Photographer: Mrs. or Mr. Blumer?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 10.7 X 8.1. Reference: See Album 19, No. 428 (Nachlaß Blumer) (10.7 X 8.1).
Leipziger MissionswerkAltar
47 Archival description results for Altar
Photographer: Hohlfeld?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 16.5 X 11.0. Reference: flat film negative and cardboard no. 190 in negative box. See album 11, no. 369.
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Guth?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 8.5 X 11.1.
Leipziger Missionswerk(This is the 100th anniversary of the Leipzig Mission.) Phototype: Photo. Format: 5,7 X 6,1. Description: Interior of a church, filled with people, view to the altar (left men, right women). Reference: See estate of Dr. Mergner No. 299 (8.9 X 5.9).
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Guth?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 11,3 X 8,8 Description: Room with chairs, altar (without people). Reference: Plate and cardboard no. 17a (11,7 X 8,0) in negative box. Cf. postcard box, no. P8a (14,2 X 9,2), P8b (14,1 X 9,2), P8c (14,2 X 9,2) "First ringing of bells after consecration in Gonja (East Africa)", series Africa II, no. 11; publisher of the Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig.
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Frau Blumer?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 11,4 X 8,5 Description: Group of African women and men dressed in white, sitting in 2 rows, some kneeling in front of L. Blumer and altar, spectators. Reference: See album 20, no. 532 (11,3 X 8,3) "Taufzug in Aruscha Weihnacht 1927". Cf. estate Blumer, No. 702 (11.1 X 8.0).
Leipziger MissionswerkPhototype: Photo. Format: 8,4 X 11,2. Description: Inscription of the print in the negative box: This altar is made entirely of wood. At the top you read the 9th commandment in Kidschagga. Among them the ? in Hebrew and Greek. The main surface is filled with a figure of an angel who raises her hands intermittently over a ? plant, the symbol of virtue. The front wall of the altar bears the symbol of the 10 commandments. all candelabra arms are rooted in the 2nd commandment. far left ? Wreath from M?. Reference: flat film neg. and cardboard no. 127 in negative box.
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Nüßler?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 11,1 X 8,5. Description: outdoor under trees, sitting. Crowd, altar, miss. u. 2 and. Europeans.
Leipziger MissionswerkPhototype: Photo. Format: 8,6 X 6,3. Description: outdoor, altar, people dressed in white.
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Guth?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 11,2 X 7,8. Description: outdoor, altar, pulpit, people on benches, 4 Europ. on chairs (2 men, 2 children).
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Guth?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 11,7 X 9,0. Description: View to the altar, Christmas tree to the left of the altar, in front of the crib, Guth am Harmonium, 3 people sitting on a bench.
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Guth?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 8,1 X 11,2. Description: View to the altar, women left, men right sitting, Christmas tree. Reference: Plate and cardboard no. 87 in negative box.
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Guth?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 5,6 X 5,8. Description: View to the altar.
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Nüßler?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 10,8 X 7,8 Description: Inside, view to the altar. Reference: See album 22, no. 17 (10,7 X 8,0) "Insides of the Madschame Church".
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Schanz?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 8,1 X 10,8. Description: View to the altar, empty, standing at table "awu voru ukeri ifo ruvewu". Remark: See Miss.Bl. 1908, No. 19, N. 1910, No. 1, gl. 1910, No. 10.
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Blumer?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 9,0 X 11.8. Description: Altar. Remark: Edges blurred or faded. Reference: Cf. album 19, no. 229 (same situation).
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Schanz?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 7,5 X 10,5 Description: Look at the altar, standing at the front of the wall: "Behold, this is the Lamb of God! Tazama, Mwana Kondoo wa Muungu! (empty benches).
Leipziger MissionswerkNote by Müller: Keta, church
North German Missionary SocietyPhotographer: Schanz?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 7,5 X 10,5. Description: View to the altar, wooden planks as benches (inscription on wall: difficult to read).
Leipziger Missionswerk(church built by Africans themselves during WW1). Phototype: Photo. Format: 11,6 X 8,7. Description: View to the altar, fully occupied benches.
Leipziger MissionswerkPhototype: Photo. Format: 10,6 X 7,5. Description: Clay walls, pillar and roof of wooden construction, wooden benches, altar.
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Wilhelm Blumer?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 11,1 X 8,3. Description: View to the altar, bananas and other plants as decoration, 2 cushions in front of the altar, flowers lying in the corridor.
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Blumer?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 10,5 X 7,7. Description: View for example altar, people sitting on the benches. Reference: See album 19, no. 453 (10,5 X 8,1) "Departure from Masama to Arusha, 7. 2. 22".
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Nüßler?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 10,8 X 7,9. Description: View to the altar. Reference: flat film neg. and cardboard no. 4 in negative box ( 1 print).
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Guth?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 8,4 X 11,1. Description: View from altar to outer door.
Leipziger MissionswerkPhototype: Photo. Format: 10,8 X 7,4 Description: View to the altar, in front Missionary Guth and other missionaries, filled benches.
Leipziger MissionswerkPhototype: Photo. Format: 13,9 X 8,9. Description: high altar(?) with palm leaves, in front of/next to it large crowd (sitting/standing; European/Islamic clothes, umbrellas, hats, caps, sticks), right beside altar group missionaries (far away, not identifiable).
Leipziger MissionswerkDescription of holdings: Dept. 42 Gemeindearchiv Horchheim Scope: 107 archive boxes, 3 m Amtsbücher, 11 m Urk.z.Rechn. (923 units = 33 m) Duration: 1710 - 1945/72 Zur Ortsgeschichte Horchheim lies approx. four km southwest of Worms in the Eisbachtal. The village was first mentioned in a deed of donation in the Lorsch Codex in 766. The name of the place is derived from the word "horac" "swampy". The marshy valley, afflicted by the floods of the Eisbach, gave it its name. Horchheim had belonged to the high monastery of Worms since the early Middle Ages. Together with some surrounding villages Horchheim and Weinsheim belonged to the dominion of Stauf, which in the 12th century was under the rule of Counts of Eberstein, from 1215 the Counts of Zweibrücken and from 1378 by purchase to the Counts of Sponheim. In 1393 the dominion was inherited by the Counts of Nassau-Saarbrücken; the Electorate Palatinate and Nassau-Weilburg, who had also acquired rights in Horchheim over the years, were involved in an exchange contract in 1706, with which the village returned to the high monastery (until 1798). 1798 - 1814 French domination, from 1816 Grand Duchy and Volksstaat Hessen respectively; 1816 Canton Pfeddersheim, 1835 District Worms, 1848 Regierungsbezirk Mainz, 1850 Regierungsbezirk Worms, 1852 - 1942 District Worms, incorporation into Worms on 01.04.1942. The municipalities Horchheim and Weinsheim are closely connected in their history. In 1715 Weinsheim appears for the first time as an independent municipality with its own mayor. After 1792, Weinsheim was administered from Wiesoppenheim, while it had always been a church branch of Horchheim. Due to the close connection, files from Weinsheim are also part of the Horchheim collection. From the middle of the 16th to the beginning of the 17th century Horchheim was predominantly Protestant, since 1635 (until today predominantly Catholic) again (parish church Heilig-Kreuz, patronage and tenth right of the cathedral monastery). In 1496 about 200 inhabitants lived in Horchheim. By 1900 the population had grown to about 1,800 inhabitants, 7 of them Jews, and in 2002 it was 4,475 inhabitants. Worth mentioning are the charitable foundations in Horchheim: the Elendenbruderschaft, the Hospital Neuhausen and the branch of the Order of Merciful Sisters. The brotherhood of the wretched was established in 1448. In 1726 a new altar for the church was procured from the funds of the foundation and a contribution to the purchase of an organ was shown. The money from the interest was used to build and maintain the school building and to pay the school teachers, to care for the local poor and poor travellers and to pay the school fees for poor children. In 1824 the fund was placed under the control of the administrative commission of the Neuhausen Hospital by the provincial government in Mainz. In 1825, at the request of the Horchheim municipal council, the so-called brotherhood house with garden was auctioned off. The proceeds were used to build the new school and community centre. The Neuhausen Hospital was founded in 1729/30 by the bishop of Worms, Franz Ludwig von Pfalz-Neuburg (1694-1732) in the form of a foundation and equipped with rich property. In a document dated 22 August 1730 (Dept. 61 No. 112), the bishop bought the manor and former monastery Liebenau for 12,000 guilders with an associated mill and numerous possessions in order to guarantee the existence of the foundation. Before his death he bequeathed a large part of his assets to the foundation to complete the newly built hospital building so that the Pfründner could finally move in. At the beginning of the French period (1798), when the buildings were destroyed, they were converted into a civil hospital, which was united with other hospitals in the canton of Pfeddersheim. By decree of 1801 the Hospital Neuhausen regained its independence and its name. Horchheim was chosen as the seat of the foundation, which was chaired by the mayor of Horchheim. Furthermore, the 14 member municipalities on the left bank of the Rhine were defined, whose citizens benefited from the funds and whose envoys formed the Administrative Commission. These were: Beindersheim, Bobenheim, Dirmstein, Hettenheim, Leidelheim (later Hettenleidelheim), Horchheim, Laumersheim, Mörsch, Neuhausen, Neuleinigen, Rheindürkheim, Roxheim, Weinsheim and Wiesoppenheim. In 1855, a revised monastery statute came into force, which was replaced by a new statute in 1948. The former hospital - under the supervision of the hospital commission on the basis of a hospital property consisting of agricultural land in 20 local markings in and around Worms - still exists today as a foundation. As a result of the incorporation into Worms on 01.04.1942, the archival material was added to the city archives in 1943 (cf. tax register of the municipality of Horchheim, Dept. 20 No. 22). On 17.03.2004 the city archive took over the remaining files, which had been kept in the municipality. The inventory was already indexed by a preliminary list (rough drawing). Distortion began in March 2008. The duration, the structure of which corresponds to the registration plan of 1908, ranges from (1614) 1710 to 1972. Particularly worth mentioning are the Horchheimer Flur- und Güterbuch with border description of the district of Horchheim from 1710-1773 (no. 0043) as well as the Schatzungsbuch 1710-1798 (no. 0001); Gerichtsprotokoll über Tausch-, Kauf- und Verkaufsgeschäfte 1769-1791, Vormundschaften 18. (alph.); stock book, renovation protocol 1753; renovation of the Korngülte of the Andreasstift (Perg. Urk. 1614), various renovations and Gülten of the 18th century. With the inhabitant maps are excerpts from the birth, marriage, punishment and death registers, offerings, church exits for the period from 1853 to 1972 (use after arrangement). As an almost complete series, the Mayor's Office invoices and the corresponding documents, in which plans for the construction of the school building, 1827, (No. 793/2), situation plan for the supervision or approval of new buildings on the lower eastward part of the village of Horchheim, 1847 (No. 793/2), are presented, are almost complete (No. 793/2). 322), draft for the construction of the bridge over the Eisbach at the lower mill at Horchheim, 1846 (No. 802/4) as well as cost estimates for the construction of a mortuary, catering and quartering of the troops. The local companies are also important: Pfeiffer
Photographer: Guth?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 5,7 X 5,7 Description: Inside the church, view to the altar, on the right women, on the left men sitting, missionary at the altar. Reference: Plate and cardboard 6,2 X 6,2, No 81 from negative box. Cf. postcard box, no. P7 (14,0 X 9,1) "Ordination of the African pastor Andrea Msedschu in Schigatini (East Africa by Missionssenior Fr. Rother)". Cf. album 22, no 63 (14.0 X 9.1, postcard).
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Guth?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 8,3 X 10,9. Description: like 890, frontal.
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Guth?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 12,0 X 8,9 Description: (cf. Album 3, 1927) right church (half-timbered tower), crowd of people, partly with m. Umbrellas under the trees, altar, chairs and missionary v.h. sitting).
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Guth?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 9,4 X 7,1. Description: inside the church, view to altar, 2 European missionaries right and left from altar (right - also 1 African), missionaries and Africans right and left sitting on benches. Reference: Plate and cardboard No. 70a in negative box.
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Blumer?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 10.8 X 8.2.
Leipziger MissionswerkPhototype: Photo. Format: 9,5 X 9,4. Description: Interior view, view from gallery to altar, on benches: on the right men and on the left women sitting, European clothes, some women with kangaroo scarves, 1 African at the harmonium, priest Guth?
Leipziger MissionswerkDescription: 1 woman on sofa leaning against cushions.
Leipziger MissionswerkA cypress serves as a Christmas tree, on the right the pulpit, on the left the altar. Photographer: Guth?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 10.9 X 7.9. Reference: See proofs, No. 10/805a (11.0 X 8.5) "Mission House in Gonja".
Leipziger MissionswerkPhototype: Photo. Format: 11,0 X 7,9 Description: View to the altar, visitors sit on benches with view into the camera (men right, women left), especially with view to the altar. Cloths bekl., 1 standing man.
Leipziger MissionswerkPhotographer: Hohlfeld?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 16,5 X 11,0. Description: View to the altar.
Leipziger MissionswerkNote by Müller: Keta, church after 1900
North German Missionary Society