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Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, E 151/12 · Fonds · 1818-1945, mit vereinzelten Nachakte
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

On the history of the authorities: The responsibility for the surveying and marking department, which was part of the Ministry of the Interior in the 19th century, and the cadastral office, which was part of the Finance Administration, and the andes surveying department was initially transferred to the Finance Administration by the Law on the Ministry of State and the Ministries of 6 November 1926 (Reg.Bl. p.239). With the law of 3 July 1934 (Reichsges.Bl. p.534), surveying became a matter of gauge and was thus entrusted to the Reich Ministry of the Interior. Subsequently, in accordance with the decree of 28 August 1936 of the Reich and Prussian Minister of the Interior, the institutions still directly belonging to the State of Württemberg (Topographisches Bureau) were to be combined in the Ministry of the Interior, whereupon the decree on the reorganization of surveying in Württemberg of 10 October 1936 (Reg.Bl. p.115) transferred the responsibility for surveying and marking from the fiscal administration to the Ministry of the Interior, and the State Inspectorate for the Corporate Surveying Service and the Topographical Department of the State Statistical Office (as Topographical Bureau) were affiliated to the Ministry of the Interior (Department XII). Inventory history and report: The documents were indexed by Bernd Geil, Ulrike Glogger and Matthias Grotz as part of the practical training of the 32nd Fachhochschule training course of the upper archive service, the final processing was carried out by Bernd Geil, Ulrike Glogger and Matthias Grotz, the signatures. Due to the pre-proveniences of the Royal Tax College and the State Tax Office, the State Technical Office, the Ministry of Finance and finally the Ministry of the Interior, various file reference levels were found. The current order follows the file number of Department XII of the Ministry of the Interior attached to the majority of the files. 0.5 linear metres of files of the provenance of the Royal Tax College or the State Tax Office were transferred to the State Archives Ludwigsburg (there stock E 251 IV). In addition, documents from the provenance of the Ministry of Finance (0.05 running metres) were assigned to inventory E 222 b (now inventory E 222a, status: 2004). 0.2 linear metres from the period before 1945 were removed from inventory EA 2/203 and integrated into the existing inventory. Provenance separations were only carried out in those cases in which this appeared to be reasonable in terms of scope and file structure. The main duplicates collected amounted to 0.06 linear metres. Reference should be made to the following holdings, which contain supplementary documents:Im Staatsarchiv Ludwigsburg:Technisches Landesamt (EL 72 I, EL 72 II)Landesfinanzamt (E 252 II)K. Steuerkollegium (E 251 I-IV)Landesvermessungsamt (EL 68)In the Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart:Ministry of Finance (E 221, E 222, E 222a)Ministry of the Interior, Personalakte Vermessungsbediensteter (E 151/22) The inventory now comprises 6.9 linear metres. m with 208 tufts (order numbers 1-209, no. 180 is not documented) with a running time of 1818-1945 with isolated files until 1951. The predominant part of the files originates from the 20th century.Stuttgart, January 1995Sabine Schnell

Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, M 1/7 · Fonds · (1851) 1871-1921
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Foreword: Responsible for the entire area of military justice was the "Oberauditor" for Württemberg according to the Military Judicial Code of 1692. In order to take into account the circumstances, which had completely changed in terms of their magnitude alone, King Friedrich appointed in 1807 the General Auditoriat for "civil cases" of the military, with the involvement of a war council with the designation "Oberkriegsgericht". As a result, the military court ap-pellation authority and at the same time the supreme authority for military justice care in Württemberg were created. These functions were transferred on 30 March 1874 to a special department in the War Ministry, the "Justice Department". She was responsible for advising and taking a stand on all legal issues specific to the military. At the same time, it fulfilled the function of the Higher War Court for the Württemberg Army Corps, was the supreme military justice authority in criminal cases, and the supreme supervisory authority for the auditors. It consisted of 4 alternating higher officers, including 1 general as chairman, the general auditor and 2 councillors of the judicial department of the Kriegsministe-rium. 1900, however, in the course of the implementation of the German Military Criminal Court Ordinance of 1898, Württemberg lost its remaining independence in the field of military court organization. De facto, it had already become necessary before, through a whole series of voting procedures with the Reich Military Administration, as well as with Bavaria and Saxony, to achieve adjustments, which were later incorporated into the new Military Criminal Court Code (2). As a result of the reorganization from 1900 onwards, the Justice Department of the (Royal Württemberg) War Ministry was dissolved as a Higher War Court or Court of Appeal. It was also decreed within the framework of the reorganization that all military court investigation files were to be handed over to the (newly appointed) High War Court of the XIIIth (Royal Württemberg) Army Corps, which was assigned to the General Command (3). From 1900 onwards, military jurisdiction was exercised exclusively by the court rulers and the recognizing courts (courts of state, war courts, upper war court and - in the appeal instance - Reich Military Court (4)). The supervision of the exercise of this military jurisdiction remained (apart from the Reich Military Court) with the Ministry of War as the supreme military justice administrative authority. According to the Ministry's organizational plan, between 1900 and 1906 this function was entrusted to "Section J" within the "Department for General Army Affairs". Section J" also had to continue to provide legal advice. In 1906, these divisions were integrated into the newly created Supply and Justice Department ( C ). From 1906 to March 1915 the Department ( C ) was thus responsible for pension, pension and support matters and for the judiciary. The expansion of the business volume caused by the war in turn resulted in the outsourcing of the judiciary. Department C remained the utility department. The tasks of the new "Department J" (legal advisor) consisted mainly in personnel administration, supervision and maintenance of the operation of the various military tribunals, pardons, extradition matters, penal system, construction and operation of military prisons, legal opinions including consideration of foreign rights, occupation law and non-military areas of law. This division also remained within the framework of the liquidation of the Ministry of War, whereby Department J was renamed Legal Department ( R ) in November 1918. Like all the settlement authorities of the Württemberg Ministry of War, it was dissolved at the end of 1920. The records of the military justice sector, which were so severely affected by reorganization, were only incomplete and in an unexpectedly badly organized state and had to be rearranged as they had been for the military tribunals (inventory M 631). The existing file numbers of the file plan were no longer a suitable basis because of the different changes over long distances, so that a complete reorganization was inevitable. The inventory was recorded in the years 2001 and 2002 by the archive employee Gerd Mantel under guidance of the signatory, who also provided the editorial revision and reorganization. The Repertorium M 1/7 contains 808 title records and 28 shelf meters of files. Stuttgart, November 2003Dr. Moegle-HofackerNotes(1) On the development of military jurisdiction, see also foreword to Repertorium M 631, Militärstrafverfahren XIII. Armeekorps.(2) Cf. M 1/7 Bü 11, Bü 17, Bü 21.(3) Cf. Holdings M 33/1 resp. 33/2 and M 77/1 as well as Government Gazette for the Kingdom of Württemberg, volume 1900, page 841(4) A list of the military courts of Württemberg is contained in the preface to Repertory M 631.

Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, Q 3/36 a Bü 423 · File · 1907/1908, 1911
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Contains: some photos from the mission station in Edea; list of addresses to pass on the report that was last in Gustav Decker's hand; information sheet "An die Sammler von Staniol für die Basler Mission", 1911, reprinted 1 page

Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, J 2 Nr. 736 · File · 1908-1910
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Contains: - Chapter 1: The Departure; Chapter 1 - 2: The First Impressions; Chapter 23 - Chapter 3: Soldiers' Life; Chapter 49 - Chapter 4: The Rainy Season; Chapter 82 - Chapter 5: The Expedition Makes the South; Chapter 103 - Chapter 6: The Old Song; Chapter 140 - Chapter 7: The Paresis Mountains; Chapter 159 - Chapter 8: The Old Song. Chapter: Patrol Rides; p. 196 - Chapter 9: Steppe Fire; p. 220 - Chapter 10: The Natives; p. 240 - Chapter 11: Cultural Work; p. 255 - Chapter 12: Days of Freedom; p. 280 - Chapter 13: Sea Ice; p. 295 - Chapter 14: Expedition to the East; p. 310 - Chapter 15: Windhoek; p. 339 - 16 Chapter: Farmwirtschaften; p. 361 - 17 Chapter: Die Heimreise; p. 382 Contains also: numerous photos and maps

Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, N 110 · Fonds
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Content and evaluation of the collective stock without spatial limitation analogous to stock N 100, to which it is generally connected in terms of time. Together with the maps in M 640 (until 1978: N 111), most of the maps united here formed the map collection of the former Army Archives Stuttgart, which was affiliated to the Main State Archives after 1945. This collection as well as other existing maps of the period up to 1945 were rearranged and listed in the years 1963-1964. Maps from the period before about 1820 to 1830 were separated out and assigned to inventory N 100. In addition, the maps were divided into military and non-military maps, which in 1968 received the various inventory signatures N 111 and N 110. The structure of the non-military maps in this collection, which belong in their mass to the 19th century, follows the political zoning valid until 1914 and shows the following groups: World Maps, Africa, America, Asia, Europe, Central Europe, European Countries (Balkans, Belgium, Bulgaria, Denmark and Schleswig-Holstein, France, Greece, Great Britain, Italy, Yugoslavia, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Austria-Hungary, Romania, Russia with Finland, peripheral states and Poland, Sweden, Switzerland, Spain, Czechoslovakia), German Reich, German Länder (Bavaria, Alsace-Lorraine, Hesse, Hohenzollern, Lippe, Lübeck, Mecklenburg, Oldenburg, Prussia, Saxony, Württemberg, Baden). For all groups, topographic maps and map series of various scales are the most important genre; especially for the German Länder, administrative, traffic and hiking maps, other thematic maps and city maps are added. Apart from individual sheets, the holdings do not contain any cadastral maps.

news clippings
Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, M 1/3 Bü 770 · File · November 1906
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Contains among other things: The Captain of Köpenick, p. 1; Bismarck's Dismissal, p. 5; Inactive Officers, p. 7; Reform of Military Jurisdiction in France, p. 25; Colonial Pessimism, p. 27/28; Self-loading Rifles, p. 1; Bismarck's Dismissal, p. 5; Colonial Pessimism, p. 27/28; Self-loading Rifles, p. 1 37; Prince Philipp zu Eulenburg, p. 41; Ludwig Ganghofer, p. 49; Refusal to obey from a religious point of view, p. 59; English Army Reform, p. 61/62; Cheap Labour, p. 77; Warrior Association Parties, p. 83

news clippings
Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, M 1/3 Bü 758 · File · Januar-Februar 1905
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Enthält u. a.: Ausbildungsfragen im Heere: "Erziehung" oder "Drill und Erziehung", S. 5; Offiziere: Starker Offizierverlust in Südwest-Afrika wegen allzu sichtbarer Rangabzeichen, S. 9; Offiziersehre und Militärehrengericht: Broschüren von Oberst a. D. Hüger und Oberst a. D. Gaedke, S. 14, 15

news clippings
Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, M 1/3 Bü 768 · File · Juli-August 1906
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Enthält u. a.: Der Kaiser: Seine Ratgeber, mangelhafte Orientierung, Abnahme der monarchischen Gesinnung, S. 23, 31; Abrüstungsfragen: Armeereform in England, S. 27, 29; Feldzug in Deutsch-Südwestafrika: Glossen von Oberst a. D. Gaedke, S. 39; Sozialdemokratie: Heer und Sozialdemokratie, S. 49; Sanitätsfragen: Einrichtung von Sanitätsinspektionen, S. 51; regierende Fürsten: Kritik der Frankfurter Zeitung, S. 63

news clippings
Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, M 1/3 Bü 763 · File · November-Dezember 1905
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Contains among other things: Offiziere: Aussichten der Offizier Karrierebahn, p. 47; Transfer of officers, excerpt from a brochure "Militärische Bedenken" by K. von Wartenberg. p. 59; Reichstag: Lieutenant General von Trotha, Commander of the Troops of Deutsch-Südwestafrika: His Appearance in the Reichstag, p. 61; Hague Conference 1899: Criticism of the German Representative, Count Münster, by Alfred H. Fried, p. 17; the Emperor and the Idea of Arbitration, by Alfred H. Fried, p. 31

Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, M 736 · Collection · 1936-1943
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Preliminary remark: Very probably at the suggestion of Heeresarchivrat Knoch, who worked from June 1936 to autumn 1943 at the Reichsarchiv branch or at the Heeresarchiv Stuttgart, the Heeresarchiv Stuttgart collected excerpts from newspapers and military journals during these years. The collection, which also contains pieces from earlier years and which has also occasionally included other printed matter and copies of official letters from the Army Archives, primarily comprises documents on general military matters, on war history and on individual military personnel, especially those of the 19th and 20th centuries. As the archival term "Auskunftei" (information agency) (cf. e.g. no. 196) suggests, the Wahl collection was created with the intention of creating a quick and easy means of information for the employees of the army archives. It does not contain any significant individual pieces, nor does it carry much weight overall. If it was nevertheless rearranged and listed, it is because it can still serve its original purpose today and because it is also revealing to the spirit which prevailed at least among some of the staff of the Heeresarchiv Stuttgart during the National Socialist era. These were marked with the respective keyword and partly with detailed information about the excerpts contained in them. The envelopes were arranged in the alphabetical order of the keywords, but the entire collection was unlisted. In the present order and indexing, the previous order was essentially retained; however, where necessary, the keywords were specified or - in individual cases - changed. The purpose of these notes and cross-references is to facilitate the use of the holdings; life data are only given for persons if they could be determined with a justifiable amount of work. The holdings (389 numbers; 0.70 m) were indexed in March and April 1975 by the archivist. Herrmann under supervision of Oberstaatsarchivrat Dr. Fischer, who also completed the present repertory.Stuttgart, June 1975(Fischer)

Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, M 635/1 · Fonds · 1810-1945
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Preliminary remark: Service regulations, pressure regulations are all generally valid orders issued for the handling of the military service or for the administration of the army, the navy and the air force. Some of them were published in the military official journals and in separate, mostly handy editions, others were only published in limited editions in the latter, for example in the case of secret or confidential orders. Supplements and supplements appeared after 1870 in the form of so-called cover pages, which were to be glued into the individual volumes or transferred by hand. Since the 1980s, a distinction has been made in Prussia, and thus also in the other German contingents, between budget-based and non-budget-based printing regulations. Only the former had to be available at the authorities and units in the number specified in the published "Printing Regulations Budget", had an official number assigned approximately according to the sequence of publication, and had been replaced by a "List of Budgetary Printing Regulations" (e.g. 1911) or a "List of Scheduled Army Printing Regulations" (e.g. The collection at hand here goes back to the former Württemberg War Ministry, which first kept the regulations of the German Federation and Württemberg, then of other German states in the library of the Ministry, in secret cabinets - for the secret and confidential regulations - and in the files - specimen copies of its own drafts, then individual cover pages. After World War I, the War Archives of the War Ministry and then - after intermediate stages - the Reich Archives branch moved into existing regulations for Württemberg and non-Württemberg troops to be dissolved and moved through, thus increasing the collection mainly by war expenditures of individual military authorities and armies. The regulations of the Reichswehr and the Wehrmacht arrived only in relatively small numbers, foreign more by chance, so some French around 1940 from Neubreisach. A "table of contents of the old publications and printing regulations", probably still compiled in the War Ministry, listed the regulations published until about 1900 separately according to the issuing country or publisher, i.e. German Federation, Prussia, Württemberg, in alphabetical order. For the budgetary regulations of the following years, the aforementioned list of 1911 (vol. 246) applied. In 1924 the Reichsarchiv branch then classified the other regulations, mainly issued during the war, according to subject groups such as "troop leadership", "foreign armies", and "infantry", without regard to the publisher, and in doing so arranged copies of the subject that were available several times in different places. The Army Archives finally compiled the regulations that had appeared since 1919 according to the list of 1939 and in an additional alphabetical list. None of these groups, i.e. the previous holdings M 635/1 - M 635/6, contained all existing volumes, nor were they counted uniformly and completely. In addition, duplicates, single copies delivered as gifts, foreign regulations were finally also included in the library, in the collection of flight documents (fonds J 150), and in the collection of memorials (fonds M 730), as, conversely, many private adaptations and instructions had found their way into the official regulations. After the then archive inspector Wannenwetsch had already removed regulations from the library in 1978 and compiled them into the temporary stock M 635/7, the archive assistant Anneliese Fink recorded the entire material within the framework of a job creation measure in 1982/83. With the temporary cooperation of the aspiring inspectors Elstner and Wüst, library material was then sorted out, memos, annual reports and other military publications on the future holdings of M 635/2 were published and, in addition, the collection of flight documents and memos was checked for regulations on the basis of the finding aids: After - including the measure of 1978 - 86 volumes were taken from the military library, 108 volumes from other holdings, 196 volumes were handed over to the military library, 17 volumes were put back into the corresponding files, 8 publishing brochures were separated out and 352 duplicates were removed, the holdings now comprise 1665 volumes in 18 metres of shelving. the regulations were separated according to the publisher, i.e. country of issue or military administration, individual armies, army corps etc., otherwise according to the chronological order. In view of the often overlapping titles of the individual rules, it seemed less advisable to break them down, e.g. after the one mentioned above. However, the chronology was broken to the extent that later editions of a regulation were not included in the first volume, or only slightly changed, and that regulations published over a longer period of time in partial volumes were included in the first volume following the respective first volume. In addition, the budgetary provisions listed above are in accordance with the specified sequence of numbers, according to which they are also frequently quoted. The detailed index, the keywords of which are largely taken from the corresponding list in the index of the statutory printing regulations of 1911, was produced by archive employee Werner Urban. the regulations, cover sheets etc. kept in the files are not included in the present find book, as they could have been recorded only with disproportionately high effort due to the current state of development of many holdings - a corresponding additional compilation must therefore be reserved for a later time. the spelling applied in the repertory is based on the current rules. The individual title recordings are arranged according to the following model: Title of the regulationPlace and date of regulation; Place of print/publishing; Printing/publishing; Year of printingOfficial number PublisherSpecial provisions to supplement the regulationAddendicesSupplements; handwritten notesEarlier archive and library signaturesRemarks.Stuttgart, April 1985(Cordes)

Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, M 635/2 · Fonds · 1868-1944
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Preliminary remark: Since the end of the 19th century, military command and administrative authorities have increasingly issued general memos, training instructions, budget overviews, equipment descriptions, maneuver reports, combat experience, overviews of foreign armies, etc. to subordinate departments and units. These publications were intended to provide rapid and reliable information and were generally to be handled "only for official business", "confidential", "only in the hands of officers", "secret", "top secret" and others. Admittedly, such restrictions could change according to external political circumstances - e.g. rankings were only published in peace - so that it is not possible to clearly distinguish them from announcements in official journals or other publications. Even the regulations - Bestand M 635/1 - do not strictly differentiate these printed matters, as both their subject matter and the legal obligation were assessed differently. In general, it can be assumed that communications produced and distributed via private companies had less confidential content than those originating from the Reichsdruckerei; writings without an indication of the publisher were usually classified as secret. The documents were usually kept with the relevant files, some of them also under special lock and key, and arrived with them in the archive. The Reichsarchiv branch or the Heeresarchiv Stuttgart has removed the largely printed, at least duplicated material from the previous environment and kept it further when larger file excretions were pending, such as in the case of the fortress Ulm. In the same way, printed matter found in private estates, despite their official and mostly confidential character, was taken from there. Under changing aspects and changing editors - government inspector Alfons Beiermeister, Army Archives Council Captain of the Reserve Franz Knoch, Army Archives employee August Martin and others - the individual items thus produced were classified in the library, under the regulations, under the memorandums, later stock M 730, and under the pamphlets, later stock J 150, each of which also contained other written material. Small-format printed booklets were preferably sent to the pamphlets, while copies in folio format were sent to the memoirs or, if they were "historical" summaries, to the "Kriegsarchiv" (M 1/11) holdings. Double copies could be found in all the collections mentioned as well as in the library. Pieces assigned to the archive since about 1920 seem to have been set up as hand copies, if this proved to be useful. Foreign printed materials were only occasionally sent in via the representatives of the Chief of Army Archives, among others. As a result of the war, the indexing and classification faltered from about 1941 onwards, so that the corresponding repertories remained unfinished or were only completed after the Second World War - according to M 730 - with the insertion of individual addenda. as part of a job creation measure, the temporary employee Anneliese Fink compiled the regulations and other printed matter(1), which were only partially recorded in various lists and not signed, for the memorandums (M 730) this was done by the student temporary employee Anne Weber. With the temporary cooperation of the aspiring inspectors Elstner and Wüst as well as Häfele, Kronberger and Schön, library material was then sorted out, the regulations and the other printed matter were distributed among the new holdings M 635/1 and M 635/2, and the library and the pamphlets (J 150) in particular were checked for corresponding material on the basis of the catalogues and repertories: Now that 64 from the library, 275 from the original compilation of the regulations, among others, 275 from the memorandums (M 730), 363 from the pamphlets (J 150), 88 from the "Kriegsarchiv" (M 1/11), 21 and 52 pieces from other mostly collection holdings have been taken over and about 30 have been handed over to the military library or put back into the associated files according to their provenance, and 88 duplicates have been discarded, the holdings now comprise 863 volumes, booklets and individual sheets in 13 metres of shelving.Not included in the new holdings - already due to the necessarily different storage - were the maps and plans which were almost exclusively produced for official use and which make up the own holdings M 640 "Military Maps" and M 652 "Plan Collection". Furthermore, as already indicated, the general official gazettes and individual publications are missing here, for example the official general staff works on past acts of war, troop newspapers and war illustrations, "Tornisterschriften", training letters, etc. The same applies to wall attacks by military authorities, which form the basis of inventory J 151 "Collection of Wall Attacks", as well as pure film and pictorial material published by military authorities, a small part of which can be found in the inventories of the "Image Collections" (M 700 ff.). While writings originating from the military side were incorporated here regardless of their content, elaborations by civilian bodies - Foreign Office, Prussian Ministries of the Interior and Justice, R e i c h s k o l o n i a l a m t , R e i c h s k o l o n i a m t , R e i c h s a l a m t a n i n e , etc. - are included if they address decidedly military or military-policy matters. It would not have been possible to rank them according to the publishers because, as mentioned above, they are often not given. Since the alphabetical order of the geographical and subject matters in the holdings of the memorandums (M 730) and the pamphlets (J 150) occasionally overlaps and thus seems less suitable, and since no comprehensive classification scheme has been preserved from the time of the Württemberg army administration, it made sense to base the new holdings on the "Einheitsaktenplan für den Bereich der Heeresleitung und des Ministeramts" of 1931(2). This was all the more true as it, or its predecessors, was formed in the interwar period and also contains documents from this epoch to a large extent. Further general elaborations are to be expected, mainly in the case of the file holdings of the War Ministry and the General Command; to record them and to insert them here in addition, however, would have required a disproportionately high effort, so that a corresponding quite desirable compilation of later time must remain reserved.The spelling applied in the find book is based on today's rules. Changing spelling for individual ... After more frequent use, positions were standardized, i.e. Generalgouvernement instead of General-Gouvernement, Army Department instead of Army Department, News Formation instead of News Formation.The individual title recordings are based on the following model, which was also used for the holdings M 635/1: Title of the typefacePlace and date of writing; possible place of print/publishing, printshop/publisher, year of printingEditors Supplements; handwritten notesEarlier archive and library signaturesRemarksStuttgart, June 1986 Dr. Cordes1) Accordingly, no earlier archive signatures are given for the title recordings of the pieces from this inventory2) issued as regulations and listed as no. 2 under the scheduled army printing regulations since 1938 (M 635/2 Bd.

Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, Q 1/18 Bü 71 · File · 1915-1918
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Contains among other things: 1) Württemberg reaction to the speech of the President of the War Food Office v. Batocki in the Reichstag Committee. Newspaper report of 27 May 1916 2) Report on the lecture of the State Secretary of the R e i c h s k o l o n i a l a m t Dr. Solf in Stuttgart on "The Teaching of the World War for Germany's Colonial Policy". Newspaper report of 29 May 1916 3) Resolution of the Reichstag deputy David, Ebert, Erzberger and others on the readiness for a peace of understanding (Reichstag printed matter no. 889, 1917)

Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, E 130 b Bü 1068 · File · 1939-1940
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Contains among other things: Richtlinien über die Vormerkung von Zivilanwärtern für den staatlichen einfachen mittleren Polizeiverwaltungsdienst, 31.1.1939 (Guidelines on the Reservation of Candidates for the State Simple Middle Police Administrative Service), 31.1.1939, as well as on the Establishment and Presentation of Assessments of Officers of the Uniformed Ordnungspolizei, June 1939; Decrees concerning the Participation of the Ordnungspolizei in the National Socialist Combat Games, 19.5.1939, March by a Police Association before Adolf Hitler at the Reich Party Congress, June, Aug. 1939, Educational measures at the uniformed order police, 21.6.1939, Prohibition of unwanted music, June, Oct. 1939, Reorganization of the SD-headquarters of the SS-Oberababschnitt Südwest, 29.9.1939, Overview of the names of the police battalions, 28.9.1939, Behavior of the relatives in the police towards fellow countrymen, 7.10.1939 as well as the establishment of a colonial police, 31.10.1940.

Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, M 703 R975N7 · File
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Execution: Photography Image carrier: Photo paper glued on cardboard Image and sheet size: 19 x 11 cm; 21.5 x 13.5 cm Remarks: from Marchtaler's estate, Otto Erhard, colonel general and minister of war, image slightly damaged

Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, M 703 R975N6 · File
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Execution: Photography Persons and institutions involved in the creation: Louis Koch, Bremen, photographer Image carrier: Photo paper glued to cardboard Image and sheet size: 27 x 22 cm; 29 x 23.5 cm Remarks: from Marchtaler's estate, Otto Erhard, Generalobst. and Kriegsm., backs. V.: The steamer Rhine with the 3rd East Asia. Inf.-Rgt. after the departure by Emperor Wilhelm II. on 6. 8.1900 before the start of the journey to China, picture with creased corner

Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, J 150 · Collection · 1813-1945 (-1947)
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

The holdings J 150 (pamphlets - collection) were mainly formed from estates and foundations of former officers, as well as from other private donations. A large number of brochures originate from the collection campaign for field libraries in the First World War. These writings have not been incorporated into the Army Archives Manual Library in order not to complicate the clarity of the holdings. For this reason alone, it seemed advisable to structure the material in a separate collection and thus make it accessible for research. Major General z. V. Sieglin had begun his sighting in February 1939. The collection was set up and indexed the following year by the archive employee Martin. Since in many cases an author or editor is not named, the classification of the pamphlets into keyword groups was justified. The list also includes keywords for which no writings are yet available, but in whose groups access can be expected. For this reason, there are also gaps in the consecutive sequence of numbers, the closure of which depends on the later use of new keywords. The alphabetical order could thus be maintained in the directory. The indexing took place in the Allegro library database. The holdings can be searched both with the library program and via the online find book. Contents and Evaluation The collection essentially contains state and military policy writings from the time of the First World War and the immediate post-war period; there is particularly abundant material on questions of war guilt and war causes, on questions of food and raw materials in war, and finally on the Versailles Peace Treaty and its effects and consequences. The collection also reflects the psychological and moral attitude of the German population in the war and post-war years. Also strongly represented is the disarmament problem up to the time of National Socialist freedom of the armed forces and the question of security in the victorious states. There is also a large amount of Allied writings from the time of the First World War. These are mostly leaflets that were dropped over the trenches. Among the foreign-language writings are those published on behalf of the Federal Foreign Office in Berlin and written in Arabic or Turkish. The collection also contains material on the National Socialist state, propaganda writings and the events of the time. The collection consists mainly of brochures and sheets with mass circulation. However, there is no lack of general historical, military and cultural writings, as far as their external presentation made an integration into the pamphlet collection appear expedient. For the same reasons, individual journals and newspapers were included in the collection if they were incomplete. Among these most represented journals are the "Süddeutsche Monatshefte" (Süddeutsche Monatshefte) (often with marginal comments by the Württemberg general Gerold von Gleich) and the "Deutsche Flugschriften" published by the national-liberal journalist Ernst Jäckh in the First World War. The weekly publication "Am heiligen Quell Deutscher Kraft", published by General Ludendorff, was also accepted. The writings in question can be used as source material for research purposes in war and military science and for dealing with historical-political questions of the Weimar Republic and National Socialism, especially about Germany's political situation and its struggle for equal rights. During the Second World War the stock was moved to Neuenstein Castle. After the pamphlets had been returned, it was discovered that the collection had been rummaged through by unknown parties and had become disordered. The reorganisation required as a result resulted in the loss of a number of pamphlets as well as certain deficiencies which made a change in the previous arrangement appear necessary. For the purpose of simplification and to achieve a better overview, individual sections, especially the pamphlets listed under "World War" such as "Nutrition, Finances etc.", were dissolved and included under the corresponding headings of the general collection for the sake of simplification and to achieve a better overview, all the more since the separation had not always been strictly carried out from the beginning and therefore numerous publications referring to the First World War were already listed in the general index. The holdings are also documented in the library catalogue of the Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart.

Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, M 430/5 · Fonds · 1839-1941
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)
  1. the history of the collection: Like positions M 430/1 - 430/4, position M 430/5 forms a select position. It unites the personal documents of military officials (including military pharmacists and military clergymen) and veterinarians of the XIII army corr 'thus usually from the time after 1870/71, and arose at the latest in 1950 in the Reichsarchiv branch Stuttgart by the union of documents of numerous provenance offices. Around or after 1934, further files of Württemberg military officials were "incorporated" into him which the Reichsarchiv branch office Stuttgart apparently had received from the Reich Ministry of the Interior; in addition, individual clusters of concepts or copies of military service time certificates were occasionally classified as the Reichsarchiv branch office or (since 1937) the Heeresarchiv Stuttgart. With its remaining holdings, the holdings were transferred to the Main State Archives in Stuttgart in 1945. In the course of the reorganization of the holdings N 430/1 - 430/4 in the years 1971 - 1973 it was supplemented by individual documents or tufts which had been handed down so far in these holdings. In view of the insufficient state of order and indexing of the holdings of military provenances before 1870/71, it cannot be ruled out that in the course of the progressive reorganization of these archival records further personnel files will come to light which - because they were continued after 1870/71 - would also have to be classified in the present holdings. To what extent such files will be proceeded or how far they will remain with the holdings of the respective provenances, which generally close with the years 1870/71, has to be decided on a case-by-case basis. 1. to the order of the stock: The previously valid repertory of the Reichsarchiv branch in Stuttgart from September 1930, which probably indexed the holdings as the first finding aid, listed in alphabetical order the names of the persons about whom files were available. While the repertory usually indicated the date of birth and the official's position, it did not contain any information on the duration of the files and on the provenance points where they had grown up. The files themselves were arranged in 63 large groups according to the repertory and did not have any archive signatures in detail. In contrast, the current reorganization attempted to separate and record the written material grown up for one person at different provenance offices according to the provenance. Often, however, it was not possible to clarify the provenance of individually handed down documents (personal sheets; evidence of personal, service and income circumstances; qualification reports; proof of employment; calculations of the pensionable period of service; military passports; excerpts from rankings; service certificates in some of which the remains of cashed records can be seen, the provenance of which is not clearly clarified; where information about this is missing in the title entries, it is therefore usually written material of this kind.The main part of the holdings has grown up in the military offices of Württemberg. As Appendix 1 shows, however, it also includes numerous non-Württemberg military and civilian provenance sites. These files were handed over to Württemberg authorities when the officials and veterinarians concerned transferred to Württemberg services and were in most cases continued there. In order not to fragment again the personnel documents united in the inventory, however, now also not continued files remained incorporated into the inventory. To the current new listing it is to be noticed that from the first names of the officials and veterinarians only the call name is indicated, as far as necessary and possible, it became and. These additions are indicated by square brackets. Of the official positions, only the most recently reached is given; however, titles and, in the case of formerly active officers who have transferred to the military administration, the former military rank are also given. For the same reason, the wording "widow's allowance for N.N." is used uniformly in numerous therein and contained notes, even if it concerns the regulation of a pension or the granting of orphans' pensions, invalidity pensions, war allowances and the like for the widows and orphans of civil servants. The index added at the end of this section lists the subjects, places and persons covered by the title recordings, with the exception of the provenance sites where the files have grown up, and the names, titles and positions of the individual officials and their families. The collection comprises 2908 tufts (14 m). After extensive preparatory work by the archivist Herrmann, supervised by the undersigned, it was recorded from spring 1975 to autumn 1976 by Oberstaatsarchivrat Dr. Fischer, who also prepared the repertory. Stuttgart, February 1977(Fischer) 3rd Appendix I: List of provenances represented in the collection: I. Württemberg Army1. Military AdministrationMinistry of WarHigh War CourtIntendantur XIII. A. K.Deputy Intendantur XIII. A. K.Intendantur of the 26th DivisionIntendantur of the 27th DivisionMontierugsdepot HeilbronnClothing Department XIII. A. K.War Clothing Department XIII. A. K.Artillery depot LudwigsburgProviantamt LudwigsburgProviantamt StuttgartProviantamt UlmGarnisonsverwaltung HohenaspergGarnisonsverwaltung LudwigsburgGarnisonsverwaltung UlmMilitär-Bauamt II LudwigsburgMilitär-Neubauamt CannstattMilitär-Neubauamt EsslingenSanitätsamt XIII. A. K.Garnisonslazarett StuttgartUnteroffozoer-Vorbildungsanstalt Ellwangen2. Commandos, Staffs, TroopsDeputy General Command XIII. A. K.Corps General Physician XIII. A. K.Fortress Command and Barracks Administration HohenaspergCourt of 26th DivisionCourt of 27th Division DivisionAuditor of the Garrison UlmDistrict Command BiberachDistrict Command CalwDistrict Command EhingenDistrict Command EllwangenDistrict Command EsslingenDistrict Command GmündDistrict Command HallDistrict Command HeilbronnDistrict Command HorbDistrict Command LeonbergDistrict Command LudwigsburgDistrict Command MergentheimDistrict Command RavensburgDistrict Command ReutlingenDistrict Command RottweilDistrict Command StuttgartDistrict Command I StuttgartDistrict Command II StuttgartDistrict Command UlmGrenadier-Regiment No. 119Infantry Regiment No. 120Füsilier Regiment No. 122Replacement Battalion Infantry Regiment No. 126Infantry Regiment No. 127Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 121Replacement Battalion Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 121Spare Battalion Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 246Spare Battalion Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 119Spare Battalion Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 126Dragonese Regiment No. 26Spare Eskadron Ulanen Regiment No. 19II. Replacement Department Field Artillery Regiments No. 13II. Replacement Department Field Artillery Regiments No. 29Replacement Battalion Foot Artillery Regiments No. 13Pioneer Battalion No. 13Minenwerfer-Kompagnie No. 254Württ. Phone Department No. 204News Replacement Department No. 13Train Department No. 13Train Replacement Department No. 13Field Post Expedition No. 754Field Post Expedition No. 796Field Post Expedition No. 9853. AbwicklungsungsstellenHeeresabwicklungsamt WürttembergAbwicklungsintendantur XIII. A. K.Abwicklungsstelle des Bekleidungsamts XIII. A. K.Abwicklungsstelle des Füsilier-Regiments Nr. 122Abwicklungsstelle des Infanterie-Regiments Nr. 126II. Preußisches Heer1. Military AdministrationMinistry of WarDirectorate I.A.K.Directorate II.A.K.Directorate III.A.K.Directorate IV. A. K. Directorate V. A. K. Directorate VIII. A. K. Directorate X. A. K.Intendantur XI. A. K.Intendantur XIV. A. K.Intendantur XV. A. K.Intendantur XVI. A. K.Intendantur 12. DivisionIntendantur 16. DivisionIntendantur 20. DivisionIntendantur 21. DivisionIntendantur 22. DivisionIntendantur 29. DivisionIntendantur 30. DivisionIntendantur 31. DivisionFieldIntendantur 56. DivisionGGIntendantur 56. DivisionGIntendantur 12. DivisionIntendantur 16. DivisionIntendantur 20. DivisionIntendantur 21. DivisionIntendantur 22. DivisionIntendantur 29. DivisionIntendantur 30. DivisionIntendantur 31. DivisionIntendantur 56. DivisionGIntendantur 6. DivisionGIntendantur 12. A. Commandos, Staffs, TroopsDistrict Command BremenDistrict Command DonaueschingenDistrict Command HeidelbergDistrict Command PotsdamDistrict Command StockachDistrict Command StrasbourgGeneral Command XV. A. K. Airship Replacement Department No. 3Dissolution Command Airship Battalions No. 4Train Replacement Department No. 10III. Bavarian ArmyDistrict Command Ans Ans Ans Answer District Command. Field Artillery Regiment IV Imperial Armed Forces and Imperial Authorities1. Reichswehra) Military Administration:ReichswehrministeriumReichswehrbefehlsstelle WürttembergWehrkreisommando VIntendantur des Wehrkreisises VHeeresanwaltschaft bei der 5. DivisionReichsbekleidungsamt LudwigsburgReichsverpflegungsamt LudwigsburgReichsverpflegungsamt StuttgartHeeresunterkunftsamt StuttgartHeeresunterkunftsamt TübingenWirtschafts- und Rechnungsamt der Nachrichten-Abteilung 5Heeresarchiv Stuttgartb) Troops Brigade News Division 132. ReichsbehördenReichsministerium des InnernReichsschatzministeriumReichsarchivbranstelle StuttgartReichsdisziplinarkammer für WürttembergReichspensionsamt - Department WürttembergLeichsvermögensamt LudwigsburgLeichsvermögensamt StuttgartLandesfinanzamt StuttgartHauptversorgungsamt StuttgartVersorgungsstelle BiberachVersorgungsstelle EhingenVersorgungsamt GmündVersorgungsamt HeilbronnVersorgungsamt HorbVersorgungsamt LudwigsburgVersorgungsstelle StockachVersorgungsamt StuttgartVersorgungsamt Ulm
Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, M 17/1 Bü 59 · File · 8. März. 1899 - 29. Dez. 1908
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Contains mainly: qualification reports; evidence of staffing, changes in staff; appointments, transfers, orders, promotions, retirements; submission of evidence of personal, employment and income status; calculation of eligible periods of service; written work by vicarious agents; translations from French on food and fodder; evidence of claims for expenses incurred by French language studies; entry into protection forces for South West Africa; invalidity insurance; list of candidates for vicarious agent posts

Photo album (reproduction)
Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, M 660/133 Bü 3 · File · 1912-1914
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Contains among other things: Ski holiday (Oberstaufen, Oberstdorf, Münsingen), 1912/13; wedding of Princess Victoria Luise in Berlin, 1913; crossing from Naples to Dar es Salaam via Aden, Mombasa and Zanzibar, 1913; stay in East Africa (Dar es Salaam, Arusha), 1913; safari, 1914

Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, M 708 · Collection · 1870-1930
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Content and Evaluation Contains in alphabetical order portraits of Reserve and Landwehr officers of the XIIIth A.K. For the inventory history see M 707. The previously unlisted inventory was sorted alphabetically by personal name and numbered by Wilfried Kircher during an internship under the guidance of Dr. Wolfgang Mährle. Mr Kircher then also entered the personal data recorded on the envelopes using the ScopeArchiv database program. The stock comprises 3612 numbers or 6.0 linear metres of shelving.

Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, Q 1/7 Bü 35 · File · 1904-1915
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Contains: Hirsch, Lina: "Prologue to the seventieth anniversary of the Württemberg Women's Association for Needy Children", [Poem], Druck, 1904, 10 p.; "Wirtschaftliche Aufgaben. Blätter zur Förderung berufsständischer Tätigkeit" of 5 August 1908; programme of the colonial festival in favour of the Elisabeth House (maternity home) in Windhoek (Namibia) on 1 March 1913 in the Königsbau in Stuttgart; invitation to the general meeting of the Schulbauverein Stuttgart on 29 March 1915

Privy Council I (inventory)
Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, E 31 · Fonds · 1816 - 1884, Vorakten ab 1587
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Preface: With the acceptance of the royal dignity at the end of 1805, Friedrich von Württemberg dissolved the Ducal Privy Council and replaced it with the Royal State Ministry. The Ministry of State was responsible for advising the monarch on general matters of state. After King Wilhelm I took office on 8 November 1816, the Privy Council was re-established as the supreme state authority directly subordinate to the king. It was composed of the ministers or heads of the various departments and of members appointed by the King. His work consisted of examining the requests and proposals of the ministries and forwarding them to the King with his expert opinions. In his capacity as the monarch's supreme advisory authority, he was also in charge of all matters relating to the estates, applications for the dismissal or retirement of civil servants, disputes between the judicial and administrative authorities, the relationship between the Church and the State, and matters specifically entrusted to him by the King. In administrative disputes, the Privy Council acted as the decisive and enacting authority, for example in appeals against decrees of the heads of department and penal findings of the administrative offices. He mediated the communication between the king and the estates, whereby he could decide independently whether or not applications from estates were suitable for submission to the king. With the establishment of the State Ministry in 1876, the Administrative Court in 1877 and the Court of Jurisdiction in 1879, the Privy Council lost much of its importance. It was repealed by the law of 15 June 1911 and, in accordance with the prominent position of the Privy Council in 19th-century state administration, its documents are of outstanding historical documentary value. The partial stock E 31 (Königlicher Geheimer Rat I), comprising 32.5 linear metres and arranged according to a rubric scheme, was probably delivered to the State Archives soon after 1876 and was used very frequently, but has so far only been insufficiently catalogued. It was therefore urgently necessary to re-draw the inventory scientifically, taking into account the existing content structure of the stock. It was carried out between December 1969 and March 1974 by the archive inspector candidates Michael Kuthe, Eric Elwert, Walter Wannenwetsch and Magdalene Rüther as well as by the State Archive referees Dr. Wilfried Schöntag, Dr. Peter Eitel, Dr. Hermann Ehmer and Dr. Norbert Georg Hofmann. The final editing of the repertory was carried out by Luise Pfeifle, archivist. She also made the register.Stuttgart, 2 November 1978Paul Sauer President of the Privy Council: Hans Otto von der Lühe18. November 1817 - 29 July 1821 Christian Friedrich von Otto29 July 1821 - 15 November 1831 Eugen von Maucler15. November 1831 - March 1848 Constantin von Neurath8. May 1851 - 27 April 1867 (- 24 April 1855 only acting) Ludwig von Golther27. April 1867 - 23 March 1870 Karl von Varnbüler23. March 1870 - 31 August 1870 Hermann von Mittnacht31. August 1870 - 10 November 1900 Max Schott von Schottenstein10. November 1900 - 15 April 1901 Wilhelm August von Breitling15. April 1901 - December 3, 1906 Karl von Weizsäcker4. December 1906 - June 15, 1911

Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, E 130 b Bü 1105 · File · 1928-1942
Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

Contains among other things: Permission to sell printed matter and lots on the occasion of the colonial exhibition in Stuttgart during the main divine service, June 1928; application of the Evangelical Lutheran State Consistory in Dresden for the release of the public holidays of meetings by judicial and administrative authorities, which were not recognized by the state, and request of the Saxon legation in Munich concerning this matter, Dec. 1928. 1929; request for general liberation of gymnastic and sporting exercises from the provisions of 15.12.1928 concerning Sunday order, 1931/32; implementation of the Holiday Act of 27.2.1934 and provisions concerning church holidays during National Socialism (with statements and reports of the Evangelical Upper Church Council and the Episcopal Ordinariate, Febr./March 19035).