassau Army) - Division No. 21 (2nd Nassau Army) Upper Rhine) - Infantry Regiment No. 131 (2nd Lorraine) - Infantry Regiment No. 137 (2nd Lower Alsace) - Dragoon Regiment No. 7 (Westphalian) - Field Artillery Regiment No. 8 (1st Rhineland) by Holtzendorff - Field Artillery Regiment No. 15 (1st Rhine) Oberelsässisches) - Field Artillery Regiment No. 31 (1st Unterelsässisches) - Pioneer Battalion No. 27 (2nd Rheinisches), 1916 - 1917 Army Inspection No. 8 Berlin: Army Corps No. 2 Stettin: - Grenadier Regiment No. 9 (2nd Pommersches/Kolbergsches) Graf Gneisenau - Infantry Regiment No. 14 (3rd Pommersches/Kolbergsches) Pommersches) Count Schwerin - Infantry Regiment No. 42 (5th Pommersches) Prince Moritz of Anhalt-Dessau - Infantry Regiment No. 54 (7th Pommersches) of the Goltz - Infantry Regiment No. 149 (6th West Prussian) - Dragoon Regiment No. 12 (2nd Brandenburg) of Arnim - Field Artillery Regiment No. 2 (1st Pommersches) - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 15 (2nd Pommersches, until 1910 2nd West Prussian) Army Corps No. 5 Posen: - Artillery Depot Posen - Grenadier Regiment No. 6 (1st West Prussian) Count Kleist von Nollendorf - Infantry Regiment No. 19 (2nd Posensches) of Courbière, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 46 (1st Lower Silesian) Count Kirchbach - Field Artillery Regiment No. 5 (1st Lower Silesian) of Podbielski - Field Artillery Regiment No. 20 (1st Posensches) Army Corps No. 6 Wroclaw: - Machine Gun Division No. 1 - Dragoon Regiment No. 8 (2nd Silesian) King Frederick III - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 6 (Schlesisches) von Dieskau Inspection of Field Artillery Berlin, 1913 - 1917 General Inspection of Foot Artillery Berlin: - Foot Artillery Shooting School Jüterbog, 1917 General Inspection of the Engineering and Pioneer Corps and Fortresses Berlin, 1913 - 1917 - Fortress Posen - Engineer Inspection No. 3 Strasbourg i. Alsace - Fortress Strasbourg i. Alsace - Engineer Inspection No. 4 Metz Feldzeugmeisterei: - Artillery Depot Inspection Berlin - Artillery Depot Torgau General War Department: - Inspection of the infantry schools - Infantry Shooting School Wünsdorf - NCO School Ettlingen - NCO School Weißenfels - Artillery Examination Commission Ersatz-, Versorgungs- und Justizdepartement: - Inspection of military penal institutions - Kaiser Wilhelm Academy for Military Medical Education (before 1895 Medical-Surgical Friedrich Wilhelm Institute [Pépinière]) - Sanitätsamt Berlin - Kriegsakademie Other Army: - Artillery Depot Ingolstadt - Artillery Depot Liège - Railway Brigade No. 2 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 5, 1916 - 1917 - Garrison Berlin Schöneberg - Gendarmerie Brigade No. 3 Berlin - General Inspectorate of Military Transport - Engineering Committee - Inspection of Military Telegraphy - Inspection of Motor Vehicles - Torpedo Inspection - Imperial Protection Forces, High Command - Kriegsschule Hannover - Landgendarmerie - Landwehr-Regiment No. 18 (1. Posensches) - Landwehr Regiment No. 24 (4. Brandenburgisches) - Navy, Admiral Staff - Sailor Artillery Department No. 4 Cuxhaven - Military Technical Academy - Pioneer Inspection No. 1 - Reichsmarineamt - Schutztruppe für Deutsch-Ostafrika - Schutztruppe für Südwestafrika - Traininspektion Truppen 1. World War I: - Army No. 1, Stage Inspection I, 1915 - 1917 - Army No. 2, Motor Car Gun No. 72, 1915 - 1917 - Army No. 4, Stage Telephone Depot 4, 1915 - 1917 - Army No. 4, Stage Doctor, 1916 - 1917 - Army Telephone Park No. 22, 1917 - Army Aircraft Park No. 11, 1916 - 1917 - Army Corps, No. 3, 5th Landstorm Pioneer Company, 1915 - 1917 - Army Corps No. 6, Provision Office Column III, 1915 - 1917 - Army Command No. 2, 1915 - 1917 - Army Command No. 4, 1915 - 1917 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 117, 1915 - 1917 - Brigade Replacement Battalion No. 3, 5th Landstorm Pioneer Company, 1915 - 1917 - Army Corps No. 6, Provision Office Column III, 1915 - 1917 - Army Command No. 2, 1915 - 1917 - Army Command No. 4, 1915 - 1917 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 117, 1915 - 1917 - Brigade Replacement Battal No. 9 - Railway Construction Company No. 111, 1917 - Replacement Division No. 8, Field Artillery Depository, 1916 - 1917 - Replacement Division No. 19, 1915 - 1917 - Replacement Machine Gun Company No. 2, 1915 - 1917 - Stage Inspection No. 7, 1915 - 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 183, 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 231, 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 248, 1916 - 1917 - Field Bakery Column No. 101, 1917 - Field Flier Department No. 19, 1917 - Field Flier Department No. 34, 1917 - Field Army, General Staff, 1917 - Telephone Replacement Department No. 231, 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 248, 1916 - 1917 - Field Bakery Column No. 101, 1917 - Field Flier Department No. 19, 1917 - Field Flier Department No. 34, 1917 - Field Army, General Staff, 1917 - Telephone Replacement Department No. 231, 1917 8, 1917 - Aircraft Mastery of the Fliegertruppen Berlin Adlershof, 1917 - Foot Artillery Battalion No. 36, 1915 - 1917 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 103, 1917 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 207, 1917 - Guard Foot Artillery Reserve Regiment No. 2, 1915 - 1917 - Guard Corps, Stage Fleet Column - Guard-Landsturm-Bataillon Nollendorf, 1915 - 1917 - Guard Reserve Corps, General Staff, 1916 - 1917 - Guard Reserve Corps, Horse Depot I, 1915 - 1917 - General Directorate of Brussels Railways, 1916 - 1917 - General Command No. 54, 1917 - Army Group Crown Prince Rupprecht, 1917 - Infantry Battalion No. 703, 1917 - Infantry Division No. 89, 1917 - Infantry Division No. 101, 1915 - 1917 - Infantry Division No. 218, 1917 - Infantry Division No. 221, 1917 - Infantry Division No. 238, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 409, 1917 - Infantry Regiment No. 444, 1917 - Engineering and Deck Officer School Kiel, 1916 - 1917 - Inspection of the Air Force, 1917 - Inspection of the Intelligence Forces, 1917 - Fighter Regiment No. 4, 1917 - Combat Wing 2, 1916 - 1917 - Korpsbrücken-Train No. 19, 1917 - Coastal Defence Hamburg, 1916 - 1917 - Landsturm-Infanterie-Ersatz-Bataillon Nr. 1 Gent (III/36), 1917 - Landsturm-Infanterie-Bataillon Nr. 2 Frankfurt/Oder, 1915 - 1917 - Landsturm-Infanterie-Bataillon Nr. 4 Gotha, 1916 - 1917 - Landwehr-Feldartillerie-Regiment Nr. 8, 1916 - 1917 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 12 - Landwehrkorps Breslau - Marine-Luftschiffer-Abteilung Ahlhorn, 1916 - 1917 - Militär-Eisenbahndirektion Nr. 1, 1916 - 1917 - Militär-Eisenbahndirektion Nr. 2, Mobile Bahnhofkommandantur Nr. 244, 1917 - Military Railway Directorate No. 4 Warsaw, 1916 - 1917 - Military Mission to Turkey, 1917 - Mine Launcher Battalion No. 4, 1916 - 1917 - Mine Launcher Replacement Battalion No. 3, 1917 - News Replacement Division No. 2, 1917 - Pioneer Company No. 269, 1916 - 1917 - Reserve Division No. 16, 1915 - 1917 - Reserve Division No. 30, 1915 - 1917 - Reserve Field Artillery Regiment No. 5, 1915 - 1917 - Reserve Field Artillery Regiment No. 33, 1917 - Reserve Foot Artillery Regiment No. 10, 1915 - 1917 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 8, 1915 - 1917 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 35, 1915 - 1917 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 46, 1917 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 51, 1917 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 64, 1915 - 1917 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 66, 1915 - 1917 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 66, 1915 - 1917 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 51, 1917 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 64, 1915 - 1917 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 66, 1915 - 1917 93, 1915 - 1917 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 98, 1915 - 1917 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 201, 1915 - 1917 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 202, 1915 - 1917 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 204, 1915 - 1917 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 225, 1915 - 1917 - Reserve Hunter Battalion No. 16, 1915 - 1917 - Reserve Corps No. 9, 1917 - Reserve Corps No. 14, Telephone Department, 1915 - 1917 - Reserve Corps No. 15, 1915 - 1917 - Reserve Ammunition Column No. 43, 1915 - 1917 - Reserve Medical Company No. 55, 1915 - 1917 - Medical Company No. 243, 1917 - Heavy Coast Mortar Battery No. 3, 1916 - 1917 - Heavy Radio Station No. 19, 1917 - Experimental and Training Airfield East, 1916 - 1917 - Weapons and Ammunition Procurement Office, 1915 - 1917;
228 sheets, Contains: Weddings 1911 - 1916 (with name index) - military community - retired officers - invalids Prussian army (from 1806/07): Chief of the army: - War ministry - Large general staff - Riding military police corps - Castle guard company (until 1861 Guard NCO company), 1911 - 1912 Army division: - Supreme Command in the Marches, 1916 Army inspection no. 1 Gdansk: Army Corps No. 1 Königsberg/ East Prussia: - Artillery depot Königsberg/ East Prussia, 1912 - Hunter regiment on horseback No. 9, 1914 - Grenadier regiment No. 1 (1st East Prussian) Crown Prince, 1911, 1916 - Grenadier regiment No. 3 (2nd East Prussian) King Friedrich Wilhelm I., 1913, 1916 - Grenadier Regiment No. 4 (3rd East Prussian) King Frederick the Great, 1914 - Füsilier Regiment No. 33 (East Prussian) Count Roon, 1916 - Infantry Regiment No. 41 (5th East Prussian) of Boyen, 1916 - Infantry Regiment No. 43 (6th East Prussian) Duke Karl von Mecklenburg-Strelitz, 1915 - Infantry Regiment No. 44 (7th East Prussian) Count Dönhoff - Infantry Regiment No. 45 (8th East Prussian), 1915 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 16 (1st East Prussian) East Prussian), 1912 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 37 (2nd Lithuanian), 1915 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 52 (2nd East Prussian), 1911 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 1 (East Prussian) of Linger, 1912 - 1914 - Pioneer Battalion No. 18 (Samländisches), 1912 - Airship Battalion No. 5 Poznan, 1914, 1916 Army Corps No. 17 Gdansk: - General Staff, 1914 - Artillery Depot Gdansk, 1912 - 1913 - Hunter Regiment on Horseback No. 4, 1912 - Infantry Regiment No. 21 (4th Poznan Airship Regiment), 1914, 1916 - Infantry Regiment No. 21 (4th Poznan Airship Regiment) Pommersches) by Borcke, 1916 - Fortress Machine Gun Division No. 5, 1915 - Infantry Regiment No. 61 (8th Pommersches) by Marwitz, 1911, 1915 - Infantry Regiment No. 128 (Gdansk), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 129 (3rd West Prussian), 1913, 1915 - Infantry Regiment No. 141 (Kulmer), 1912 - Infantry Regiment No. 175 (8th West Prussian), 1913 - 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 176 (9th West Prussian), 1915 - Jäger Battalion No. 2 (Pomeranian) Fürst Bismarck, 1915 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 71 (Groß-Komtur), 1915 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 81 (Thorner), 1914 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 11 (1st West Prussian), 1911, 1915 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 17 (2nd West Prussian), 1915 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 17 (2nd West Prussian), 1914 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 11 (1st West Prussian), 1911, 1915 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 17 (2nd West Prussian), 1914 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 11 (1st West Prussian), 1911, Foot Artillery Regiment No. 17 (2nd West Prussian), Foot Artillery Reg No. 17 (Foot Artillery) (West Prussian), 1914 - Train Battalion No. 17 (West Prussian), 1911 Army Corps No. 20 Allenstein: - Division No. 37, 1912 - Infantry Regiment No. 59 (4th Posensches) Freiherr Hiller von Gärtringen, 1914 - 1916 - Infantry Regiment No. 146 (1st Masurian), 1914, 1916 - Infantry Regiment No. 148 (5th West Prussian), 1914 - 1916 - Infantry Regiment No. 150 (1st Ermidian), 1915 - Infantry Regiment No. 151 (2nd Ermidian), 1911 - Hunter Battalion No. 1 (East Prussian) Count Yorck von Wartenburg, 1912 - 1915 - Cuirassier Regiment No. 5 (West Prussian) Duke Friedrich Eugen von Württemberg, 1916 - Dragoon Regiment No. 11 (Pomerania) von Wedel, 1914 - Ulan Regiment No. 4 (1. Pommersches) by Schmidt, 1912 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 35 (1st West Prussian), 1911 - 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 73 (Masurian), 1913 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 79 (3rd East Prussian), 1912 - Pioneer Battalion No. 23 (2nd West Prussian), 1912 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 73 (3rd East Prussian), 1913 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 79 (3rd East Prussian), 1912 - Pioneer Battalion No. 23 (2nd West Prussian), 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 79 (3rd East Prussian), 1913 - Pioneer Battal Regiment No. 23 (2nd West Prussian), 1912 - Pioneer Battalion No. 23 (2nd East Prussian) Army Inspection No. 2 Berlin: Gardekorps Berlin: - Generalkommando, 1912 - 1913, 1916 - Generalstab, 1916 - Intendantur - Proviantamt Berlin, 1913 - 1914 - Proviantamt Potsdam, 1913 - Truppenübungsplatz Döberitz, 1915 - Garde-Division No. 1, 1911, 1916 - Guard Division No. 2, 1911 - Guard Cavalry Brigade No. 1, 1912 - 1913 - Guard Cavalry Brigade No. 3, 1911 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 1 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 2, 1911, 1914 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 2, 1911 - Guard Cavalry Brigade No. 1, 1912 - 1913 - Guard Cavalry Brigade No. 3, 1911 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 1 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 2, 1911, 1914 3, 1911 - 1912, 1916 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 4, 1913 - 1915 - Guard Regiment on Foot No. 5, 1913 - 1915 - Guard Fuesilier Regiment, 1913 - 1916 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 1 Emperor Alexander - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 1 2 Emperor Franz, 1912 - 1914 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 3 Queen Elisabeth, 1913 - 1916 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 4 Queen Augusta, 1913 - 1914 - Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 5, 1911, 1913 - 1915 - Guard Machine Gun Division No. 2, 1911 - Guard Shooting Battalion, 1915 - Training Infantry Regiment, 1914 - 1916 - Cuirassier Regiment Gardes du Corps, 1913 - 1914 - Guard Cuirassier Regiment, 1911 - Guard Dragoon Regiment No. 1 Queen Victoria of Great Britain and Ireland, 1912 - 1913 - Guard Dragoon Regiment No. 2 Empress Alexandra of Russia, 1911, 1913 - Guard Ulan Regiment No. 1, 1912, 1916 - Guard Ulan Regiment No. 2, 1914 - 1915 - Guard Ulanen Regiment No. 3, 1913, 1916 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 1, 1911 - 1914 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 2, 1914 - 1916 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 3, 1911, 1914 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 3, 1911, 1914 4, 1911 - Guard Foot Artillery Regiment, 1911 - Guard Pioneer Battalion, 1911 - 1912, 1916 - Railway Regiment No. 1, 1912, 1915 - 1916 - Telegraph Battalion No. 1, 1911, 1915 - Airship Battalion (Department) No. 1, 1911 - Airship Battalion No. 1, 1913 - Airship Battalion No. 2, 1914 - Motor Battalion Berlin, 1914 - 1916 - Guard Train Battalion, 1916 - Half Battalion Division, 1912 - 1913 - Medical Company No. 1, 1913 - Airship Battalion No. 2, 1914 - Motor Battalion Berlin, 1914 - 1916 - Guard Train Battalion, 1916 - Half Battalion Division, 1912 - 1913 - Medical Company No. 1 1, 1915 - Sanitary Company No. 2, 1916 Army Corps No. 12 (1st Saxon) Dresden: - Grenadier Regiment No. 101 (2nd Saxon) Kaiser Wilhelm, King of Prussia, 1911 - Infantry Regiment No. 103 (4th Saxon) Dresden: - Grenadier Regiment No. 101 (2nd Saxon) Kaiser Wilhelm, King of Prussia, 1911 - Infantry Regiment No. 103 (4th Saxon) Dresden: - Grenadier Regiment No. 101 (2nd Saxon) Kaiser Wilhelm, King of Prussia, 1911 - Infantry Regiment No. 103 (4th Saxon) Dresden: - Grenadier Regiment No. 101 (2nd Saxon) Saxon) Grand Duke Friedrich II. of Baden, 1913 - Guard-Rider Regiment (1st Heavy Regiment) Dresden, 1913 Army Corps No. 19 (2nd Saxon) Leipzig: - Infantry Regiment No. 105 (6th Saxon) King Wilhelm II. von Württemberg, 1916 - Infantry Regiment No. 107 (8th Saxon) Prince Johann Georg, 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 181 (15th Saxon), 1914 - Ulan Regiment No. 18 (2nd Saxon), 1916 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 107 (8th Saxon) Prince Johann Georg, 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 181 (15th Saxon), 1914 - Ulan Regiment No. 18 (2nd Saxon), 1916 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 107 (8th Saxon) 12 (1st Saxon), 1914 - Pioneer Battalion No. 22 (2nd Saxon), 1911 Army Inspection No. 3 Hanover: Army Corps No. 7 Münster: - Artillery Depot Münster, 1913 - Fusililier Regiment No. 39 (Lower Rhine) General Ludendorff, 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 53 (5th Westphalian), 1915 - Infantry Regiment No. 55 (6th Westphalian) Count Bülow von Dennewitz, 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 158 (7th Westphalian) Lorraine), 1911 - Hussar Regiment No. 11 (2nd Westphalian) - Field Artillery Regiment No. 7 (1st Westphalian), 1915 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 22 (2nd Westphalian), 1912, 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 58 (Mindensches), 1916 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 7 (Westphalian), 1911 - 1912 - Pioneer Battalion No. 24 (2nd Westphalian), 1912 Army Corps No. 9 Hamburg-Altona: - Infantry Regiment No. 31 (1st Thuringian) Count Bose, 1916 - Infantry Regiment No. 84 (Schleswigsches) of Manstein, 1912 - Infantry Regiment No. 85 (Holstein) Duke of Holstein, 1912 - Fusilier Regiment No. 90 (Grand-Ducal-Mecklenburg), 1912 - Dragoon Regiment No. 18 (2nd Reichsmark) of Manstein, 1912 - Infantry Regiment No. 85 (Holstein) Duke of Holstein, 1912 - Fusilier Regiment No. 90 (Grand-Ducal-Mecklenburg), 1912 - Dragoon Regiment No. 18 (2nd Reichsmark) Großherzoglich-Mecklenburgisches), 1915 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 9 (Schleswigsches) General Field Marshal Graf Waldersee, 1911 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 45 (Lauenburgisches), 1915 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 20 (Lauenburg), 1913 - 1916 Army Corps No. 10 Hanover: - Füsilier Regiment No. 73 (Hannoversches) Prince Albrecht of Prussia, 1912 - Infantry Regiment No. 74 (1. Hannoversches), 1911 - 1912 - Infantry Regiment No. 79 (3. Hannoversches) Hannoversches) by Voigts-Rhetz, 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 91 (Oldenburgisches), 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 92 (Braunschweigisches), 1913 - Dragoon Regiment No. 16 (2nd Hannoversches), 1911 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 10 (1st Hannoversches) by Scharnhorst, 1911 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 26 (2nd Hannoversches), 1912 - Pioneer Battalion No. 10 (Hannoversches), 1916 - Train Battalion No. 10 (Hannoversches), 1913 Army Inspection No. 4 Munich: Army Corps No. 3 Berlin: - General Command, 1912 - 1916 - General Staff, 1912 - Intendantur, 1911 - 1915 - Artillery Depot Berlin Spandau, 1911, 1914 - Infantry Brigade No. 11, 1912 - Commandantur Berlin, 1912, 1915 - 1916 - Artillery Depot Berlin, 1911 - 1914 - Leib Grenadier Regiment No. 8 (1st Brandenburg) King Friedrich Wilhelm III.., 1911 - 1912, 1915 - Grenadier Regiment No. 12 (2nd Brandenburg) Prince Carl of Prussia, 1912 - 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 20 (3rd Brandenburg) Count Tauentzien von Wittenberg, 1916 - Infantry Regiment No. 24 (4th Brandenburg) Grand Duke Friedrich Franz II. von Mecklenburg-Schwerin, 1912 - Füsilier Regiment No. 35 (Brandenburg) Prince Heinrich of Prussia - Infantry Regiment No. 48 (5th Brandenburg) of Stülpnagel, 1915 - Infantry Regiment No. 52 (6th Brandenburg) of Alvensleben, 1914 - 1915 - Infantry Regiment No. 64 (8th Brandenburg) Prince Friedrich Karl of Prussia, 1913, 1915 - 1916 - Cuirassier Regiment No. 6 (Brandenburg) Emperor Nikolaus I. of Russia, 1913 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 18 (2nd Brandenburg) Field Artillery Master General, 1915 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 39 (Kurmärkisches), 1911 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 54 (Neumärkisches), 1913 - 1916 - Pioneer Battalion No. 3 (1st Brandenburg) Brandenburgisches) von Rauch, 1912 - 1916 - Bezirkskommando Berlin, 1914 - Telegraphen-Bataillon Nr. 2, 1911 - Halbinvalidenabteilung, 1913 - Sanitäts-Kompanie Nr. 1, 1915 Armeekorps Nr. 1 (Bayerisches) München: - Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 7 Prinz Leopold, 1915 - Reserve-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 3, 1915 - Feldartillerie-Regiment Nr. 20, 1915 Armee-Inspektion Nr. 5 Karlsruhe: VIII. Army Corps No. 8 Koblenz: - Director's Office, 1912 - Infantry Regiment No. 25 (1st Rheinisches) of Lützow, 1912 - 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 28 (2nd Rheinisches) of Groeben, 1911 - 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 69 (7th Rheinisches) of Lützow, 1911 - 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 28 (2nd Rheinisches) of Groeben, 1911 - 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 69 (7th Rheinisches) of Lützow, 1912 - 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 28 (2nd Rheinisches) of Groeben, 1911 - 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 28 (7th Rheinisches) of Lützow Rheinisches), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 160 (9. Rheinisches), 1912, 1914 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 9 (Schleswig-Holstein), 1911 - Pioneer Battalion No. 8 (1. Rheinisches), 1913 - 1914 - Airship Battalion No. 3, 1912 - 1913 - Flieger-Bataillon Nr. 3, 1916 Army Corps Nr. 14 Karlsruhe: - Füsilier-Regiment Nr. 40 (Hohenzollernsches) Prince Karl Anton von Hohenzollern, 1916 - Leib-Grenadier-Regiment Nr. 109 (1. Badisches), 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 113 (5. Badisches), 1915 - Infantry Regiment No. 142 (7. Badisches), 1911 - Dragoon Regiment No. 21 (2. Badisches), 1911 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 66 (4. Badisches), 1911 - Infantry Regiment No. 142 (7. Badisches), 1911 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 66 (4. Badisches), 1911 - Dragoon Regiment No. 21 (2. Badisches), 1911 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 66 (4. Badisches), 1911 - Infantry Regiment No. 142 (7. Badisches), 1911 - Dragoon Regiment No. 21 (2. Badisches), 1911 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 66 (4. Badisches), 1911 - Field Artillery Reg No. 66 (4. Badisches). Badisches), 1912 - Field artillery regiment no. 76 (5th Badisches), 1913 - Foot artillery regiment no. 14 (Badisches), 1916 Army corps no. 15 Strasbourg i. Alsace: - Artillery depot Strasbourg i. Alsace, 1913 - Hunter regiment on horseback no. 3, 1915 - Infantry Regiment No. 136 (4th Lorraine), 1911, 1915 - Infantry Regiment No. 143 (4th Lower Alsatian), 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 171 (2nd Upper Alsatian), 1914 - Dragoon Regiment No. 15 (3rd Silesian), 1912 - 1913 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 10 (Lower Saxon), 1913, 1916 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 13 (Hohenzollernsches), 1911, 1915 - Pioneer Battalion No. 15 (1st Silesian), 1915 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 13 (Hohenzollernsches), 1911, 1915 - Pioneer Battalion No. 15 (1st Silesian) Alsatian), 1912, 1915 Army Inspection No. 6 Stuttgart: Army Corps No. 4 Magdeburg: - Infantry Regiment No. 26 (1st Magdeburg) Prince Leopold of Anhalt-Dessau, 1911 - 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 27 (2nd Magdeburg) Magdeburgian) Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia, 1912 - Füsilier Regiment No. 36 (Magdeburgian) General Field Marshal Count Blumenthal, 1911, 1916 - Infantry Regiment No. 66 (3rd Magdeburgian), 1911 - Infantry Regiment No. 72 (4th Thuringian), 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 93 (Anhaltinian), 1913 - Cuirassier Regiment No. 7 (Magdeburg) of Seydlitz, 1914 - Hussar Regiment No. 10 (Magdeburg), 1913 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 4 (Magdeburg) Prince Regent Luitpold of Bavaria, 1913 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 4 (Magdeburg) Encke, 1916 - Pioneer Battalion No. 4 (Magdeburg), 1911 - 1913 Army Corps No. 11 Kassel: - Hunter Regiment on Horseback No. 2, 1912 - Hunter Regiment on Horse No. 6, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 71 (3rd Thuringian), 1914 - 1915 - Infantry Regiment No. 83 (3rd Kurhessian) of Wittich, 1916 - Infantry Regiment No. 95 (6th Thuringian), 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 19 (1st Thuringian), 1911 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 55 (2nd Thuringian), 1912 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 18 (Thuringian), 1915 - 1916 Army Corps No. 13 (Württembergisches) Stuttgart: - Grenadier Regiment No. 119 (1st Württembergisches) Queen Olga, 1911 - Infantry Regiment No. 120 (2nd Württembergisches) Emperor Wilhelm King of Prussia, 1913 - Grenadier Regiment No. 119 (1st Württembergisches) Queen Olga, 1911 - Infantry Regiment No. 120 (2nd Württembergisches) Emperor Wilhelm King of Prussia, 1913 - Grenadier Regiment No. 119 (2nd Württembergisches) 123 (5th Württemberg) King Karl, 1911 - Infantry Regiment No. 126 (8th Württemberg) Grand Duke Friedrich von Baden, 1912 - Ulan Regiment No. 19 (1st Württemberg) King Karl, 1913 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 29 (2nd Württemberg) Prince Regent Luitpold of Bavaria, 1913 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 49 (3rd Württemberg), 1912 Army Inspection No. 7 Saarbrücken: Army Corps No. 16 Metz: - Hunter Regiment on Horseback No. 13, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 98 (Metzer), 1912 - Infantry Regiment No. 130 (1st Lorraine), 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 173 (9th Lorraine), 1916 - Hussar Regiment No. 13 (1st Lorraine), 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 130 (1st Lorraine), 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 173 (9th Lorraine), 1916 - Hussar Regiment No. 13 (1st Lorraine). Kurhessisches) King Humbert of Italy, 1913 - Ulan regiment No. 14 (2nd Hannoversches), 1911 - Field artillery regiment No. 33 (1st Lorraine), 1912 - Field artillery regiment No. 34 (2nd Lorraine), 1916 - Field artillery regiment No. 70 (4th Lorraine), 1913 - Pioneer Battalion No. 20 (2nd Lorraine), 1913 Army Corps No. 18 Frankfurt/Main: - Artillery Depot Mainz, 1912 - Fusililier Regiment No. 80 (Kurhessisches) by Gersdorff, 1916 - Infantry Regiment No. 81 (1st Kurhessian) Landgrave Friedrich I. of Hesse-Kassel, 1911 - Infantry Regiment No. 87 (1st Nassau), 1915 - Infantry Regiment No. 116 (2nd Grand-Ducal-Hessian) Kaiser Wilhelm, 1913 - 1914 - Infantry Body Regiment No. 117 (3rd Grand-Ducal-Hessian) Grand-Duchess, 1911, 1913 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 25 (1st Grand-Ducal-Hessian), 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 27 (1st Nassauian) Orania, 1912 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 63 (2nd Hessian) Nassauisches), 1911 - Fußartillerie-Regiment Nr. 3 (Brandenburgisches) Generalfeldzeugmeister, 1911, 1916 - Pionier-Bataillon Nr. 25 (2nd Nassauisches), 1913 - Eisenbahn-Regiment Nr. 2, 1912 - 1915 - Eisenbahn-Regiment Nr. 3, 1913 Armeekorps Nr. 21 Saarbrücken: - Infantry Regiment No. 97 (1st Upper Rhine), 1913 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 15 (1st Upper Alsatian), 1916 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 31 (1st Lower Alsatian), 1912 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 67 (2nd Lower Alsace), 1911 - Pioneer Battalion No. 27 (2nd Rhineland), 1914 Army Inspection No. 8 Berlin: Army Corps No. 2 Stettin: - Intendantur, 1914 - Grenadier Regiment No. 2 (1st Pomerania) King Friedrich Wilhelm IV, 1913 - Grenadier Regiment No. 9 (2nd Pommersches/Kolbergsches) Graf Gneisenau, 1911, 1916 - Infantry Regiment No. 14 (3rd Pommersches) Graf Schwerin, 1911 - 1915 - Infantry Regiment No. 42 (5th Pommersches) Prince Moritz von Anhalt-Dessau, 1914 - Infantry Regiment No. 49 (6th Pommersches), 1911 - Infantry Regiment No. 149 (6th West Prussian), 1913 - Cuirassier Regiment No. 2 (Pommersches) Queen, 1916 - Dragoon Regiment No. 12 (2nd Brandenburg) of Arnim, 1912, 1915 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 17 (2nd Pommersches), 1911, 1916 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 38 (Vorpommersches), 1911, 1913 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 53 (Hinterpommersches), 1912 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 2 (1st Pommersches) of Hindersin, 1912, 1916 Army Corps No. 5 Poznan: - Intendantur, 1911 - Garrison Administration Sprottau, 1915 - Division No. 10, 1913 - Grenadier Regiment No. 6 (1st West Prussian) Count Kleist von Nollendorf, 1911 - 1912 - Grenadier Regiment No. 7 (2nd West Prussian) King Wilhelm I., 1915 - Infantry Regiment No. 19 (2nd Posensches) of Courbière, 1911 - 1915 - Füsilier Regiment No. 37 (West Prussian) of Steinmetz, 1913, 1915 - Infantry Regiment No. 46 (1st Lower Silesian) Graf Kirchbach, 1915 - 1916 - Infantry Regiment No. 47 (2nd Lower Silesian) of King Ludwig III of Bavaria, 1915 - Infantry Regiment No. 58 (3rd Posensches), 1912, 1916 - Infantry Regiment No. 154 (5th Lower Silesian), 1913 - Infantry Regiment No. 155 (7th West Prussian), 1911 - 1914 - Hunter Battalion No. 5 (1st Silesian) von Neumann, 1915 - Dragoon Regiment No. 4 (1st Silesian) von Bredow, 1911 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 5 (1st Lower Silesian) by Podbielski, 1911, 1914 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 20 (1st Poznan), 1913 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 56 (2nd Poznan), 1911 - Foot Artillery Regiment No. 5 (Lower Silesian), 1913 - Pioneer Battalion No. 5 (Lower Silesian), 1915 - 1916 Army Corps No. 6 Wroclaw: - Artillery depot Glatz, 1913 - Hunter regiment on horseback No. 11, 1916 - Infantry regiment No. 51 (4th Lower Silesian), 1915 - Infantry regiment No. 63 (4th Upper Silesian), 1913 - Hussar regiment No. 6 (2nd Silesian) Graf Goetzen, 1914 - Field artillery regiment No. 42 (2nd Silesian) Schlesisches), 1911 - Pionier-Bataillon Nr. 6 (Schlesisches), 1911 Inspection of the fighters and marksmen Berlin, 1914 Generalinspektion der Kavallerie Berlin, 1912 - 1913 Inspection of the field artillery Berlin: - Feldartillerie-Schießschule Jüterbog, 1912 Generalinspektion der Fußartillerie Berlin, 1911, 1913 - Fußartillerie-Schießschule Jüterbog, 1913 - Fußartillerie-Brigade Nr. 1 Berlin, 1915 General Inspection of the Corps of Engineers and Pioneers and the Fortresses of Berlin, 1914 - Ingenieur-Inspektion Nr. 1 Berlin, 1914 - Ingenieur-Inspektion Nr. 2 Berlin, 1913 - Ingenieur-Inspektion Nr. 4 Metz, 1911, 1916 Feldzeugmeisterei: - Artillery depot inspection Berlin Spandau Other Army: - Admiralstab - Artillery depot Windhuk/Namibia, 1913 - Artillery Examination Commission - Railway Brigade No. 2 Hanau, 1914 - Railway Battalion No. 2 Hanau, 1914 - Railway Battalion No. 2 Hanau, 1914 - Railway Battalion No. 2 Hanau, 1914 - Railway Battalion No. 2 Hanau, 1914 - Railway Battalion No. 2 Hanau, 1914 - Railway Battalion No. 2 Hanau, 1914 4, 1913, 1916 - First Sailor Division Kiel - First Shipyard Division Kiel, 1911 - 1914 - Fortress Prison Berlin Spandau, 1915 - Fireworks Laboratory Berlin Spandau, 1915 - Fortification Königsberg/East Prussia, 1916 - Guard Field Artillery Regiment No. 6, 1915 - Guard Foot Artillery Regiment No. 1, 1915 - 1916 - Guard Foot Artillery Regiment No. 2, 1914 - Garrison Administration Warsaw, 1916 - Gendarmerie Brigade No. 1, 1915 - 1916 - Guard Foot Artillery Regiment No. 2, 1914 - Garrison Administration Warsaw, 1916 - Gendarmerie Brigade No. 1, 1915 - Garde Foot Artillery Regiment No. 2, 1914 - Garrison Administration Warsaw, 1914 - Gendarmerie Brigade No. 2, 1914 3 Berlin, 1913 - Gendarmerie Brigade No. 8 Koblenz, 1912 - General Inspectorate of Transportation - General Military Fund, 1915 - Geschoßfabrik Berlin Spandau, 1915 - Geschoßfabrik Gera, 1915 - Geschwader Nr. 2 Kiel, 1913 - Gewehrfabrik Berlin Spandau, 1916 - Hauptkadettenanstalt Berlin, 1912, 1915 - Ingenieurkomitee, 1911 - 1913, 1916 - Inspektion der Fliegertruppen, 1916 - Inspektion der Infanterieschulen, 1913 - 1915 - Inspektion der Telegraphentruppen, 1911 - Inspektion des Torpedowesens, 1912 - Kadettenhaus Bensberg, 1916 - Kadettenhaus Wahlstatt, 1915 - Kaiserliche Schutztruppen, Oberkommando, 1911 - 1914 - Kaiser-Wilhelms-Akademie für das militärärztliche Bildungswesen (before 1895 Medizinisch-Chirurgisches Friedrich-Wilhelms-Institut [Pépinière]) - Kommandanturgericht Berlin, 1912 - Kriegsakademie, 1911 - 1914 - Landgendarmerie Berlin, 1914 - Lehr-Maschinengewehr-Kompanie Wünsdorf, 1914 - Luftschiffer-Bataillon Z V Berlin Johannisthal, 1914 - Marinebekleidungsamt Wilhelmshaven, 1915 - Marine-Luftschiffer-Abteilung Hamburg Fuhlsbüttel, 1914 - Naval Station of the North Sea Wilhelmshaven, 1915 - Naval Station of the Baltic Sea Kiel, 1913 - Military Training Forge Berlin, 1911 - Military Veterinary Academy, 1911 - Munitions Factory Berlin Spandau, 1911, 1916 - Pioneer Inspection No. 3 Strasbourg i. Alsace, 1914 - Reichsmarineamt - Sanitätsamt Berlin, 1914 - Schutztruppe für Deutsch-Ostafrika, 1911 - 1914 - Schutztruppe für Kamerun, 1911 - 1914 - Schutztruppe für Südwestafrika - See-Artillerie-Abteilung Friedrichsort, 1916 - See-Bataillon Nr. 2 Wilhelmshaven, 1912 - S.M.S. Arcona (small cruiser), 1913 - S.M.S. Breslau (small cruiser), 1916 - S.M.S. Derfflinger (big cruiser), 1916 - S.M.S. Germany (liner), 1915 - S.M.S. Freya (Great Cruiser), 1911 - S.M.S. Prince Bismarck (Great Cruiser), 1916 - S.M.S. Göben (Great Cruiser), 1915 - S.M.S. Irene (Small Cruiser), 1915 - S.M.S. Kolberg (Small Cruiser), 1911 - S.M.S. Schleswig-Holstein (Line Ship), 1915 - S.M.S. Stuttgart (Small Cruiser), 1912 - 1913 - S.M.S. Württemberg (Line Ship), 1916 - Torpedo Division No. 1 Kiel, 1913 - 1914 - Torpedo Division No. 2 Wilhelmshaven, 1912 - 1915 - Traindepot Directorate No. 1 Berlin, 1913, 1915 - Traininspektion Nr. 2 Berlin, 1913, 1916 - Unteroffiziersschule Ettlingen, 1913 - Unteroffiziersschule Treptow a. d. Rega, 1915 - Unteroffiziersvorschule Annaburg, 1915 - Zweite Matrosen-Division Wilhelmshaven, 1913 - Zweite Werft-Division Wilhelmshaven, 1913 Foreign troops: Austrian Army: - Feldhaubitzregiment No. 14 Knight of Krobatin, 1911 troops 1st World War: - Army No. 3, Army Flight Park No. 3, 1916 - Army No. 5, Feldluftschiffer-Abteilung No. 4, 1915 - Army Department of Woyrsch, Road Construction Company No. 30, 1915 - Army Flight Park No. 11, 1916 - Army Fleet Column No. 440, Stage Inspection No. 10, 1916 - Army Corps No. 1, Machine Rifle Replacement Company No. 30, 1915 - Army Flight Park No. 11, 1916 - Army Fleet Column No. 440, Stage Inspection No. 10, 1916 - Army Corps No. 1, Machine Rifle Replacement Company No. 30, 1915 - Army Flight Park No. 11, 1916 - Army Fleet Column No. 440, Stage Inspection No. 10, 1916 - Army Corps No. 1, Machine Rifle Replacement Company No. 3, 1915 - Army Corps No. 3, Machine Gun Replacement Company No. 1, 1916 - Army Corps No. 3, Medical Company No. 2, 1915 - Army Corps No. 6, Stage Inspection Bow, Provisioning Column No. 6, 1915 - Army Corps No. 17, Landstorm Escadron No. 1, 1915 - Army Corps No. 21, Corps Motor Vehicle Column, 1916 - Army Command 10, 1915 - Army Command 10, Surveying Department No. 1, 1915 - Army Corps No. 21, Corps Motor Vehicle Column, 1916 - Army Command 10, 1915 - Army Command 10, Surveying Department No. 1, 1915 - Army Corps No. 21, Army Command No. 10, Army Command No. 10, Surveying Department No. 1915 10, 1916 - Army Command 12, Surveying Division No. 12, 1916 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 11, 1916 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 14, 1915 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 27, 1916 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 27, 1916 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 27, 1916 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 11, 1916 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 14, 1915 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 27, 1916 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 27, 1916 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 27, 1916 57, 1915 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 79, 1915 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 101, 1916 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 117, 1916 - Artillery Flight Department No. 205, 1916 - Brigade Replacement Battalion No. 205, 1916 - Armour Battalion No. 101, 1916 - Armour Battalion No. 117, 1916 - Artillery Flight Department No. 205, 1916 - Brigade Replacement Battalion No. 205, 1916 - Armour Battalion No. 117, 1916 9, 1914 - Division Graf von Bredow, Foot Artillery Ammunition Column No. 22, 1915 - Division Graf von Bredow, Ammunition Column No. 12 (Reserve), 1915 - Spare Field Artillery Regiment Zossen, 1915 - Stage Telephone Depot, 1914 - Stage Area Ghent, Voluntary Nursing, 1915 - Stage Telegraph Directorate 12 Grodno, 1916 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 209, 1916 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 245, 1916 - Field Bakery Column No. 1, 1916 - Military Aviation Department No. 21 Galicia, 1915 - Military Aviation Department No. 37, 1915 - Telephone Aviation Department No. 25, 1914 - Telephone Double Train No. 107, 1916 - Telephone Telephone Replacement Department 2, 1916 - Fortress Telephone Department Küstrin, 1915 - Fortress Telephone Department Poznan, 1916 - Airline Aviation Department No. 2, 1915 - Airline Replacement Department No. 37, 1915 2 Berlin Adlershof, 1915 - 1916 - Voluntary Naval Air Corps Berlin Johannisthal, 1915 - Radio Operator Department No. 151, 1916 - Radio Operator Station Neumünster, 1915 - Foot Artillery Battery No. 24, 1915 - Foot Artillery Ammunition Column No. 1, Battalion No. 18, 1915 - Guard Corps, Machine Gun Replacement Company No. 3, 1916 - Guard Corps, Field Hospital No. 2, 1915 - Guard Corps, Field Hospital No. 7, 1915 - Guard Corps, Ambulance Company No. 1, 1915 - Guard Corps, Medical Company No. 2, 1916 - Guard Infantry Regiment No. 7, 1916 - Guard-Landsturm-Bataillon Dennewitz, 1915 - Guard-Reserve-Division No. 2, 1914 - Guard-Reserve-Foot Artillery Regiment No. 2, 1916 - Guard-Reserve-Foot Artillery Regiment No. 2, 1916 - Guard-Infantry Regiment No. 7, 1916 - Guard-Landsturm-Bataillon Dennewitz, 1915 - Guard-Reserve-Division No. 2, 1914 - Guard-Reserve-Foot Artillery Regiment No. 2, 1914 2, 1915 - Guard Reserve Corps, Sanitary Company No. 1, 1914 - Guard Reserve Regiment No. 1, 1915 - Guard Reserve Regiment No. 2, 1914 - Guard Reserve Sanitary Company No. 2, 1916 - Headquarters, Radio Operators Department, 1916 - Headquarters, Floodlights Department, 1916 - Infantry Division No. 3, Sound Measuring Unit 74, 1916 - Infantry Regiment No. 186, 1916 - Infantry Regiment No. 360, 1916 - Infantry Regiment No. 376, 1915 - Cavalry Division No. 8, Field Directorate, 1916 - Commander's Office Küstrin, Reinforcement Battalion No. 2, 1914 - Land Aviation Department Berlin Johannisthal, 1916 - Landstorm Battalion No. 376, 1915 - Cavalry Division No. 8, Field Directorate, 1916 - Commander's Office Küstrin, Reinforcement Battalion No. 2, 1914 - Land Aviation Department Berlin Johannisthal, 1916 - Landstorm Battalion No. 2 Königsberg/East Prussia, 1915 - Landstorm Battalion No. 5, Section 4 Poznan, 1915 - Landstorm Replacement Battalion Hardershof, 1915 - Landstorm Infantry Battalion Potsdam No. 2, 1915 - Landstorm Infantry Battalion No. 5, Section 4 Poznan, 1915 - Landstorm Infantry Battalion Potsdam No. 2, 1915 - Landstorm Infantry Battalion No. 5, Section 4 Poznan, 1915 - Landstorm Infantry Battalion No. 2, 1915 - Landstorm Infantry Battalion No. 2, 1915 2 Berlin Spandau, 1915 - Landsturm-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 2 Halberstadt, 1916 - Landsturm-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 172, 1915 - Landwehr-Eskadron Nr. 1, 1916 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 3, 1915 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 4, 1915 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 8, 1915 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 12, 1915 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 33, 1915 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 48, 1916 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 52, 1915 - Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 53, 1916 - Marinekorps, Schweres Korpsartillerie-Regiment Nr. 1, 1916 - Maschinengewehr-Ersatz-Kompanie Nr. 5 Pillau, 1916 - Pioneer Replacement Battalion No. 2, 1915 - Pioneer Replacement Battalion No. 17 Thorn, 1915 - Pioneer Replacement Battalion No. 18, 1915 - Pioneer Replacement Battalion No. 26, 1915 - Pioneer Regiment No. 26, 1915 - Pioneer Regiment No. 17 Thorn, 1915 - Pioneer Replacement Battalion No. 18, 1915 - Pioneer Replacement Battalion No. 26, 1915 - Pioneer Regiment No. 26, 1915 29, 1915 - Radfahrer-Kompanie Marienburg, 1915 - Regiment Kurmark Berlin Lichtenberg, Marsch-Kolonne Nr. 7, 1916 - Reserve-Division Nr. 44, 1916 - Reserve-Dragoner-Regiment Nr. 1, 1916 - Reserve-Dragoner-Regiment No. 2, 1915 - Reserve-Feldartillerie-Regiment No. 3, 1916 - Reserve-Feldartillerie-Regiment No. 10, 1915 - Reserve-Feldartillerie-Regiment No. 44, 1915 - Reserve Field Artillery Regiment No. 52, 1916 - Reserve Telephone Division No. 40, 1915 - Reserve Foot Artillery Regiment No. 1, 1915 - Reserve Foot Artillery Regiment No. 6, 1915 - Reserve Infantry Brigade No. 52, 1916 - Reserve Telephone Division No. 40, 1915 - Reserve Foot Artillery Regiment No. 1, 1915 - Reserve Foot Artillery Regiment No. 6, 1915 - Reserve Infantry Brigade No. 1, 1915 - Reserve Foot Artillery Regiment No. 6, 1915 - Reserve Infantry Brigade No. 1, 1915 48, 1915 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 49, 1915 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 52, 1916 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 64, 1914 - 1916 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 91, 1915 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 93, 1915 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 94, 1916 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 110, 1915 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 118, 1915 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 201, 1914 - 1916 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 202, 1915 - 1916 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 204, 1915 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 206, 1916 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 210, 1914 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 225, 1915 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 228, 1915 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 245, 1916 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 261, 1916 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 261, 1916 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 263, 1916 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 270, 1916 - Reserve Corps No. 3, General Command III, 1916 - Reserve Hospital I Frankfurt/Oder, 1914 - S.M.S. Torpedoboot V 163, 1916 - Road Construction Company No. 15, 1916 - South Army, Stage Inspection Galicia, Stage Auxiliary Company No. 24, 1916 - Torpedo Boat Flotilla No. 16, 1915 - Train Replacement Department No. 1, 1916 - Train Replacement Department No. 14, 1915..;
Missions-Kirchenordnungen, Dr., 1869, 1875 o.J.; Agreement on the transfer of the Hakka Mission (China) to Berlin, 1882; Negotiations on a joint teacher training institution and on the ordination of colored helpers in Africa, 1903; Negotiations on the coordination of the work at the Cape, 1904; Report on the death of Insp. Sauberzeig-Schmidt in Hong Kong, Dr., 1906; J. Neitz: Report of a journey to Samuel Maherero, 13 p., 1907; Foundation of church coffers in China, Vorschlag Glüer, 1907; Satzung d. Berliner Missionsgesellschaft, Dr., 1907; Die Aufsicht über die Missionsarbeit d. Berliner Mission, 18 p., ms., ca. 1908; Admission of Miss. Behrens/Hermannsburg, 1913; Reports of fights in Tsingtau, 1914; Vertraul. Report on obstruction of missionary work by World War I, 18 p., ms., 1915; conflict with P. Theo. Fliedner/Madrid, 1920; What still holds us to the pagan mission today, pamphlet, ca. 1920
Rheinische Missionsgesellschaft167 sheets, Contains: Marriages March 1869 - March 1921 (with name index) Baptisms February 1869 - November 1920 (with name index) Dead January 1869 - September 1920 (with name index) Communions March 1869 - March 1913 (only statistical data, no names) - Military Community - Retired Officers Prussian Army (from 1806/07): Army Division: Army Inspection No. 1 Gdansk: Army Corps No. 1 Königsberg/ East Prussia: - Füsilier Regiment No. 1 Königsberg/ East Prussia: - Füsilier Regiment No. 1 Königsberg/ East Prussia: - Füsilier Regiment No. 1 Königsberg/ East Prussia: - Füsilier Regiment No. 1 Königsberg/ East Prussia: - Füsilier Regiment No. 1 Königsberg/ East Prussia: - Füsilier Regiment No. 1 Königsberg/ East Prussia: - Füsilier Regiment No. 1 Königsberg/ East Prussia 33 (East Prussian) Count Roon, 1892 Army Corps No. 17 Gdansk: - 1st Life Hussar Regiment No. 1, 1882 Army Inspection No. 2 Berlin: Guard Corps Berlin: - Guard Fuesilier Regiment, 1916 - Training Infantry Regiment Schubin, 1917 Army Inspection No. 3 Hanover: Army Corps No. 9 Hamburg-Altona: - Infantry Regiment No. 84 (Schleswigsches) von Manstein, 1916 Army Inspection No. 4 Munich: Army Corps No. 3 Berlin: - Landwehr-Bezirkskommando Crossen, 1886 - Grenadier-Regiment No. 12 (2nd Brandenburg) Prince Carl of Prussia, 1869 - 1880, 1919 - Füsilier-Regiment No. 35 (Brandenburg) Prince Heinrich of Prussia, 1916 - Infanterie-Regiment No. 48 (5th Brandenburg) von Stülpnagel in Küstrin, 1919 - Infanterie-Regiment No. 52 (6th Brandenburg) Brandenburgisches) of Alvensleben, 1881 - 1920 - Infantry Regiment No. 52 (6. Brandenburgisches) of Alvensleben, Replacement Battalion, 1917 - 1918 - Infantry Regiment No. 64 (8. Brandenburgisches) Prince Friedrich Karl of Prussia, 1893, 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 18 (2. Brandenburgisches) General Field Commander, 1919 - District Command Crossen, 1872 - 1919 Army Corps No. 3 (Bavarian) Nuremberg: Chevauleges Regiment No. 6 Prince Albrecht of Prussia in Bayreuth, 1915 Army Inspection No. 5 Karlsruhe: Army Corps No. 8 Koblenz: - Infantry Regiment No. 28 (2nd Rheinisches) of Groeben, 1914 Army Inspection No. 8 Berlin: Army Corps No. 2 Stettin: - Infantry Regiment No. 49 (6th Pommersches), 1871 - Sanitäts-Kompanie No. 3, 1916 Army Corps No. 5 Posen: - Ulan Regiment No. 10 (Posensches) Prince August of Württemberg, 1916 - Infantry Regiment No. 58 (3rd Posensches), Machine Gun Company No. 3, 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 5 (1st Lower Silesian) of Podbielski, 1918 Army Corps No. 6 Breslau: - Grenadier Regiment No. 10 (1st Silesian) King Friedrich Wilhelm II, 1901 - 1907 - Grenadier Regiment No. 11 (2nd Silesian) King Frederick III, 1907 - Pioneer Battalion No. 6 (Silesian), 1916 Other Army: - Field Artillery Brigade No. 38 Erfurt, 1907 - Landwehr Regiment No. 12 (2nd Brandenburg), 1869 - 1870 - Schutztruppe für Deutsch-Ostafrika, 1906 Landwehr Regiment No. 57, 1871 Troops 1st World War: - Labour Battalion No. 26 Goslar, 1916 - Army Telephone Department No. 18, 1917 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 43, 1917 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 26 Goslar, 1916 - Army Telephone Department No. 18, 1917 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 43, 1917 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 18, 1917 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 43, 1917 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 18, 1917 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 43, 1917 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 18, 1917 102, 1917 - Reinforcement Battalion No. 142, 1917 - Replacement Pioneer Battalion No. 3, 1917 - Stage Medical Depot No. 15, 1917 - Field Artillery Regiment No. 283, 1918 - Telephone Department No. 31, 1917 - Telephone Department No. 4051, 1917 - Flieger-Ersatz-Abteilung Nr. 1 Altenburg, 1918 - Guard-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 7, 1918 - Guard-Train-Ersatz-Abteilung, 1915 - Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 426, 1918 - Landsturm-Bataillon Nr. 21, 1918 - Landstorm Battalion Brandenburg/Havel, 1916 - Landstorm Battalion Guben (III/25), 1916 - 1919 - Landstorm Infantry Battalion Halle/Saale, 1917 - Landstorm Infantry Replacement Battalion Guben (III/52), 1915 - Landwehr Infantry Regiment No. 52, 1914 - Landwehr Infantry Regiment No. 368, 1918 - Mine Search Semi-Flotilla No. 6 Cuxhaven, 1917 - Mine Launcher Battalion No. 3, 1917 - Pioneer Battalion No. 31, 1917 - Pioneer Battalion No. 33, 1916 - Pioneer Replacement Battalion No. 3, 1918 - Pioneer Regiment No. 368, 1918 - Mine Search Semi-Flotilla No. 6 Cuxhaven, 1917 - Pioneer Battalion No. 3, 1917 - Pioneer Battalion No. 33, 1916 - Pioneer Replacement Battalion No. 3, 1918 - Pioneer Regiment No. 3, 1918 36, 1916 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 24, 1918 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 52, 1916 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 61, 1918 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 226, 1915 - Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 267, 1918 - Schiffer-Ersatz-Bataillon Wendisch Sagar, 1918 - Schützen-Regiment No. 10, 1914 Provisional Reichswehr 1919/1920: - Reichswehr-Schützen-Regiment No. 6 Berlin, 1920 - Reichswehr-Schützen-Regiment No. 9, 1920 - Sicherheitswehr Münster, 1921 Reichswehr 1921 - 1935: - Sicherheitswehr Naumburg, 1921..;
Letters from Nitsch to Methodists and I.M.R. about a new beginning after World War I
Neukirchener MissionPrint: Carl Grüninger Nachfolger Ernst Klett, Poster Printing Department, Stuttgart; Size: 43 x 34 cm; Number: 1; Text border black-white-vertical hatched, title accompanied by 2 Iron Crosses
Digital copies of press articles on the subject
History of the Inventory Designer: Generalmajor Description of the Inventory: Mainly diary entries and letters mainly from his service as commander of the Imperial Protection Forces for Cameroon before and during World War I; records of the Cameroon campaign (1914-1916); lecture manuscripts citation method: BArch, N 521/...
- on the history of the central management: The founding meeting of the central management of the charitable association took place on 29 December 1816 in the old castle in Stuttgart. Queen Katharina called together a circle of distinguished men and women to communicate her plan for a "charity society", drawn up with the permission of her husband, King Wilhelm I. After further meetings, the central management of the charity was constituted on 6 Jan 1817, approved by royal decree the following day, and the first public call for the formation of local and regional authorities was made. The new institution grew out of an older root. Already in 1805 a "private society of voluntary friends of the poor" had come together in Stuttgart, which wanted to alleviate the plight of the poor in the city by providing public food and employment. But in the inflation of 1816/17 their strength was by far not sufficient. On the one hand, the population in the flat countryside suffered, on the other hand, the society itself in the city of Stuttgart could only inadequately fulfil its self-imposed task. The members of the central administration were appointed and appointed by the queen, after her death by the king; they were active in an honorary capacity and were supposed to represent all strata of the population. The direct leadership had been reserved for the Queen; her deputy in the chair and her successor as president of the central leadership was Privy Councillor August von Hartmann (1819-1847). The office rooms were provided by the state and the reporters and civil servants were paid from the state treasury. The accounts were therefore subject to State control. Central management was not a government agency. As a special institution under the king's control, it was nevertheless able - in accordance with the queen's wishes - to make far-reaching decisions quickly and found the necessary support from the state administrative authorities during its implementation. It was active in the country through the "District Charity Associations", which were formed in the upper districts from the heads of the church and secular administration and in some cases also through "Local Charity Associations" in individual towns. In the city of Stuttgart, the "Lokalwohltätigkeitverein" (local charity association), which emerged from the "Privatgesellschaft" (private company), took over the tasks of a district charity association (see F 240/1), while a separate district charity association was set up at the Stuttgart office - as was the case with other higher offices. In addition to providing the population with food and clothing in years of need, the fight against beggars on the one hand and job creation on the other formed the focal points of their activities. To stimulate savings activity, the "Württembergische Sparkasse in Stuttgart" was founded with an announcement dated 12 May 1818, the supreme supervision of which was transferred to the central management (see portfolio E 193). On 16.5.1818 the "Royal Army Commission" (see fonds E 192) was established as a collegial state authority to carry out state tasks in the promotion of the poor and the economy. Practically only members of the central management belonged to it, so that a very close personal dovetailing with this was given. The central management not only wanted to eliminate current emergencies, but also to get to the root of the problem. For example, industrial and work schools have already been set up for children in order to promote diligence and manual skills through straw and wood work, to prevent neglect and to help them earn some money. In 1849, these existed in 99 towns of Württemberg and employed 6400 children. Vocational training for the next age group was promoted with apprenticeship contributions. Emergency shelters were built for girls at risk, sick and hard-to-reach people were supported in institutions and homes, trade and commerce were supported with loans. In cooperation with the Central Office for Trade and Commerce, the central management (see inventory E 170) introduced new branches of work into the Württemberg economy and promoted the sale of its products. Since 1823, the impoverished communities have been given targeted help in the form of a special state aid and improvement plan; the implementation of these measures was the responsibility of the Armenkommission. Since the middle of the 19th century, the fight against the consequences of natural disasters and war emergencies, as well as disease control, has slowly come to the fore of the central management's activities. The necessary funds were raised from collections and annual state contributions and have been held in an emergency fund since about 1895. In the time of crisis during and after the First World War, the central management used all means at its disposal to help steer the need. At the same time it was the office of the National Committee for War Invalidity Welfare, the National Foundation for the Survivors and the National Office for Homeworking Unemployed Women, organised large collections of money for the benefit of children's, middle-class, old-age and homeland emergency aid and managed the distribution of donations from foreign relief organisations in cooperation with the district charity associations. In addition, she conducted the business for social charitable associations and for national collections, in particular for the Landesverband für Säuglingsschutz und Jugendfürsorge, the Verein für entlase Strafgefangene, the Heimatnothilfe, the Künstlerhilfe and took over the tasks of numerous welfare associations and foundations that had entered into the inflation period (see For more than a century, the central management of the charitable association was and remained the switchboard for welfare work in Württemberg. The central management has always been in close contact with the institutions and associations and has turned its special attention to them by giving suggestions or making significant contributions to numerous foundations. She promoted them by regular contributions and helped by advice, especially in financial terms. The "Blätter für Wohltätigkeit in Württemberg", today "Blätter der Wohlfahrtspflege", published since 1848, spread far beyond the immediate sphere of activity of the central management, but with the expansion of the state tasks the central management gradually lost its independent position. In 1921 it became an institution under public law under the supervision of the Ministry of the Interior and was now called "Central Management for Charity". During the National Socialist era it was renamed "Zentralleitung für das Stiftungs- und Anstaltswesen" (Central Management for Foundations and Institutions), with corresponding restrictions on its scope of duties, since the "National Socialist People's Welfare Office" reserved for itself the more popular areas, in particular emergency aid ("Winterhilfswerk"). After the end of the 2nd World War, the scope of the central management was expanded again and its sphere of activity extended to the former Prussian administrative district of Hohenzollern. But it could no longer attain its former significance. In 1957 it became the "Landeswohlfahrtswerk für Baden-Württemberg" in the form of a foundation under civil law with its registered office in Stuttgart, Falkertstr. 29. 2. On the history of the registry: the first office of the central management of the charitable association was established in the summer of 1817 in the old castle in Stuttgart, in the same place where the constituent meeting of the central management had taken place on 6 January of the same year. The Chancellery, which was also responsible for the business of the agricultural central office, was run from 1817 to 1857 by Regierungsrat Schmidlin as secretary. In 1820 the Chancellery rooms were moved from the Old Palace to the Ministerial Building of Foreign Affairs. In the end, this had an unfavorable effect on the management of the registry and constantly forced compromises to be made. In 1825, 1837 and 1846 Schmidlin had lists drawn up of the files kept in the registry of the Central Management and the Army Commission. The files of both bodies were kept together. The special files (Aalen to Welzheim) were filed in subjects 1 - 66, the general files in subjects 67 - 84. The list of 1837 contains in contrast to the list of 1825, which only describes the general files, also a list of the existing special files and in the appendix a list of the 15 file fascicles handed over in December 1838 by Geh. Rat von Hartmann from the estate of Queen Katharina to the registry of the central administration. Unfortunately, the 1846 directory is no longer available. The connection between the offices of the central management of the charity association and the central office of the agricultural association (with separate registries), which had existed since 1817, was dissolved in 1850 with the transfer of the latter to the Legion barracks, when a second registry was formed for the latter on the occasion of the internal separation of the central management and the Army Commission in 1855; copyist Rieger had great difficulty in dividing up the files and ordering both registries. Due to the close interdependence of the Central Management and the Armed Commission - the members of the Armed Commission were all members of the Central Management - however, a strict separation was not always necessary at that time (and also with the new indexing 1977 to 1979, see E 191 and E 192).1856 In 1857 Chancellor Keller, successor of Secretary Schmidlin in the chancellery, expanded Schmidlin's file plan to accommodate the rapidly growing registry, whereby in particular the various matters previously united under general headings were separated. In the special files, subjects 1 - 66 increased by six to 72, so that the general files were now distributed among 73 - 114 instead of subjects 67 - 84. The files, which were stored in confined spaces in various rooms, could be found quickly on the basis of a central management file directory produced by Keller around 1860 and supplemented up to the beginning of the 20th century, which lists the file subjects in alphabetical order with fan descriptions. Secretary Kuhn undertook a comprehensive reorganization of the registry in 1874. On the one hand, he eliminated 403 file fascicles, mainly local files, for the old registry, which had been completed in 1877, and on the other hand he systematically structured the remaining registry files, leaving out the old subject classification. Obviously this new plan did not come to fruition due to a chronic lack of space, which the Secretariat complained about in a note dated 10 Dec. 1896 to the Ministry of Finance and asked for new premises to be provided. As a result of the sale of the entire property, these offices had to be vacated in 1906; since no suitable state building was available, the private house Furtbachstraße No. 16 was rented. Probably with regard to the move into the house Furtbachstraße, secretary Kuhn designed around 1903 in a modified form a new registry order, which was also then applied in practice. On 26 June 1914 the central administration finally moved into the house at Falkertstraße 29, which it had acquired from the estate of the Kommerzienrat von Pflaum and set up for its purposes. The new accommodation had a favourable effect on the registry conditions insofar as more extensive file accesses could be accommodated in the subsequent period. These were above all the files of numerous associations dissolved as a result of inflation, as well as files from the management of the Central Management for Social Charitable Associations, committees and large relief actions in the emergency years between the two world wars. The storage of these files took place in loose connection with the remaining files. Around 1936, a provisional list of files ("registry plan") was created for the files of the NS-Volkswohlfahrt (National Socialist People's Welfare) with the inclusion of newer files of the central administration. Archival documents on the history of the registry see E 191 Rubr. III 1c Büschel 4532 (offices) and Büschel 4533 (tools). 3. to the order and distortion of the stock: The old files of the central management were handed over to the Ludwigsburg State Archives by the Landeswohlfahrtswerk in 1968 and 1976. In 1976, individual books and periodicals were placed in the service library of the archive from the outset. State Archives Director Dr. Robert Uhland began in 1968 to organize and record the files and volumes, but was already stuck in the early days with this work because of other obligations. As part of a research contract with the support of the Volkswagenwerk Foundation, the holdings were then transferred from 1977 to 1979 under the direction of Senior State Archives Councillor Dr. Wolfgang Schmierer by the scientific director of the Volkswagenwerk Foundation. Employees Dr. Hans Ewald Kessler in cooperation with the archive employees Erwin Biemann and Helga Hecht. The final works, which included the inventory classification and revision of the title records, were carried out from 1981 to 1982 for the inventory group A (files and volumes), Amtsrat Karl Hofer, and for the inventory group B (printed matter), Archivoberinspektorin Regina Glatzle. Since at the beginning of the indexing there were no finding aids available, apart from a very inaccurate index of the older archives, especially for the older ones, it was also not possible to use the older registry data, some of which still existed. The old registers (E 191, Rubr. III 1b Bü 5992 - 5998) were only found during the indexing process. The extensive files and volumes were divided in the course of the indexing work and divorced into the holdings E 191 (central management of the charitable association), E 192 (Armenkommission) and E 193 (central management of the Sparkasse für Württemberg). The external files burst in the registry were excavated and integrated as independent holdings in accordance with their provenance into the corresponding holdings series of the State Archives F 240/1 (Lokalwohltätigkeitsverein Stuttgart), F 240/2 (Bezirkswohltätigkeitsverein Cannstatt), PL 408 (Wichernhaus Stuttgart), PL 409 (Verein zur Unterstützung älterer Honoratiorentöchter), PL 410 (association for artificial limbs), PL 411 (association for worker colonies), PL 412 (association for folk sanatoriums), PL 413 (national association for infant protection and youth welfare), PL 416 (Paulinenverein), PL 417 (Comité zur Beschaffung von Arbeit), PL 418 (association for shameful house arms), PL 419 (harvest association) and PL 705 (estate Heller). All these holdings contain files of originally independent organisations which have been taken over by the central management over time. The inventory E 193 was arranged and registered as a separate file group, which originated at the central management, but concerned its own closed field of work, as a separate file group.15 file fascicles originate from the estate of Queen Katharina and were handed over to the registry of the central management in the year 1838 by Privy Councillor v. Hartmann: they are incorporated in the majority in section I 3 of the inventory E 191. A list of these files is attached to the registry of 1837. E 191 was indexed in individual connected groups according to numerus currens, whereby the title records could only be arranged objectively after completion of the indexing.After several registration plans had been valid for the files of the central management, also different stock groups were not registered by these, the stock E 191 was arranged according to a new stock systematics under consideration of the business circles of the central management and preservation of old registration structures. the stock contains a large number of brochures, above all annual reports and statutes of socially active institutions and associations from the whole German-speaking area. As far as these were collected independently, they were registered under the inventory department B, further are in the associated files. Duplicates as well as the periodical "Blätter für das Armenwesen" and "Blätter der Zentralleitung für Wohltätigkeit in Württemberg", volumes 1890 - 1891, 1896 - 1922 and 1925 - 1939, were taken over to a large extent into the collections (JL 415) or into the service library of the State Archives Ludwigsburg. 7107 numbers in the volume of 97 m were included in the holdings E 191. However, 264 numbers are not documented by subsequent summarization of tufts.Ludwigsburg, March 1982Gez. Dr. Schmierer Supplement 2006: The documents received in 2001, 2004 and 2005 from the Baden-Württemberg Welfare Office were incorporated into the inventory in 2005 (= E 191 Bü 7445-7499).Ludwigsburg, July 2006W. Schneider Supplement 2013: In the course of packaging the inventory in 2010, title recordings and archive units were systematically compared and some errors and inconsistencies were corrected. Stephen Molitor
Description of the holdings: The head of the army archives was the head of archives for the Wehrmacht part of the army with its official seat in Potsdam. The chief of the army archives was in charge of the army archives in Potsdam, Vienna, Munich, Dresden and Stuttgart, the army archives branches in Prague and Gdansk, as well as the representatives in the occupied territories and the Wehrmacht sighting station for prey files. The Chief of the Army Archives was responsible for the recording of files of the High Command of the Wehrmacht, of the High Command of the Army with subordinate offices, of the command authorities, troops, administrative authorities and other institutions of the army (cf. HDv. 30 Correspondence and Business Transactions of the Wehrmacht, Appendix 2). The User Regulations regulated the lending and use of the Army Archives (cf. BArch RH 18/437). After three years of negotiations, the Reich and Prussian Minister of the Interior and the Reich War Minister agreed in September 1936 that the military files should be taken over by the High Command of the Army. On April 1, 1937, the chief of the army archives and the army archives under his command took over the military archives, which since 1919 had been administered by the Reichsarchiv, its branches in Dresden and Stuttgart, and the war archives in Munich. The Chief of the Army Archives was subordinate to the Chief Quartermaster V in the General Staff of the Army until 1942. With the reorientation of the writing of war history, Hitler subordinated the Chief of the Army Archives to the Commissioner of the Führer for Military History, Colonel Scherff, with effect from 1 July 1942. From 1937 to 1942 Friedrich von Rabenau was the chief of the army archives, from 1942 until the end of the war Karl Ruppert, who had been in charge of the Potsdam army archives since 1937. The management of the Heeresarchiv Potsdam and the office of Chief of Army Archives were merged in 1943. Heeresarchiv Potsdam The Heeresarchiv Potsdam was divided into three departments. Department A administered the Brandenburg-Prussian Army Archives, the archives of which ran from the 17th century until the dissolution of the Prussian army in 1920. Department B kept the files of the volunteer formations formed after World War I and of the Reichswehr. Section C was intended for the recording of Wehrmacht files, i.e. from 1935 with the re-establishment of military sovereignty. The departments of the Heeresarchiv Potsdam were divided into subject areas. Other organisational units included the collections, estates, maps and the picture collection. In 1935, the Berlin Department of the Reichsarchiv (especially the Prussian War Ministry after 1867) and the Central Office of Records for War Losses and War Graves were also subordinated to the Heeresarchiv Potsdam. The Heeresarchiv Potsdam continuously took over the war diaries of all command authorities and troops as well as the court files of the field and war courts in the court file collection centre. The file collection centre West in Berlin-Wannsee mainly recorded loot files from various military offices in France. The organisational structure of the Heeresarchiv Potsdam was not uniform and changed several times until 1945. In territorial matters, the Heeresarchiv Potsdam was bound by the instructions of the commander in Wehrkreis III (Berlin). A British air raid on Potsdam on 14 April 1945 hit the service and magazine building of the chief of the army archives and the army archive Potsdam hard. The holdings of the Brandenburg-Prussian Army Archives were almost destroyed. This concerned, among other things, the files of the Prussian military cabinet, the files of the Prussian Ministry of War, the war files of the unification wars and the most important war diaries with attachments from the First World War. The personal records of the Prussian army and the Reichswehr are considered almost completely destroyed. In 1943 the Heeresarchiv Potsdam outsourced the department for the recording of war diaries to Liegnitz in Silesia. At the end of 1944 this branch was moved back to Potsdam. Later, the Heeresarchiv Potsdam outsourced large quantities of its archives. Shortly before the enclosure of Berlin, the war diaries of the Second World War and a few particularly valuable older files were transferred to Blankenburg in the Harz Mountains and to Bad Reichenhall or Kufstein in "two transports of 4-6 railway wagons each" (Poll). The archives in Blankenburg were confiscated by the Western Allies. These were the war diaries of the Army High Commands, the General Commands, the divisions and other army departments as well as parts of older files. The war diaries of top army authorities were burned in Reichenhall and Kufstein on the orders of Scherff, the Führer's representative for military historiography. The destruction of older files, estates and collections in Reichenhall could be prevented by the responsible official. Heeresarchiv Wien The Chief of the Army Archives took over the War Archive Vienna after the integration of Austria in 1938. It was the central military archive of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy until 1918 and of the Republic of Austria until 1938. After the beginning of World War II, the Army Archives Vienna was assigned the Southeast Files Collection Point for the collection of loot files from the Southeast region. In territorial matters the Army Archives Vienna was bound to the instructions of the commander in the military district XVII (Vienna). Today the War Archives are under the control of the Austrian State Archives. Heeresarchiv München After the foundation of the Reichsarchiv in 1919, the Kriegsarchiv München was able to maintain its status as an independent Bavarian archive and was not subordinated to the Reichsarchiv as a branch of the Reichsarchiv, as were the archives in Dresden and Stuttgart. In 1937, the head of the Heeresarchiv took over the Kriegsarchiv München as the Heeresarchiv München. The Army Archives Munich covered the entire Bavarian military tradition from about 1650 to 1920. After the beginning of World War II, the Army Archives Munich was assigned the file collection point South, in particular for the recording of Italian booty files. In territorial matters, the Heeresarchiv München was bound by the instructions of the commander in Wehrkreis VII (Munich). After the Second World War, the Kriegsarchiv München was subordinated to the Bavarian Hauptstaatsarchiv. Despite losses during the war, the majority of the holdings have been preserved and enable source research into military history before 1919 as a replacement for the lost archive of the Potsdam Army Archives. Army Archives Dresden In 1937, the head of the army archives took over the Dresden branch of the Reichsarchiv from the Reichsarchiv as the Dresden Army Archives. This service was responsible for the stocks of the Saxon Army (XII. (I. Royal Saxon) Army Corps and XIX. (II. Royal Saxon Army Corps). The holdings of the Army Archives Dresden covered a period from 1830 - 1919 without a clear demarcation between the holdings and the Main State Archives Dresden. In territorial matters the Army Archives Dresden was bound to the instructions of the commander in the Military District IV (Dresden). During the Anglo-American air raid on Dresden on 13 February 1945, the personal documents of the Saxon army suffered losses. Despite losses during the war, the majority of the holdings have been preserved and enable source research for military history before 1919 as a replacement for the lost archive of the Potsdam Army Archives. The government of the USSR returned the preserved holdings of the Dresden Army Archives to the government of the GDR after the war. Until reunification they were administered in the military archives of the GDR in Potsdam. The Bundesarchiv-Militärarchiv transferred the holdings to the Hauptstaatsarchiv Dresden in 1991. Heeresarchiv Stuttgart The head of the army archives took over the Reichsarchiv branch Stuttgart from the Reichsarchiv in 1937 as Heeresarchiv Stuttgart. This office was responsible for the holdings of the Württemberg Army Corps (XIII (Royal Württemberg Army Corps) and the XIV (Grand Ducal Baden Army Corps). In territorial matters the Heeresarchiv Stuttgart was bound to the instructions of the commander in the Wehrkreis V (Stuttgart). The Heeresarchiv Stuttgart has been preserved without war losses and, as a replacement for the lost records of the Heeresarchiv Potsdam, enables source research for military history before 1919. Today the Heeresarchiv Stuttgart is subordinated to the Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart. The archives of the XIV (Grand Ducal Baden) Army Corps are stored in the General State Archive in Karlsruhe, although the Grand Duchy of Baden from 1871-1919, in contrast to Bavaria, Saxony and Württemberg, did not have a military reserve right. Army Archives Prague Branch The Army Archives Prague branch administered the former Czech army archives and recorded archival material of the Austro-Hungarian army in Bohemia and Moravia. It was in charge of supplementing the official archival material with collections, making the holdings available for use by Wehrmacht offices, and providing information. In territorial matters, the Army Archives Prague branch was bound to the instructions of the Wehrmacht Plenipotentiary at the Reich Protector in Bohemia and Moravia (Wehrkreisbefehlshaber in Böhmen und Mähren). The Gdansk Army Archives Branch The Gdansk Army Archives Branch captured the military archives captured during the Eastern campaigns, in particular the Polish Army Archives. It had to record this material, make it usable and provide information from the files. In territorial matters, the Gdansk Army Archives Branch was bound by the instructions of the Commander of Military District XX (Gdansk). The Commissioner of the Chief of Army Archives at the Military Commander in France The Commissioner of the Chief of Army Archives at the Military Commander in France in Paris had to supervise and evaluate the French army archives. He was to inventory sources on German history, copy documents and collect contemporary historical material. The Commissioner of the Chief of the Army Archives at the Military Commander in Belgium and Northern France The Commissioner of the Chief of the Army Archives at the Military Commander in Belgium and Northern France in Brussels was to evaluate the Belgian Army Archives, enable their use by German agencies, inventorise sources on German history, copy documents and collect material on contemporary history. The Commissioner of the Chief of the Army Archives in Alsace-Lorraine The Commissioner of the Chief of the Army Archives in Alsace-Lorraine in Metz was concerned with the re-registration of German army files, the sighting of French prey files, in particular the Maginot Line, and the provision of files for Wehrmacht offices. The Commissioner of the Chief of Army Archives in the Netherlands The Commissioner of the Chief of Army Archives in the Netherlands, based in The Hague, was responsible for overseeing and evaluating the Dutch army archives. He was to inventory sources on German history, copy documents and collect contemporary historical material. The Commissioner of the Chief of Army Archives at the Commander of the German Forces in Denmark The Commissioner of the Chief of Army Archives at the Commander of the German Forces in Denmark, based in Copenhagen, was to evaluate the Danish Army Archives and collect material on contemporary history. The Commissioner of the Chief of the Army Archives at the Wehrmacht Commander Norway The Commissioner of the Chief of the Army Archives at the Wehrmacht Commander Norway in Oslo took over the management of the Norwegian Army Archives, gave information to German offices and collected contemporary historical material. The Commissioner of the Chief of the Army Archives in Italy The Commissioner of the Chief of the Army Archives in Italy was commissioned, after the fall of Italy and the invasion of the Wehrmacht in Italy in 1943, to secure the files of the Italian army for the writing of war history and for evaluation by Wehrmacht offices. The Commissioner of the Chief of Army Archives in Athens After the occupation of Greece, the Commissioner of the Chief of Army Archives in Athens was responsible for the inspection and safeguarding of the Greek Army records as well as an archival-military inventory. The Commissioner of the Chief of Army Archives in Belgrade The Commissioner of the Chief of Army Archives in Belgrade evaluated the Yugoslavian Army files, provided military replacement services, pension offices and information on resettlement issues. Furthermore, he should collect contemporary historical material. The Commissioner of the Chief of Army Archives at the Wehrmacht Commander Ostland The Commissioner of the Chief of Army Archives at the Wehrmacht Commander Ostland in Riga administered and evaluated the military archives and holdings in Riga, Kaunas, Vilnius. He provided information for the military replacement services and recorded German and Polish army files. Furthermore, he should collect contemporary historical material. The Commissioner of the Chief of Army Archives at the Wehrmacht Commander Ukraine The Commissioner of the Chief of Army Archives at the Wehrmacht Commander Ukraine in Kiev had to evaluate the military archives in Kiev and Kharkov and to record Austrian and Polish military files. He was involved with the collection of contemporary historical material. The Commissioner of the Chief of Army Archives at the Commanding General of the Security Forces and Commander in the Army Area North The Commissioner of the Chief of Army Archives at the Commanding General of the Security Forces and Commander in the Army Area North had to evaluate the seized military archives and collect historical material. The Commissioner of the Chief of Army Archives at the Commander of the Rear Army Area Center The Commissioner of the Chief of Army Archives at the Commander of the Rear Army Area Center had to evaluate the seized military archives and collect historical material. Wehrmacht-Sichtungsstelle für Beuteakten The Wehrmacht-Sichtungsstelle für Beuteakten checked the loot files arriving from the front for their salary and forwarded them to Wehrmacht offices, as far as the files seemed important to them for further warfare. In territorial matters, the Wehrmacht sighting post for loot files was bound to the instructions of the commander in Wehrkreis III (Berlin). Preprovenience: Reichsarchiv Content characterization: The files of the RH 18 holdings Chief of Army Archives contain personal and material files of the "Chief of Army Archives" and almost all offices subordinated to him. In addition, the inventory contains regulations and announcements of the respective territorially competent command authority, e.g. of the military commander in France or of the commander in Wehrkreis VII (Munich). The records of the holdings of the Heeresarchiv Potsdam are assigned to the holdings. This includes finding aids of the registries, delivery directories and finding aids of the army archives. These records provide an overview of the numbers and contents of the former holdings and supplement the lost holdings of the Prussian army with organisational documents. The lists of estates contain biographical information. A special feature of the RH 18 collection are its personnel files, which, in contrast to most other personal documents of the Wehrmacht, have not been removed from the collection. The personnel files were classified by the respective services. The permanent exhibition of the Heeresarchiv Potsdam is virtually reconstructed in the online find book for RH 18, arranged according to display cases or themes. War diaries, orders, military conventions, correspondence between well-known generals and contemporary collection material from 1679 until after the end of the First World War were included in the Archivalienschau by the staff of the Heeresarchiv Potsdam. The documents have been filed thematically in display cases. On the reverse side of the documents the responsible subject area of the Heeresarchiv Potsdam, the holdings and the serial number are indicated. The Federal Archives and Military Archives do not present these archival records in their original form, but in microfiches. A large part of the documents was in stock MSg 101, which was completely re-signed to RH 18. State of development: Online-Findbuch Scope, Explanation: 2482 AE Citation method: BArch, RH 18/...
Contains : The collection contains all sources of medical history, except documents directly related to the history of the Heinrich-Heine-University. The core of the collection goes back to those sources that Prof. Dr. Hans Schadewaldt acquired for the Institute for the History of Medicine. So far, the military medical part of the collection has been of particular interest, for which there is also a separate partial index. The main components of the military medical collections are the following estates or partial estates: 1. estates of Elisabeth and Walter von Oettingen 2. estates of Erich Hippke 3. estates of Oberstabsarzt Schmidt The estates of Elisabeth and Walter von Oettingen (1873-1944) mainly contain material for the use of the hospital train L - Crown Princess Cecilie - which the couple operated for the Red Cross during the First World War. In addition, there are some personal documents and the memoirs of Walter von Oettingen, as well as photos from wartime, which were included in the photo collection. The Oettingen estate also includes 500 to 600 glass plate negatives (some coloured) from the time of the First World War and earlier. These are photographs from the various wars in which the Oettingen couple operated field hospitals (fonds 8/ 6). The estate of General Surgeon Dr. Erich Hippke (1888-1969) mainly contains material from his time as Inspector of the Air Force Medical Service, 1941-1944. The files are mainly private files, containing comparatively many lecture manuscripts and photographs of medical facilities. The holdings include 143 photographs not listed here, which have been transferred to the photo collection of the University Archives. These are mainly photographs from the Hippke estate showing medical facilities and medical units. In addition there are photographs of the Eastern Front 1942/43 and from Southern Europe. Unfortunately, it is not possible to identify the descendant, Colonel Schmidt, more precisely (information from the Bundesarchiv-Militärarchiv dated 23.1.2002). From 1942 to 1944 Schmidt was Chief Medical Officer of the Chief of the Military Administrative District B - Southwest France - based in Angers. From this time at least parts of his hand files as well as a service diary are handed down. The collection of Prof. Dr. Gerhard Rose (1896-1992), accused in the Nuremberg Doctors' Trial, was the result of correspondence with Hans Schadewaldt in the 1970s and 1980s and therefore does not constitute a genuine estate. In many places it contains war memories of the Wehrmacht's medical service during the Second World War. As far as further collection material that fits into the context of the collection is taken over, it will be incorporated here. From the contents: World War I; World War II; 100th anniversary celebration; Collections of Orders; Christian Bruhn; German Society of Dentistry, Oral Medicine and Maxillofacial Medicine; History of Medicine in Düsseldorf; Occupational Health; Gynaecology and Obstetrics; Women's Milk Collection Centres (Marie-Elise Kayser); Management; History of Medicine; Gesolei; Julius Köhl Hand Files (Chairman 1931-1933); Treasury and Accounting Matters; Lebensborn e.V.Air Force Medical Services; Medical Academy; Military Medicine; Military Medicine in General; Erich Hippke's Succession and Handfiles; Meinardus's Succession and Handfiles (Italy and Eastern Front); Schmidt's Succession and Handfiles; National Socialism; Oettingen Branch; Nuremberg Medical Process/War Crimes; Patients; Düsseldorf Patient Index; Pharmacy and medical products; Prizes and awards; Publications; Gerhard Rose Collection; Wehrmacht medical supplies; Staff of Chief Medical Officer; University of Düsseldorf; Düsseldorf Doctors' Association; Wehrmacht brothel; Wehrmacht medical supplies in general; West German Jaw Clinic; Dentistry; Civil Administration.
Contains among other things: Reports by German prisoners of war in Dahomey, 1914- 1915 Report by Dr. W. Leuze on his experiences as a prisoner of war in Africa and Europe, 1916
- Speech by Professor Gustav Schmoller in the Philharmonie on "The connection between economic and colonial policy", from: Tägliche Rundschau, November 29 [18]99
- 50 years of German colonization. On the founding day of the "Society for German Colonization", from: Kreuzzeitung, March 28, 1934 (No. 74), with illus.
- German East Africa, an English colony? Images of a bygone era from stolen German land, from: BZ [?], February 17, 1919, with illus.
- The colonial question, from: Der Reichsbote (Vol. 52), No. 27 of February 1, 1924, No. 28 of February 2, 1924, No. 31 of February 6, 1924, No. 33 of February 8, 1924
- Illustrations from "Meyers Historisch-Geographischer Kalender", 1926.
Publisher: Crown Prince Wilhelm of Prussia; Berlin; Graphic: B [...]; print: E. Heckendorff, Berlin; size: 66 x 44 cm; number 1; last text line red; between title and text in black, red, brown and olive in oval frame a colonial soldier waving the imperial flag
who was expelled from Congo to South Africa at the outbreak of World War I and has lived in Germany again since 1919. Contains among others: not submitted questionnaire for the committee for expelled Reich Germans from Great Britain, Ireland and the British colonies; account with the Deutsche Afrika-Bank and other banks; correspondence with a farm in Deutsch-Südwestafrika in the Congo.
Leaflets, pamphlets, invitations, programmes, commemorative publications, newspapers, articles, disputes, memoranda, speeches, occasional poems - each unique - about Cologne, its past and history. I. Imperial city; Icewalk from 1784, funeral service for Emperor Leopold II, Imperial Post Office in Cologne, pamphlet of the evangelicals against mayor and council in Cologne (Wetzlar 1715), municipal lottery, occasional poems for weddings, individual personalities (Jan von Werth, Frhr. Theodor Steffan von Neuhoff); II. Time of the French occupation 1794-1815: opening of the Protestant church (1802), educational affairs (Collége de Cologne, Université), Heshuisian inheritance, secularization, Peace of Tilsit, election of the department 1804; assignates, dentists, liberation wars; successor society of the society at Wirz, Neumarkt (1813); III. Prussian period (1815-1945): Visit of members of the Prussian royal house, imperial birthday celebrations, cathedral, cathedral building, cathedral completion celebration 1880, cathedral building association; Hohenzollern bridge, southern bridge, monument to Friedrich Wilhelm III, Laying of the foundation stone of the Rhine. Appellhofs (1824), building festival for the town hall (1913), town hall, provost's house at St. Maria ad Gradus; suburbs (terrain in Marienburg, parish St. Marien, Kalk: Fabriken, Arbeiter, 1903); travel brochures, city maps, articles on Cologne for tourism; commemorative and public holidays; revolution 1848; parties, elections (centre, liberal parties, social democratic party); Reichstag elections, city elections; city announcements/publications, decrees concerning the city of Cologne. Debt management (1824), rules of procedure of the city council, census, distribution of business in the administration; announcements of the news office; general comptoir or table calendar 1814-1829 (incomplete); programmes of the Konzertgesellschaft Köln and the Gürzenich concerts (1849-1933); programmes of the chamber music concerts (1897-1914); programmes of the Musikalische Gesellschaft (1900-1916), music festivals, etc. Lower Rhine Music Festivals (1844-1910); Cologne Theater Almanach (1904-1908), City Theater, Schauspielhaus, including program booklets and leaflets; Theater Millowitsch; musical performances at celebrations and festivals, concert programs; Cologne Arts and Crafts Association (Annual Report 1912); Rheinisch-Westfälisches Wirtschaftsarchiv: Statutes, Rules of Procedure 1907; Exhibitions, etc. Art in Cologne private possession (1916), Carstan's Panoptikum (1888), German Art Exhibition, Cologne 1906, Deutsche Werkbund-Ausstellung 1914, Exhibition for War Welfare Cologne 1916; Handelshochschule Köln; university courses in Brussels (1918); Women's university studies for social professions (1916/17); music conservatory (1913); grammar schools, further education schools, elementary schools, weaving school in Mülheim, Waldschulhof Brück (1917), elementary school teachers' seminar; scientific conferences: 43. Meeting of German Philologists and Schoolmen 1895, IX. Annual meeting of the Association of Bathing Professionals 1910, 12th Association Day of the Association of German Professional Fire Brigades 1912; occasional poems for family celebrations, weddings; associations; programmes, membership cards, diplomas, statutes of health insurance funds and death funds; Catholic Church: associations, parishes, saints and patrons; Protestant Church: religious service order or Death ceremonies for the chief president Count Solms-Laubach (1822), for Moritz Bölling (1824); inauguration of the new synagogue, Glockengasse (1861); military: regimental celebrations, forbidden streets and restaurants (before 1914); memorandums about the garrison Cologne (1818); food supply in the First World War: food stamps, bread and commodity books, ration coupons and forms, etc.a. for coal purchasing; Einkaufs-Gesellschaft Rhein-Mosel m. b. H.Economy: Stadtsparkasse, cattle market in Cologne, stock exchange, beer price increase 1911; individual commercial enterprises, commercial and business buildings, hotels: brochures, letterheads, advertising cards and leaflets, price lists, statutes; shipping: Rhine shipping regulations, timetables, price lists, memorandums; main post office building, inauguration 1893; Rheinische Eisenbahn, Köln-Gießener Eisenbahn; German-French War 1870/71; First World War, etc.a. Leaflets, war loans, field letters, war poems; cruisers "Cologne"; natural disasters: Rhine floods, railway accident in Mülheim in 1910, hurricanes; social affairs: charity fair, asylum for male homeless people, possibly home for working young girls, invalidity and old-age insurance; St. Marien-Hospital; Sports: clubs, sports facilities, gymnastics festivals; Carnival: programs, carnival newspapers, - songs, - poems; celebrations, ceremonies for imperial birthdays, enthronements of archbishops, celebrations of other personalities; IV. Weimar Republic and National Socialism: floods; churches, treasure chambers; cathedral; individual buildings, monuments, including the old town, town hall, Gürzenich, Haus zum großen Rosendal, Mühlengasse; Revolution 1918: workers' and soldiers' council; gifts, honorary citizenship to NS greats; hanged forced laborers; bank robber Gebrüder Heidger (1928); municipal and other official publications concerning the Weimar Republic and National Socialism. Luftschutz, NSRechtsbetreuungsstelle; Newsletter of the Welfare Office 1937, 1938; Kameradschaftsdienst der Verwaltung für Wirtschaftsfürsorge, Jugendpflege und Sport 1940, 1943, 1944; Müllabfuhr und Müllverwertungsanstalt, Wirtschaftspolitik, Industrieansiedlung, Eingemeindung von Worringen, Erweiterung des Stadtgebiets; political parties: Advertising flyers for elections, pins, badges of DNVP, NSDAP, SPD, centre; camouflage letters of the KPD; appeals, rallies of various political groups, including the Reich Committee for the German Referendum (against the Young Plan, 1929), Reich Presidential Election, referendum in the Saar region, Working Committee of German Associations (against the Treaty of Versailles); Municipal Stages: Periodical "Die Tribüne", 1929-1940, annual reports 1939-1944, programme and cast sheets for performances in the opera house and the Schauspielhaus, also in the Kammerspiele; Lower Rhine music festivals; galleries (Dr. Becker, Goyert), Kölnischer Kunstverein: Invitations to exhibitions (1934-1938), circulars to members; art auctions at Fa. Math. Lempertz (1925-1931); music performances, concerts: Kölner Männer-Gesang-Verein, municipal orchestra, concerts of young artists, Concert Society Cologne; Millennium Exhibition 1925; museums: Wallraf-Richartz-Museum, Rautenstrauch-Joest-Museum, Kunstgewerbemuseum (among others monuments of old Russian painting, 1929), Schnütgen-Museum, art exhibitions, among others. Arno Breker (NSDAP-Gaupropaganda-Amt Gau Köln-Aachen), exhibition of works by West German artists (Deutsche Arbeitsfront), Richard Seewald, Deutscher Künstlerbund, Ausstellungsgemeinschaft Kölner Maler; universities, including the University of Cologne (lecture timetables, new building, anniversary 1938), Hochschule für Musik bzw. Conservatory of Music in Cologne; Reich activity reports of the foreign office of the lecturers of the German universities and colleges (1939-1942); Lower Rhine music festivals; scientific and cultural institutions and events and events in the region.a. Petrarca-Haus, German-Italian Cultural Institute, Volksbildungsstätte Köln, German-Dutch Institute, Cologne Meisterschule, Vereinigung für rechts- und staatswissenschaftliche Fortbildung in Köln, Austrian Weeks, Kampfbund für deutsche Kultur e.V.Conferences (Westdeutscher Archivtag 1939, Deutsche Anthropologische Gesellschaft 1927, Rheinische Siedlungstage 1925, Conference for Monument Conservation and Cultural Heritage Protection, Grenzland-Kundgebung der Beamten der Westmark, Cologne 1933, Internationaler Brieftauben-Züchter- Kongress (IBRA) 1939; Schools: Invitations, Testimonials Concerning the German Anthropological Society 1927, Rheinische Siedlungstage 1925, Conference for the Preservation of Monuments and Cultural Heritage, Borderland Demonstration of the Officials of the Westmark, Cologne 1933, Internationaler Brieftauben-Züchter-Kongreß (IBRA) 1939; Schools: Invitations, Testimonials Concerning the German Anthropological Society 1927, Rheinische Siedlungstagestage 1925, Conference for the Preservation of Monuments and Cultural Heritage, Borderland Demonstration of the Officials of the Westmark, Cologne 1933, International Brieftauben Congress (IBRA) 1939) Elementary schools, vocational schools, grammar schools; Sports: Vaterländische Festspiele 1924, Zweckverband für Leibesübungen Groß-Köln, 14th German Gymnastics Festival 1928, II German Fighting Games 1926, Leichtathletik-Welt- und Länderkämpfe, Westdeutscher Spielverband, Hockey-Damen-Länderspiel Deutschland- Australien 1930, Excelsior-Club Köln e.V., XII. Bannerspiele der weiblichen Jugend der Rheinprovinz 1926; Catholic Church (official announcements and publications, e.g. Kirchlicher Anzeiger für die Erzdiözese Köln; pamphlets; programme, prayer slips); British occupation, French colonial troops in the Rhineland, identity cards, passports; British World War I pamphlets; Liberation celebration in Cologne 1926; Second World War: appeals, leaflets concerning the Second World War; information leaflets concerning the Second World War: "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution", "The German Revolution". Air raids, defence, low-flying combat, darkening, etc.; newspaper articles about air raids on Cologne; advertising: leaflets, leaflets of the advertising office, the Cologne Week publishing house and the Cologne Tourist Association for Cologne, including the surrounding area and the Rhine Valley; invitations, menus to receptions and meals of the Lord Mayor Adenauer (1927-1929); pay slips, work certificates, work books of Cologne companies; Cologne Trade Fair: Programmes, brochures, adhesive stamps, catalogues for trade fairs and exhibitions (1924-1933); food stamps and cards for World War I; announcements; clothing cards, basic cards for normal consumers for World War II; vouchers for the city of Cologne (emergency money) from 1920-1923, anniversary vouchers for Gewerbebank eGmbH Köln-Mülheim, also for Dellbrücker Volksbank eGmbH; savings banks: Annual reports of the Sparkasse der Hansestadt Köln; documents, savings books of the Spar- und Darlehnskasse Köln-Dünnwald, the Kreissparkasse des Landkreises Köln, Bergheim und Mülheim, also the branch Köln-Worringen, the Bank des Rheinischen Bankverein/Rheinischen Bauernbank; Köln-Bonner-Eisenbahnen: Annual reports, balance sheets (1939-1941); trams: Annual Report, Annual Report (1939, 1940), Ticket; Köln-Frechen-Benzelrather Eisenbahn: Tariffs; Shipping: Preussisch-Rheinische Dampfschiffahrts-Gesellschaft zu Köln, Dampfschiffahrtsgesellschaft für den Nieder- und Mittelrhein zu Düsseldorf (Annual Reports 1938-1940), Köln- Düsseldorfer Rheindampfschiffahrt, Weber-Schiff (Timetables); Kraftverkehr Wupper-Sieg AG, Wipperfürth (Annual Reports 1939, 1940, Advertising Brochure 1937); Advertising brochure of the Airport Administration Cologne (1929); Individual Companies: House announcements, advertising leaflets, cards, brochures, adhesive stamps, receipts from industrial companies (Ford Motor Company AG, Glanzstoff- Courtaulds GmbH, Herbig-Haarhaus, department stores). Department store Carl Peters, insurance companies, newspapers, publishing houses, bookstores, craft businesses, shops (tobacco shops); Cologne bridges (Mülheimer bridge), post office, restaurants, hotels; invitations to festivals, events, anniversaries of associations, programmes; professional associations; cooperatives (Cologne-Lindenthal cooperative savings and building association (1930-1938); social affairs: Cologne emergency aid, housing assistance, sending of children (mostly official printed matter); collecting cards from Cologne and other companies, above all from the food and luxury food industries, such as coffee and tobacco companies, etc.a. the companies Haus Neuerburg, Himmelreich Kaffee, Stollwerk AG, König
History of the Inventory Designer: Under the name Rechnungshof des Norddeutschen Bund (Court of Audit of the North German Confederation), the Prussian Chamber of Upper Legislation took control of the budget of the German Reich for the financial years 1867-1869 for the first time, renaming the authority the Rechnungshof des Deutschen Reiches (Court of Audit of the German Reich). In addition to controlling the Reich's budget, the Oberrechnungskammer, in its function as Court of Audit, was responsible for auditing the budget of Alsace-Lorraine (1874-1919) and for controlling the budget of the protectorate (since 1892/95 Africa, since 1898 all protectorates). The Court of Audit (Rechungshof, RH) was chaired by the Chief President of the Chamber of Appeal; its members were appointed by the Emperor at the suggestion of the Federal Council. The task of auditing the accounts of the Reich's budget had to be transferred to the Upper Chamber of Accounts by repeated individual legislation, usually on an annual basis. Article 86 p. 2 of the Weimar Constitution ("The audit of accounts is regulated by the Reich Law") established the audit of accounts for the Reich Administration under constitutional law. The Reich Budget Code of 31.12.1922 accordingly provided for the fundamental audit of the Reich budget by the Court of Audit of the German Reich (legalization of the audit of the "economic efficiency of the administration"). Thus, for the first time, auditing was fixed as a right of the state; at the same time, the establishment of the Court of Audit as an independent Reich authority independent of the Reich government was regulated. The Imperial Budget Code determined - as an important objective of the Court of Audit after examination of the submitted annual accounts - to prepare memoranda on the most important audit results and to submit proposals to the Imperial Government for the amendment and interpretation of laws in order to remedy identified deficiencies in the administration. The Court of Audit of the Weimar Republic represented a college of President, Directors and Councillors, which decided all fundamental matters by majority vote in the Plenary Assembly. In order to decide on matters that were limited in scope and only concerned individual administrative areas, the Reich Budget Code granted the formation of senates consisting of at least 3 members. In addition, the expert activity could be carried out at the request of the Reich Ministers, the Reich Parliament and the Reich Council; in addition, companies with their own legal personality could also be audited by the Court of Audit. The President and the other members of the Court of Audit were now appointed by the President of the Reich, countersigned by the Reich Minister of Finance. The President of the Court of Audit was also responsible for the management of the Prussian Chamber of Accounts. From October 1, 1922, however, he no longer headed the Prussian but the Reichsbehörde full-time. Presidents of the Court of Audit were: 1869-1890: Karl Ewald von Stünzner 1890-1898: Arthur Paul Ferdinand von Wolff 1898-1914: Eduard Ludwig Karl von Magdeburg 1914-1922: Ernst Holz 1922-1938 Friedrich Ernst Moritz Saemisch 1938-1945 Heinrich Müller 1922 was also appointed Reichssparkommissara with the task, together with the Reich Minister of Finance, of examining the entire budget and drawing up expert opinions on it. He was supported by the savings committee of the Reichstag. In December 1933 this office was closed again and the tasks were transferred to the new presidential department of the Court of Audit. As the supreme audit and control authority, the Court of Audit was responsible for supervising the entire Reich budget by examining the budget accounts, including the unscheduled income and expenditure of all Reich administrations, the accounts for the entire non-monetary property of the Reich as well as the books and accounting documents of the enterprises of the Reich. Since the end of the First World War, the Court of Audit has also had to increasingly control the use of Reich funds, which flowed into the private economy in the form of loans, credits, guarantees, subsidies and participations, by including both important business enterprises and a rich country of smaller enterprises in its audit area. The internal structure of the RH remained essentially unchanged throughout its existence. It was divided into the presidential department and a changing number of audit departments, to which the authorities and companies to be audited were allocated according to objective criteria. For the collection and cartographic indexing of laws, ordinances, administrative provisions, official regulations and other documents required for auditing the accounts, a news agency was attached to the Presidential Department, which from 1937 was known as the "Archive". In 1933 the Court of Audit was confirmed as an independent supreme Reich authority vis-à-vis the Reich government, but the previous procedure of majority decisions was abolished and the President was largely granted authority to issue directives to all organs of the Court of Audit. With the exception of the Wehrmacht control and the use audit of state subsidies to the NSDAP, the Court was initially able to perform its duties within the framework of financial control to the full extent even after 1933. In 1934, the office of the Reich Savings Commissioner, who was responsible for advising the Reich government on all matters relating to budget management and the appropriate design, simplification and cost reduction of the administration, was dissolved and its most important functions transferred to an office of the Presidential Department of the Court of Audit. Also from 1934, the Act on the Maintenance and Increase of Purchasing Power (Gesetz zur Erhaltung und Hebung der Kaufkraft) made it possible to extend the jurisdiction of the Court of Audit to include the auditing of corporations, institutions and other legal entities under public law (finally laid down by law in the Reich Auditing Ordinance of 30 March 1938). In the course of the imperial reform efforts of the Third Reich, the "Law on the Budgetary Management, Accounting and Auditing of the Länder and on the Fourth Amendment to the Reich Budget Code" of 17 June 1936 brought important changes: with the beginning of the 1936 accounting year, the auditing of the budget and economic management of the Länder was transferred to the Technical University. For this purpose, based on the already existing State Audit Offices, the Regional Court set up in 1937 foreign departments responsible for one or more Länder, initially in Hamburg, Karlsruhe, Leipzig (from 1940 Dresden) and Munich. Later Vienna (1939), Poznan (1942) and Metz (1942) were added. These external departments of the Court of Audit were assigned "accounting offices" by the Länder as preliminary audit offices in accordance with the "Vorprüfordnung für die Länder" of 9 April 1937. After 1938, especially during the war, the focus of the audit activities of the Court of Audit shifted: on the one hand, the audit of the administrations in the so-called "Old Empire" was reduced, on the other hand, however, the jurisdiction of the Court of Audit was extended to all German administrations in the occupied territories and also exercised there to a large extent. Only the Generalgouvernement and the autonomous protectorate government had their own examination offices. . Inventory description: Inventory history The majority of the RH's registry, which is already in the Reichsarchiv, was transferred to the former Central State Archives of the GDR after the war. At the end of the war, a further part of the existing records was still kept in the RH buildings in Potsdam and Berlin and was archived after 1946. The losses caused by the Allied air raid on Potsdam in April 1945 amount to approx. 9 running metres. Since the Prussian Oberrechungskammer took over the examination of Reichaufgabe für Kunst, Wissenschaft, kirchliche Angelegenheiten und Forstwirtschaft in 1934 (the Prussian Oberrechungskammer already had corresponding departments for these areas), these records - as well as the previous files of the Court of Audit in the holdings of Rep. 138 of the Geheimes Staatsarchiv, Stiftung prußischer Kulturbesitz. Archival evaluation and processing The registries of the Court of Audit distinguished three groups of files according to the tasks of the authority, which are also reflected in the classification: - General files - Technical files with special audit documents and instructions - Audit files for the actual audit negotiations. In this finding aid book, both the relevant files of the tradition kept until 1990 in the Central State Archives as fonds R 2301 and the files kept in the Federal Archives as fonds R 47 are recorded. Although the necessary standardisation of individual development information was achieved by merging the two parts of the transmission, a complete re-drawing did not take place. The general files were kept according to a uniform file plan and are summarised at the beginning of the inventory. The specialist and examination files are arranged according to the most recently valid business distribution plan. In addition, the files of the "archive" are listed separately as a relatively independent structural part with various special registries. The creation of archival file titles, volume sequences and series was usually required when the files were recorded; the creation of identical titles was unavoidable due to the specific nature of the structure. Characterisation of content: The Court of Audit's transmission more or less comprehensively covers the authority's entire spectrum of tasks with the following focal points: - Organisational, legal, administrative and operational matters - Court of Audit and Reich Savings Commissioner - Civil servant duties and rights - Affairs of employees and workers - Budget, cash, accounting and auditing - Specialist and audit files on individual authorities and companies such as the Reich Ministry of Finance, the Reich Ministry of Labor, the Reich Ministry of the Interior, the Reich Office for Regional Planning, the Reich Nourishment State, Reich offices and main associations, Vereinigte Industrieunternehmungen AG und Untergesellschaften (VIAG), Kleinbahnunternehmen und Wohnungsbauunternehmen, Hauptversorgungs- und Versorgungsämter sowie Wehrmachttversorgungsämter - Collection of administrative reports, statutes and other printed matter from local and district administrations (locations A-Z) - Budgets and budget accounts of the Länder and municipal institutions - Gesetzsammelmappen In addition, 3089 personnel files are part of the inventory. , citation style: BArch, R 2301/...
- 1918-1977, Landeskirchliches Archiv Stuttgart, D 23* description: Adaptation - Maxi Sophie Eichhorn Character of the holdings - The estate of Karl Hartenstein forms an extensive collection of his work in an eventful period. - His work as a pastor and scientific worker can be read from the extensive sermon and lecture material, the documents of the Basel Mission reflect his activity as a mission director and passionate mission representative, as also the correspondence material, e.g. with international mission workers, the Evangelical Church of Germany (EKD) or pastors of the regional church, proves. Karl Hartenstein always remained open to all demands and proved his pastoral talent not least during the war in Stuttgart. - The collection provides an excellent illustration of a personal life path marked by the upheavals of the 20th century: decisions and paths were shaped by the First World War, the Third Reich and the period of reconstruction in Germany, the close connection to Basel was a positive effect of that time, for example, Hartenstein's departure and the accompanying end of his rectorate at the beginning of the Second World War are rather ambivalent. - In its entirety, the collection reflects missionary activity in the first half of the 20th century and the personal and inner-church changes triggered by the Second World War, up to the reconstruction of the Württemberg regional church and the renewal of worldwide missionary activity. Biographical Information - Karl Wilhelm Hartenstein, born on 25 January 1894 in Stuttgart - Bad Cannstatt, was the eldest of three sons of the Hartenstein banking family. His childhood was marked by a bourgeois evangelical education. The usual military year followed the school leaving examination in 1912. During this time Karl Hartenstein began to deal more intensively with his faith and religion. His parents did not oppose the increasing desire to study theology, although Karl Hartenstein was intended to take over his father's business. After a year at Tübingen University, in which he joined the student fraternity Nicaria and met his later wife Margarete Umfried, Hartenstein had to go to war with the Western Front in 1914. Not only the promotion to officer during the wartime and the resulting responsibility for many comrades, but also the maturation and consolidation of a faith continued significantly due to the war impressions. In the spring of 1919 Hartenstein was able to resume his studies and after his exam in 1921 in Calw near Stuttgart, a short time later in his home community Bad Cannstatt he took over the temporary parish service. Already in 1922, after one year of intensive church work, he was appointed as a Repetent (teaching activity) to the Tübinger Stift, where he devoted himself to theological studies, e.g. the Römerbrief commentaries of Karl Barth, in addition to his activity, and wrote his doctorate. His marriage to Margarete Umfrid coincided with the start of his first permanent parish post in Bad Urach in 1923. At the foot of the Swabian Alb Hartenstein systematically expanded the church work, so that not only the Inner Mission, but also the Outer Mission soon belonged to the successful interest of his church. When a new director of the Basler Mission was sought in 1926, whose seat was traditionally occupied by a German representative, the choice quickly fell on the ambitious pastor from Bad Urach, who also accepted the surprising offer after a period of reflection. - As director of the Basler Mission, the largest mission agency of that time, important tasks such as the reconstruction of mission fields lost in the First World War awaited the youngest leader ever to lead the Basler Mission. Karl Hartenstein was also responsible for the supervision of the administration, as leading member of the inspectors' conference and the committee, and as pastor for the missionaries. The annual mission festival, his travels to India and Africa, which quickly earned him a good reputation in international missionary work, were the highlights of Hartenstein's time in Basel, along with the births of his three sons (1928: Hermann, 1931: Markus, 1935: Gottfried). For the political turnaround in Germany, from which Hartenstein only turned away after a "closer look" and clearly joined the Confessing Church, was to weaken his position, so that with the outbreak of the Second World War Hartenstein's time in Basel was over. - As an authorized representative of the Basler Mission - Deutscher Zweig (Basel Mission - German Branch), he tried from 1939 on to secure the assets of the Mission Society from Stuttgart, but was mostly cut off from the exchange with the management in Basel. - In 1941, Hartenstein responded positively to the request of Theophil Wurm, Bishop of the State of Württemberg, to act as Prelate of Stuttgart, thus the former Mission Director became one of the closest advisors to the Bishop of the State of Württemberg, Wurm. However, the effects of the war gradually pushed back everyday church life, air raids destroyed churches, houses and authorities, and communication shrank to a minimum. - With the end of the war, a busy time began for the prelate: Hartenstein acted as the contact man for the regional church between the occupying powers and the municipal and state authorities, and the return to Basel seemed closed. In 1948 Karl Hartenstein rejected the office of the regional bishop, but he became a member of the Council of the Protestant Church in Germany and took part in international mission events, for example in Amsterdam in 1948. Since his return in 1939 Karl Hartenstein had suffered various health setbacks, in 1949 he fell ill at heart and struggled with death, so that he voluntarily resigned from several offices. The major church events in 1952, the World Mission Conference in Willingen (Hesse) and the German Protestant Church Congress in Stuttgart, were still co-organized and organized by Hartenstein, but on October 1, 1952 he died surprisingly of his heart disease and was buried in the Stuttgart forest cemetery. History of the Collection - The estate of Karl Hartenstein was handed over to the Landeskirchlichen Archiv in 1964 and incorporated into the archive's collection of estates as Collection D 23. In 1976, Albrecht von Stackelberg recorded part of the files (order no.: 176-270) in a detailed manner, which meant that the holdings could not be used as a unit. In spring 2005, as part of the final training course for the signatories' upscale archives service, the unprocessed part of the training began to be indexed. The units entered into the Faust archive program were not as deeply recorded in this section as in the section completed in 1976. After completion of the distortion, the old find book units could also be entered in fist stones, whereby they were partly divided for packaging reasons. The subsequent classification reflects Hartenstein's various life periods and his diverse activities. The collection covers the period 1926-1954, with a focus on the period after 1945. The photos contained in the estate were transferred to the photographic collection of the Regional Church Archive, and the existing library holdings were passed on to the Regional Church Central Library.