Showing 117 results

Archival description
Albers, Wilhelm
BArch, N 686 · Fonds · 1879-1919
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

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/...

Bamberger, Ludwig
BArch, N 2008 · Fonds · -1000
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the inventorist: political and economic writer, member of the Reichstag (nat.lib., later freisinnig) citation method: BArch, N 2008/...

Bamberger, Ludwig
Barth, Theodor (Bestand)
BArch, N 2010 · Fonds · 1879-1927
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the inventorist: Syndicus of the Bremen Chamber of Commerce, journalist (ed. of the "Nation"), member of the Reichstag (liberal) citation: BArch, N 2010/...

Barth, Theodor
BArch, N 2350 · Fonds · 1860-1905
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the Inventory Designer: Wirkl. Geh. Rat, Chief President of the Province of Hanover, Member of the 2nd hannov. Chamber, later of the Reichstag and Prussia. House of Representatives citation style: BArch, N 2350/...

Bennigsen, Rudolf
Beseler, Hans von
BArch, N 30 · Fonds · 1850-1967
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the Inventory Designer: 27.04.1850 - 20.12.1921, Generaloberst Description of the Inventory: Generaloberst Unterlagen, u.a. (documents, etc.) as chief of the engineering and pioneer corps and general inspector of the fortresses (1904-1914), as commander-in-chief of the siege army off Antwerp in 1914 and as governor general in Warsaw (1915-1918); memorandums and correspondence; books; albums; pictures; periodicals Life data: 1850-1921 BB: Private things are to be excluded from publication (ask head of MA) State of development: Special conditions of use Citation method: BArch, N 30/...

Bundesarchiv, BArch N 961 · Fonds · 1878-1962
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)
  • 1878-1962, Bundesarchiv, BArch N 961* description: History of the inventor: 28.03.1878 Born in Erstein, Alsace 01.10.1896 Entry into the military 27.01.1898 Promotion to lieutenant secretary 08.12.1903 Transfer to Kiel for navy 18.01.1904 Transfer in naval expedition corps to Deutsch-Südwestafrika 11.04.1905 Transfer back to Kiel 01.10.1908- 30.06.1911 Attendance at the Prussian Academy of War in Berlin 01.04.1912 Commanding in the Great General Staff 01.10.1913 Promotion to Captain 22.03.1914- August 1914 Military attaché in Belgrade (Serbia) 1914 - 1918 Various uses of general staff in the 1st WK 22.03.1918 Promotion to Major 1918 - 1921 Activity in the staff of the Chief of Field Railways 1921 - 1923 Acquisition in the Reichswehr and activity in the Reichswehr Ministry 01.12.1923 Promotion to Lieutenant Colonel 01.10.1923- 01.06.1926 Commander of the 10th Infantry Regiment in Dresden 01.06.1926- 01.11.1928 Transfer to the staff of the 4th Infantry Regiment in Kolberg 01.04.1927 Promotion to Colonel 01.11.1928- 1930 Commander of the 14th Infantry Regiment in Constance 01.11.1930 Appointment as Chief of the Wehrmacht in Berlin and promotion to Major General 01.10.1932 Promotion to Lieutenant General 31.01.1933 Retirement 01.10.1935- 1939 Reactivation and appointment as teacher at the Kriegsakademie Berlin 10.09.1939- 01.07.1940 Commander and Commander in Poland 01.07.1940- 15.03.1941 Commander of the German troops in the Netherlands 1942 Commanding General of the 82nd Army Commanding General of the German Armed Forces in the Netherlands 1942 Army Corps 01.11.1942- 28.02.1943 High Command of the Army 28.02.1943 Retirement 15.09.1943- 15.05.1945 General Commander of the German Red Cross 12.07.1962 Death in Berlin Content characterization: The estate N 961, Alfred Boehm-Tettelbach is the estate of the Reichswehr and Wehrmacht member, commander-in-chief of the German troops in the Netherlands in World War II and general leader of the German Red Cross 1943-1945, Alfred Boehm-Tettelbach. The estate includes the periods of childhood and youth in school, the time as a soldier in the Her and Navy, the years as a teacher at the War Academy, the time in World War II as commander in Poland and commander of the troops in the Netherlands, the years as general leader of the German Red Cross and the post-war years until the death in 1962. The estate consists of numerous self-written documents and writings from his apprenticeship, comprehensive diary entries and a series of self-written memorial books on Boehm-Tettelbach's entire life chronicle. Citation style: BArch N 961/...
Boell, Ludwig (inventory)
BArch, N 14 · Fonds · 1911-1943
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the Inventory Designer: Life data 03.07.1889 born in Weißenburg/Elsaß I. married with Edith ..., died 1927 II. married with Miranda ... Military service in the royal prussia. Army and in the Reichswehr 01.10.1907 Entry 30.09.1920 Release from the 200,000 man army Promotions 1908 Corporal 31.03.1909 NCO 10.08.1909 Deputy Sergeant 19.11.1909 Flag Junker 22.03.1910 Lieutenant (with patent of 22.3.1908) 25.02.1915 Lieutenant Colonel 18.06.1917 Captain Positions 01.10.1907 Inf.Rgt. 143 One-year volunteer 04.02.1909 Inf.Rgt. 132 Voluntary exercise 16.06.1909 Inf.Rgt. 60 Exercise A 23.08.1909 Inf.Rgt. 56 Flag officer 26.11.1913 Schutztruppe Deutsch-Ostafrika, Recruit Depot Schutztruppe Deutsch-Ostafrika, 10th field comp. 03.1914 Schutztruppe Deutsch-Ostafrika, 1st field comp. Kp-Führer, Ordonnanz-Officier beim Kommandostab, Adjutant der Schutztruppe und Generalstabsoffizier bei General Wahle 31.03.1920 VII AK budgeted Kp chief 07.1920 Schutztruppen-Abwicklungsamt Berlin-Adlershof Inventory description: Eugen Friedrich Ludwig Boell, was born on 03.07.1889 in Weißenburg/Elsass. He attended the elementary school and the grammar school in Weissenburg, as well as the University of Strasbourg/Elsass where he studied philology. Married in second marriage to Miranda Machalitzky born 13.01.1908, with whom he had four children. Hildegard Ingeborg Boell born 19.02.1934 Friedrich Ludwig Boell born 12.05.1935 Gisela Adelheid Boell born 14.03.1939 Erika Miranda Boell born 03.04.1943 Ludwig Boell was an officer in the army and in the Schutztruppe Deutsch-Ostafrika (1914-1918). In 1920 he retired from the Reichswehr due to the reduction of the Wehrmacht and due to military service damage. After his retirement from the army, he was responsible for collecting and sifting the material for the history of the East African campaign at the Schutztruppenamt and the Colonial Central Administration. Furthermore, he was adjutant of the staff chief of the senior management of the organization "Escherich", as well as office manager and accountant at the Theresientaler Kristallglasfabrik. 01.08.1936, appointment to the government council in the Reichsdienst at the Forschungsanstalt für Kriegs und Heeresgeschichte in Potsdam. 01.05.1938, was promoted to the senior government council. On 01.09.1944, Ludwig Boell was awarded the War Merit Cross 2nd Class with Swords. Military service in the Royal Prussian Army and in the Reichswehr 01.10.1907 Entry 30.09.1920 Discharge from the 200,000 man army Promotions 00.00.1908 Corporal 31.03.1909 NCO 10.08.1909 Sergeant 19.11.1909 Fahnenjunker 22.03.1910 Lieutenant (with patent dated 22.03.1908) 25.02.1915 Lieutenant Colonel 18.06.1917 Captain Positions 01.10.1907 Inf.Rgt. 143 One-year volunteer 04.02.1909 Inf.Rgt. 132 Voluntary exercise 16.06.1909 Inf.Rgt. 60 Exercise A 23.08.1909 Inf.Rgt. 56 Flag-junker 26.11.1913 Schutztruppe Deutsch-Ostafrika, Rekrutendepot Schutztruppe Deutsch-Ostafrika, 10. field company 00.03.1914 Schutztruppe Deutsch-Ostafrika, 1. field company 00.03.1914 Schutztruppe Deutsch-Ostafrika, 1. field company 00.03.1914 Schutztruppe Deutsch-Ostafrika, 1. field company 00.03.1914 Feldkompanie Kompanieführer, Ordonnanz-Offizier bei beim Kommandostab, Adjutant der Schutztruppe und Generalstabsoffizier bei General Wahle 31.03.1920 VII. AK budgeted company commander 00.07.1920 Schutztruppen-Abwicklungsamt Berlin-Adlerdorf Einsatz 1914-1918 Deutsch-Ostafrika citation method: BArch, N 14/...

BArch, N 2043 · Fonds · 1000-
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the Inventory Designer: Director of the Colonial Department of the Federal Foreign Office, later Vice-Chancellor at the University of Rostock, member of the Reichstag (conservative), citation method: BArch, N 2043/...

Buchka, Gerhard von
Carpenter, Karl (inventory)
BArch, N 521 · Fonds · 1808-1939
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

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/...

BArch, RH 18 · Fonds · 1929-1944
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

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/...

BArch, N 559 · Fonds · 1881-1949
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the Inventory Designer: General of the Infantry Berthold von Deimling Life data 21.03.1853 in Karlsruhe 03.02.1944 in Baden-Baden Career 1873 Promotion to Lieutenant Seconde 1875 Change to Infantry Regiment "Duke of Holstein" (Holsteinic) No. 85 (Rendsburg) 1880 promotion to lieutenant 1879 to 1882 Kriegsakademie Berlin 1882 officer in infantry regiment no. 85 1886 transfer to the Großer Generalstab (railway department) 1888 captain 1891 general staff officer in the 1st division in Königsberg 1893 major 1895 in the general staff of the XVI. Army Corps 1898 Battalion Commander in the infantry regiment "Prince Wilhelm" (4th Baden) No. 112 in Mulhouse (Sundgau) 1900 Lieutenant Colonel and transfer to the Great General Staff (Chief of Operations Division II) 1903 Colonel and Commander of the infantry regiment No. 112 in Mulhouse 1904 Commander of the 2nd Army Commandant of the German Army (Battalion) No. 112 in Mulhouse (Sundgau) 1903 Colonel and Commander of the infantry regiment No. 112 in Mulhouse 1904 Commander of the 2nd Army Command No. 112 in Mulhouse (Sundgau) 1904 Commander of the infantry regiment No. 112 in Mulhouse (Sundgau) 1900 Lieutenant Colon and Commander of the infantry regiment No. 112 in Mulhouse 1903 Commander of the infantry Regiment No. 112 in Mulhouse 1904 Field Regiment 1905 deputy of the commander-in-chief for the southern region 1905 elevation to hereditary nobility 1906 commander of the Schutztruppe in southwest Africa 1907 major general 1908 return and commander of the Infanterie-Brigade 58 (Mühlhausen) 1910 lieutenant-general and appointment as commander of the 29. Division in Freiburg i. Br. 1913 General of the Infantry and Commanding General of the XV Army Corps (Strasbourg) 1914 War operation in southern Alsace, on the Aisne, off Ypres in Flanders, off Verdun (XV. Army Corps) 1916 Awarded the Pour le Merite (capture of the Fort Vaux) 1916 Assignment to the Somme 1916 Transfer to the Section Commander of the Army Division B (Vosges) 1917 Farewell with simultaneous appointment as Chief of the 1st Under Alsatian Infantry Regiment No. 132. Description of the stock: The stock contains life memories, anda. on his activities as commander of the Schutztruppe in South West Africa (1906-1907), the 58th Infantry Brigade in Mulhouse/Alsace (1907-1910) and the 29th Division in Freiburg (1910-1913) and as commander general of the XVth Army Corps in the 2nd Infantry Army Corps in the United Kingdom. Feldartillerieregiments in Südwestafrika 1904-1906 (Herero- und Hottentottenaufständen); further documents from the period of service in Südwestafrika as well as from the 1st World War; correspondence with Ludendorf and Hindenburg as well as from the time after retirement; further newspaper articles and pictorial material. References to other holdings R 1001 Reichskolonialamt (Online-Findmittel) R 1002 Authorities of the former protectorate Deutsch-Südwestafrika (Online-Findmittel) N 14 Ludwig Boell estate N 38 Arnold Lequis estate N 103 Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck estate NL 30 Viktor Franke citation: BArch, N 559/...

Deimling, Berthold von
BArch, N 255 · Fonds · 1854-1939
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the Inventory Designer: 07.09.1843 - 08.03.1918, Admiral, Chief of the Admiral Staff of the Navy (1899-1902) Inventory description: Admiral, Chief of the Admiral Staff of the Navy (1899-1902) Correspondence; memoirs, reports and publications about commands and travels, especially to Asia (Kiautschou), supplemented by pictures and maps. Life data: 07.09.1843-08.03.1918 Citation method: BArch, N 255/...

Diederichs, Otto von
BArch, N 1004 · Fonds · 1908-1954
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the Inventory Designer: Adelheid v. Saldern, Hermann Dietrich. A statesman of the Weimar Republic, Boppard 1966 NDB 3, p. 698 MdR (DDP, 1920-1933) Reichsminister (1928-1932) Inventory description: Correspondence and material files mainly from political activity, including as Reich Minister for Food and Agriculture (1928-1930), Economics (1930) and Finance (1930-1932), as Special Representative for Food and Agriculture, and as Head of the Food and Agriculture Council of the American and British Zone (1946-1947). (as of 1977) Citation method: BArch, N 1004/...

BArch, MSG 105 · Fonds · 1877-1962
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

Description of the holdings: The collection compiled by Eugen von Donat consists of documents on the history, technology and individual associations and institutions of the railways in the First and Second World Wars. In addition, the collection contains documents on war damage to road and railway bridges in Baden-Württemberg and, above all, extensive map material on Westwall sites. Citation style: BArch, MSG 105/...

Falkenhayn, Erich of
BArch, N 2069 · Fonds · 1914-1922
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the inventor: Born on 11 September 1861 in Burg Belchau (district of Graudenz / West Prussia); died on 8 April 1922 in Schloss Lindstedt near Potsdam. Citation style: BArch, N 2069/...

Falkenhayn, Erich von
Fauth, Friedrich (inventory)
BArch, N 378 · Fonds · 1938-1947
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the Inventory Designer: Born on 03 Sept. 1875, died on 07 November 1961 in Heidelberg. Fauth came to Tsingtau in January 1898 and belonged to the artillery sailor department. Until about 1908 he lived with the family of Governor Oskar Truppel. The daughter of Truppels Annemarie, married Werners, was the godmother of Fauths daughter. Fauth was vice watchman in 1906, lieutenant at sea in 1918. In the 1930s, Friedrich Fauth recorded his memories of the Tsingtau period in handwriting and typewriting. He sent a copy of it to Annemarie Werner. In 1967, the latter handed over the documents to the then Document Centre of the Military History Research Office. Inventory description: Memories of the military service in Tsingtau, including the First World War citation: BArch, N 378/...

BArch, N 94 · Fonds · 1887-1953
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the Inventory Designer: 27.07.1863 - 18.08.1954, Major General Description of the Inventory: Private and business correspondence; documents from the period of service 1886-1919, including as commander of the Infantry Regiment 271 (1915-1918) and the 82nd Reserve Infantry Brigade (1918); memoirs. Citation style: BArch, N 94/...

Gaisser, Karl (inventory)
BArch, N 279 · Fonds · 1907-1958
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the Inventory Designer: 17.03.1880 - 29.04.1958, Polizei-Oberst Description of the Inventory: Memoirs of the activities in Togo (1908-1914) and Cameroon (1914) as well as advisor of the Croatian police to the commander of the Ordnungspolizei in Croatia (1943-1944) with numerous picture albums; correspondences and reports from the period of service in Togo and Cameroon. Citation style: BArch, N 279/...

BArch, R 36 · Fonds · 1906-1945
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the Inventor: After Adolf Hitler had been appointed Reich Chancellor of the German Reich on January 30, 1933, the NSDAP gradually undermined the democratic system of the Weimar Republic over the following months and finally eliminated it. Decisive stages were the abolition of fundamental rights after the fire of the Reichstag on 28 February 1933 and the abolition of parliamentarism by the so-called Enabling Act of 23 March 1933. The latter abolished the separation of powers and conferred all legislative powers on the government under Adolf Hitler for four years. A further step was the smashing of the parties and unions. After the KPD had been banned, the trade unions dissolved and the SPD rendered incapable of action, the other parties dissolved on their own. In the course of these measures, the six existing municipal umbrella organisations also lost their independence. On May 22, 1933, the chairmen and managing presidents of the German/Prussian Association of Cities, the Reichsstädtebund, the Deutscher Landkreistag, the Deutscher Landgemeindetag, the Preußischer Landgemeindetag West, and the Association of Prussian Provinces were forced to give their consent to the transfer of the various associations into a new unified association. From now on, this "German Community Day" was to be the sole corporate representation of all German city and community associations recognised by the NSDAP. In order to standardize the previous associations with their 80 sub-organizations, the provisional Lord Mayor of Munich, Karl Fiehler, was appointed as "Representative for the Standardization of the Municipal Central Associations". The management of the new association was taken over by Dr. Kurt Jeserich, provisional director of the Institute for Municipal Science in Berlin, and Dr. Ralf Zeitler, speaker at the Reich Employers' Association. The merger process, which lasted for months, finally came to an end in the Law on the German Community Day of 15 December 1933, which finally established the formation of the new association. As the only existing communal top organization, the German Community Day, which as a corporation under public law was fundamentally subordinate to the Reich Minister of the Interior, was forced to include all cities, rural communities, administrative districts, provinces and later also the Reichsgaue in its capacity as self-governing government units. After the integration of Austria and the Sudetenland into the German Reich in 1938, the annexation of West Prussia, Gdansk and Poznan in the following year, the sphere of influence of the German Association of Municipalities was extended to the new parts of the Reich and their Gau administrations. In principle, the association took over the municipal representation of interests for all areas placed under German sovereignty. On February 14, 1934, Karl Fiehler, the previous commissioner for unification, was appointed the first chairman of the German Association of Municipalities. Fiehler was head of the NSDAP's local government department. The personal union was intended to coordinate the orientation of the NSDAP's work in local politics with the work of the German Community Congress and thus to comply with the principle of the harmony of party and state proclaimed at the 1933 Reich Party Congress in Nuremberg. The management of the German Association of Municipalities was subject to the instructions of the chairman and Reichsleiter of municipal politics. Through this entanglement of party and state authorities, the German Community Day came under the "organizations supported by the NSDAP", which was also partly advantageous, since the technical work could be made more effective under the supremacy of the party office. The association was now much more representative of the state. However, the idea of a unitary association with clearly defined tasks and closer ties to the state was nothing new; quite a few saw in it the possibility of better asserting municipal interests. The forced standardization and the practice of the totalitarian state, however, only allowed the possible advantages of the new uniform association to recede into the background. The association was supervised by the Reich Minister of the Interior, who appointed the chairman, the members of the board and the specialist committees. The executive committee and specialist committees were only allowed to meet after being convened by the minister, who also determined the agenda. In addition, he approved the budget and he himself or a deputy had to chair the committees. In addition to the 20 specialist committees, which only had the right to advise the chairman, the state and provincial offices were the only subordinate bodies of the Berlin office. Although the association had a highly centralised structure, the necessary expansion to include regional working groups and county departments in order to increase the exchange of experience led to an organisational structure that was comparable in its approach to that of the old associations. The fact that the association no longer had the right to represent municipal interests before the Reich and Land authorities on its own initiative had a particularly drastic effect. Only after a request by the authorities should the association be allowed to express itself from now on. Before 1933, however, it was precisely this right of initiative that had been decisive for the active representation of interests vis-à-vis the state and the self-determination of municipal associations as part of a pluralistic social order. Despite the organisational and political changes, the German Community Day also played an important role between 1933 and 1945, above all as a community advisory centre and as a mediator of practical experience in the field of local administration. Even the exchange between municipalities and state administration was by no means discontinued, which is evidenced by the active expert activities of the German Association of Municipalities (Deutscher Gemeindetags). A certain continuity in the association's work could also be ensured by the fact that a larger number of executives from the dissolved associations transferred to the new association. The organisational structure of the German Association of Municipalities was basically very similar to that of the German/Prussian Association of Cities. Thus the German Community Day took over the coat of arms of the German/Prussian Community Day, the Holstentor, and also its registry. The annual meetings of the German Association of Municipalities also followed on from similar events of the predecessor institutions. As a result of the bombing of Berlin during the Second World War, the German Community Day moved part of its administrative offices in August 1943 from Berlin to Wels/Upper Austria. The main tasks of the departments there were Ia (civil servants, employees and workers), II (finances and taxes), III (welfare, health and social policy), V (schools), Va (culture), VI (real estate, construction and housing) and Rv (defence of the Reich). It should be noted that only Division III with all registries moved to Wels. The other departments - probably only working staffs - took only parts of their registries with them. Also the cash administration and the personnel office moved to Wels. Departments Z (Central Department: General Administration, Management), I (Constitution and Administration), IV (Economy and Transport) and the Department for the Eastern Territories remained in Berlin. After the collapse of the German Reich in 1945, the German Community Day, due to its status as a "supervised organization", was regarded by the Allies as a part of the NSDAP's outlines and, together with the other organizations of the NSDAP, banned and formally dissolved. The administrator appointed by the Berlin magistrate for the concerns of the German Association of Municipalities did not succeed in correcting this misunderstanding. It was not possible to set up a kind of municipal chamber as the successor to the German Association of Municipalities. The "German Association of Cities", which had already re-constituted itself in 1946, was granted the right to ownership of the property of the German Association of Cities, but it could not bear the financial burden of the reconstruction and repair of the building on its own. Together with the Berlin Senate, the "Verein zur Pflege kommunalwissenschaftlicher Aufgaben e.V." was finally founded and established in 1951 as an asset holder of the German Association of Municipalities. The association, which was soon renamed "Verein für Kommunalwissenschaften", took over the office building in Straße des 17. Juni and also the files stored there. The building, today known as the Ernst Reuter House, was planned by Albert Speer for the German Community Day, erected from 1938 and finally occupied by the German Community Day in 1942. The German Association of Cities, the largest municipal umbrella organisation, initially set up its headquarters in Cologne due to its special status in Berlin. It was not until 1999 that the head office was partially relocated to the Ernst-Reuter-Haus in Berlin. In addition to the German Association of Cities and Towns, the central associations at district and municipal level were also newly formed after the Second World War. The Deutscher Landkreistag and the Deutscher Städte- und Gemeindebund, together with the Deutscher Städtetag, represent the most important municipal interest groups. The Federal Association of Municipal Central Associations offers these three associations the opportunity to present their interests in a bundled manner and to jointly express their views on overarching problems. Inventory description: Inventory history The inventory R 36 consists entirely of the files of the administrative offices relocated to Wels during the war. Apart from the cash documents and personnel files, the whereabouts of which could not be clarified, the Wels stockpiles have survived the war and the turmoil of the post-war period without any losses. They were taken by a member of the German Association of Communities via Linz/Donau, Offenburg, Frankfurt/Main to Siegburg, where the files were first kept at the newly founded German Association of Counties. With the approval of the Federal Association of Municipal Central Associations, the latter handed them over to the Federal Archives in 1953. The records in the Federal Archives represent only a small part of the total records. An estimated three-quarters of the total holdings, which consisted of the non-displaced registry parts of the German Association of Municipalities and the old registries of the dissolved umbrella organisations, remained in Berlin. After the Second World War, the files were stored at the Verein für Kommunalwissenschaften, which handed them over to the Landesarchiv Berlin as a deposit in 1968. There the German Community Day is registered today with 8600 file units. The second largest part of the collection is the legacy of the German and Prussian Association of Cities with 4286 files, whereby its war economy files from the years 1914 to 1918 form a separate collection with 1279 file units. Furthermore, the tradition of the Reichsstädtebund, the Association of Prussian Provinces, the German and Prussian Landkreistag, the German and Prussian Landgemeindetag and other associations that were absorbed into the German Gemeindetag in 1933 can be found in the Berlin State Archives. The German Association of Cities also handed over its old registrations to the Landesarchiv Berlin until 1985. Already in 1937/38 a small part of the files of the predecessor institutions of the German Community Day had been transferred to the Prussian Secret State Archives - today the Secret State Archives of Prussian Cultural Heritage. These holdings had been moved to Stassfurt during the war and then to the German Central Archive of the GDR, Merseburg Department. Today the tradition of the German and Prussian Association of Cities and Towns, the Association of Prussian Provinces, the Prussian County Council and the Prussian West Community Council is again in the Secret State Archives in Berlin-Dahlem. Documents of the German and Prussian Association of Cities, the Reichsstädtebund and the German and Prussian Landkreistag amounting to some 2600 file units, which had been transferred to the Reichsarchiv Potsdam in 1938, were lost in the fire at the archive building in April 1945. Archive evaluation and processing The present finding aid book represents a revision of the finding aid book produced in Koblenz in 1957. Volume counts, as far as they had been specified in the file numbers, were taken over for the volume sequences. In addition, further tape sequences were created for archiving purposes. The transactions contained in individual volumes ("booklets") were included in the titles. For the illustration of the volume and issue divisions, the file numbers are displayed in the index. Furthermore, the titles and the classification, which were based entirely on the file plan of the German Association of Municipalities, were slightly changed. For example, file plan items have been grouped together and the names of individual subgroups have been standardized. The changes were made carefully in order to reproduce as faithfully as possible the traditional registry order, as far as it has been preserved. There were no cassations. Furthermore, it should be pointed out that a large part of the files had been created by the predecessor institutions and then continued by the German Association of Municipalities after 1933. Content characterization: Administration of departments, committees, personnel and salary matters 1926-1945 (24), personnel files 1927-1944 (25), budget, cash and accounting 1939-1943 (2), course of business and management 1936-1945 (10), Publishing affairs 1933-1945 (16), constitutional and administrative affairs 1926-1944 (10), civil service affairs 1916-1945 (350), employee affairs 1932-1944 (41), worker affairs 1932-1944 (55), labor law 1934-1944 (32), Hospital staff 1926-1945 (26), four-year plan 1936-1944 (8), general financial matters, financial equalisation 1920-1945 (40), budget, cash and accounting of municipalities 1923-1944 (37), taxation and tax law 1918-1945 (81), Contributions and fees 1932-1944 (6), wealth and debt management 1922-1944 (24), savings banks, banking 1928-1944 (17), welfare 1915-1945 (354), economic welfare 1914-1945 (126), health 1912-1944 (60), health 1909-1945 (108), Youth welfare 1913-1945 (68), unemployment assistance 1925-1945 (93), social insurance 1921-1945 (62), accident insurance 1925-1945 (100), hospitals 1920-1944 (12), institutions 1912-1945 (177), work service 1924-1944 (41), welfare education 1928-1945 (59), Youth education 1921-1945 (35), Sport 1906-1945 (49), Cemetery and Funeral 1917-1944 (31), Economy and Transport 1935-1939 (3), Education 1913-1945 (167), Vocational and Continuing Education 1920-1944 (26), Technical and Higher Education 1920-1945 (25), Popular education 1933-1945 (8), art, monument conservation, nature conservation 1926-1945 (123), religious affairs 1931-1943 (9), tourism 1934-1944 (3), urban development, roads 1931-1945 (29), road construction, road traffic 1925-1945 (39), agriculture, Forestry and Water Management 1927-1945 (23), General Affairs of the Reich Defence 1939-1944 (4), War Welfare 1937-1945 (18), War Food Economy 1919-1944 (79), Air Protection 1926-1945 (53) State of Development: Online-Findbuch (2007) Citation method: BArch, R 36/...

Groener, Wilhelm (inventory)
BArch, N 46 · Fonds · 1867-1939
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the Inventory Designer: Lieutenant General, Reichsminister Karl Eduard Wilhelm Groener Life data 22.11.1867 born in Ludwigsburg (Württemberg) 03.05.1939 died in Bornstedt near Potsdam Development 22.11.1884 as a flag squire in the 3rd Württemberg Infantry Regiment No. 121 joined Ludwigsburg 01.04.1890 Battalion adjutant 01.10.1993-July 1896 Commanded to Kriegsakademie 01.04.1897-01.04.1899 Commanded to Großen Generalstab 25.03.1899 Transferred to Großen Generalstab 12.09.1902 Company commander in infantry regiment no. 98 transferred 01.10.1904 to the Great General Staff transferred 01.07.-11.09.1907 to the General Command VII Army Corps commanded 18.04.1908 to the spring voyage of the deep-sea fleet commanded 10.09.1908 with effect from 01.10.1908 to the General Staff of the XIII Army Corps transferred 18.10.1910 as battalion commander in the 7th Württemberg Infantry Regiment No. 125 transferred 13.09.1911 with effect from 01.10.1911 to the Great General Staff commanded 01.10.1912 appointed head of department in the Great General Staff 03.08.1914 chief of the field railway 26.05.1916, leaving his position as chief of the field railways for use at the War Food Office, 01.11.1916 appointed chief of the War Office at the War Ministry and appointed representative of the Prussian War Minister 09.11.1916 appointed Deputy Plenipotentiary of Prussia in the Federal Council 16.08.1917 appointed Commander of the 33rd Infantry Division 20.12.1917 appointed Leader of the XXV Reserve Corps 25.02.1918 appointed Leader of the 1st Army Corps 28.03.1918 appointed Chief of the General Staff of the Army Group Eichhorn - from 08. 08. 1917 appointed Commander of the 33rd Infantry Division 20.12.1917 appointed Leader of the XXV Reserve Corps 25.02.1918 appointed Leader of the 1st Army Corps 28.03.1918 appointed Chief of the General Staff of the Army Group Eichhorn - from 08. 08. 1918 appointed Commander of the 33rd Infantry Division08.1918 Army Group Kiev appointed 15.07.1919 appointed Commander of the Kolberg Command Post 30.09.1919 Approval of his farewell request 25.07.1920-12.08.1923 Reich Minister of Transport 19.01.1928 Reich Minister of Defence 08.10.1931 Reich Minister of the Interior 30.05.1932 Resignation from both offices Promotions 08.08.1885 Ensign 09.09.1886 Lieutenant 18.09.1893 Lieutenant Colonel 25.03.1899 Captain 27.01.1906 Major 01.10.1912 Lieutenant Colonel 05.09.1914 Colonel 26.06.1915 Major General 01.11.1916 Lieutenant General 29.10.1918 I. General Quartermaster Orders and Decorations 01.09.1900 Royal Prussia. Red Eagle Order 4th Class 11.05.1905 Knight's Cross 1st Class of the Royal Württembg. Friedrichs-Order 11.09.1907 Prussia. Crown Order 3rd Class 28.02.1908 Royal Bayer. Order of Military Merit 4th class with crown 09.03.1908 Officer's Cross of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. French Joseoh Order 17.09.1909 Crown to the Royal Prussia. Red Eagle Order 4th Class and Knight's Cross of the Order of the Württembg Crown 13.09.1912 Knight's Cross 1st Class of the Royal Saxon. Albrechts Order with Crown 19.07.1913 Royal Prussia. Red Eagle Order 3rd Class 29.04.1914 Cross of Honor of the Order of the Württembg Crown 17.10.1914 K.u.K. Austrian-Hungarian. Iron Crown 2nd Class 16.11.1914 Iron Cross 2nd Class 05.12.1914 Officer's Cross of the Royal Bavarian. Military Order of Merit with Swords 07.12.1914 Officer Cross of the Royal Württembg. Military Order of Merit with Swords 17.12.1914 Iron Cross 1. Class 29.12.1914 k.u.K. Austrian-Hungarian. Military Cross of Merit 3rd Class with war decoration 14.05.1915 Knight's Cross of the Royal House Order of Hohenzollern with Swords 29.06.1915 Knight's Cross of the Royal and Royal Austro-Hungarian Empire. Leopold Order with War Decoration 11.09.1915 Order pour le mérite 15.12.1915 Commander's Cross 2nd Class of the Royal Saxon. Albrechts-Ordens mit Schwertern 21.01.1916 Großoffizierkreuz des Kgl. Bulgar. militär-Verdienstorden mit Schwertern 10.04.1916 Komturkreuz 1. Klasse des Großhzgl. Bad. Order of the Zähringer Lion with Swords 23.08.1916 Commander Cross of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Franz Joseph-Ordens 27.10.1916 Bremer Hanseatenkreuz 08.11.1916 Hamburg Hanseatenkreuz 05.01.1917 Commturkreuz des Kgl. Bayer. Militär-Max Joseph-Ordens 22.03.1917 Cross of Merit for War Aid 07.06.1917 K.u.K. Österr.-Ungar. Iron Crown 1st Class with War Decoration 02.08.1917 Commander Cross of the Royal Württembg. Friedrichs-Order with Swords 16.08.1917 Royal Prussia. Red Eagle Order 2nd Class with Crown and Swords 31.08.1917 Cross of Honour 1st Class of the Princel. Hohenzollern House Order with Swords 15.06.1918 Star to the Royal Prussia. Red Eagle Order 2nd Class with Crown and Swords 27.06.1918 Grand Cross of the Royal Württembg. Friedrichs-Orden with Crown and Swords Description of the Collection: The collection includes, among others..: Memoirs 1867-1919; personal war diary, e.g. as chief of the field railways (1914-1916), chief of the war office (1916-1917); as First Quartermaster General (1918-1919); correspondence with Ebert and Hindenburg, among others; manuscripts mainly on the First World War, e.g. on the Schlieffen Plan and on field railways; material collections mainly of a war-historical and war-economical nature; political documents as Reich Minister of Transport (1920-1923), Reich Minister of the Armed Forces (1928-1932) and acting Reich Minister of the Interior (1931-1932). Further parts of the estate can be found in the Main State Archives in Stuttgart and in private hands. References to other stocks PH 3 Großer Generalstab RH 26-33 33. infantry division R 4101 Reichseisenbahnamt R 1501 Reich Ministry of the Interior R 5 Reich Ministry of Transport [online finding aids] Citation method: BArch, N 46/...

Groener, Wilhelm
BArch, N 1121 · Fonds · 1910-1969
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the Inventory Designer: Writer Description of the Inventory: Notes on her stay in Cameroon (around 1910); diary notes (1919-1925, 1932-1936, 1943-1953) and other documents from political and literary activities, including on the resistance of the Black Front against the NSDAP and on the Moringen camp (Northeim district). (as of 1977) Citation method: BArch, N 1121/...

Gustedt, Elisabeth von
Haeften, Hans v. (inventory)
BArch, N 35 · Fonds · 1902-1937
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the Inventory Designer: 16.03.1870 - 09.06.1937, Major General, President of the Reichsarchivs Inventory description: Memoirs and military historical elaborations from the First World War, including as representatives of the Supreme Army Command at the Reich Chancellor (1918), as well as military and political documents. Citation style: BArch, N 35/...

BArch, N 2105 · Fonds · 1000-
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the Inventory Designer: Chairman of the Association for Mining Interests in Dortmund, member of the Prussian Mining Association. House of Representatives and Reichstag (nat.lib.) citation method: BArch, N 2105/...

Hammacher, Friedrich
Bundesarchiv, BArch N 1062 · Fonds · 1890-1927
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)
  • 1890-1927, Federal Archives, BArch N 1062* description: History of the inventory compiler: Curriculum vitae in table form 20.10.1861 born in Berlin as Felix Ernst Witkowski pupil of the French Gymnasium Berlin 1875 - 1888 actor with the theater name Harden, whom he leads from 1878 exclusively 1881 conversion from Judaism to the Protestant confession 1888 beginning of journalistic activity with "Berliner Tageblatt", "Deutsches Montagsblatt", "Nation", and "Gegenwart" 1889 Co-founder of the Berliner Freie Bühne 1892 - 1922 Publisher of the weekly "Die Zukunft" (for politics and public life, theatre, art and literature) 1906 - 1909 Trials of Philipp Fürst zu Eulenburg and Count Kuno Moltke against Harden for his attacks on their disastrous influence on the emperor and moral misconduct 1922 Right-wing extremist assassination attempt on Harden 30.10.1927 in Montana, canton Valais, Switzerland, died Description of the holdings: Extensive correspondence with writers, journalists, politicians, artists, industrialists, including Ballin, Erzberger, Hofmannsthal, Holstein, Harry Graf Keßler, Thomas Mann, Max Reinhardt, Rathenau; files from several trials, including against Philipp Eulenburg and Kuno Moltke (1907-1909) as well as against Jagow, Wangenheim and Schiele (1921) Status: 1977 Content characterisation: Edited by Wolfgang Mommsen with the collaboration of Gertrud Winter Publikationsfindbuch, Koblenz 1970 Reworked reprint 1985 Supplements and supplements since 1985 Note: This text file contains the supplements and supplements not yet contained in the Reworked reprint of the Publikationsfindbuchs, Findbücher zu Bestände des Bundesarchivs Volume 4, 1985. The form (layout) depends on the publication index. A new table line is created for each name entry so that dating and scope information remain uniquely assigned. The signature of the archive (the band number) is repeated in brackets for clarity. The previous distortion is taken over bit by bit. As long as this is not yet possible in the form of text transmission, the illustration of the old directory must suffice. This way, the index can also be used as a complete directory in file form. The index to the holdings is fragmentary for the time being. The page references refer to the page of the file printout (MS Word text file). Note on the Publication Findbuch (1985): The Publication Findbuch describes the contents of the holdings as of 1984/1985. In the meantime, additional papers from the estate of Maximilian Harden have been acquired, which have not yet been fully recorded. The current list of Harden papers in the Federal Archives and information on later accesses not yet recorded in the publication directory can be obtained from the Federal Archives on request. The microfiches offered correspond to the status of the stock in 1962 and were converted from the microroll films produced at that time. Subsequent entries were only partially filmed. On request, the Federal Archives will inform you which volumes have been supplemented by newly acquired documents since 1962. A removal of duplicates of whole film rolls is no longer necessary. Microfiches can be ordered by the band. For technical reasons, it is not possible to submit individual documents or a selection of documents from individual volumes in microforms. The acquisition and use of microfilm / microfiche duplicates are also subject to the Federal Archives Act and the terms of use of the Federal Archives. Koblenz, April 2005 Gregor Pickro Zur Geschichte und Ordnung des Bestandes (Preliminary remark in the Publication Findbuch 1985) At Harden's death, his written estate had a considerable extent; when even today nothing more detailed is known about it, it was probably much larger than the preserved papers show. In addition, Harden's heirs endeavoured to increase the estate through original letters collected from friends and acquaintances or copies of which were made and added to the actual estate. After 1933 the estate was fled to Palestine. Larger parts may have been left behind, and losses may also have occurred in Palestine, as a suitable storage room was not available and right supervision was lacking. After the end of the 2nd World War the papers were returned to Germany. Mrs. Maximiliane Horowitz in Berlin, Harden's daughter, sold the remaining estate to the Federal Archives in January 1953 through the mediation of Mrs. Pflug in Wuppertal; Mrs. Horowitz was given about 30 autographs and Mrs. Pflug 1 autograph each by all known personalities after copying for the Federal Archives. Photocopies or copies of larger parts of the letters she had handed over to the autograph trade before selling them to the Federal Archives were available and were also handed over to the Federal Archives. In addition, the Federal Archives have endeavoured to purchase autographs from Harden's estate that were offered for sale. It was possible to acquire at least the letter volumes and individual letters which the American Mr. Young had bought at auction. With a few exceptions (poet-autographers), the Federal Archives today seem to have almost all of Harden's papers at its disposal, either in the original or in the form of a photocopy or transcript, which returned to Germany from Palestine after 1945. The previous losses must be regarded as definitive. The collection of Harden letters, which had been started by Harden's heirs, was continued by the Federal Archives. Letters from Harden to Landsberger and Paulsen and photocopies of letters from Harden to Tucholsky could be purchased. As it emerged from the acquisition of the estate by the Federal Archives, it originally consisted of a series of correspondence and factual files (primarily probably trial files). Unfortunately, parts of the fact files were still dissolved after 1945 and divided into correspondence series. When the estate reached the Federal Archives, only the letters of a few particularly important and important correspondents had already been collected; for larger parts of the rest of the documents there were several alphabetically preceding series, the rest was unordered. After sorting out the collection of Harden letters and transcripts as well as the few remaining material files and remains of material files, all letters addressed to Harden were filed in a large alphabetical correspondence series. It is joined by the fact file departments newly created in the archive. Finally, the appendix contains original letters from Harden and copies of letters which, according to their provenance, do not belong to the actual estate. According to their provenance, Harden's estate also does not include hundreds of postcards and letters that Harden wrote to his girlfriend Elfride Schmaltz between 1908 and 1927, supplemented by typewritten comments by Mrs. Schmaltz on individual letters. They were in the Secret State Archive of Prussian Cultural Heritage in Berlin, enriched with a typewritten transmission of Harden's hard-to-read cards and letters through them, newspaper clippings and correspondence about Harden, and individual letters to and from Harden acquired in the autograph trade. In 1969 this collection was transferred to the Federal Archives. The letters to and from Harden were placed in the alphabetical correspondence series of the Harden estate. They are identifiable from the supplementary foliation (e.g. 5 a-c) and are not contained in the previously produced publication films. The actual Nachass Schmaltz, whose core piece are the letters of Harden, was attached as Appendix II to the Harden estate and filmed. Photographs have been handed over to the picture archive of the Federal Archives and are included in the biographical series. Supplementary holdings Further papers by Maximilian Harden / partial estate Leo Baeck Institut New York (see also below) 23 letters by Harden 1894-1927 on literary and political topics as well as communications from the Max Reinhardt circle Berlin, proof of a manuscript, newspaper clippings, photos (ZDN, March 2002) In the Bundesarchiv: Josefine Katarina Harden geb. Joost (1860-1912) N 2353 Wife of the writer Maximilian Harden (1861-1927) Letters of Maximilian Harden Hugo Isenbiel (died 1913), Prussian Attorney General Letters of Philipp Fürst zu Eulenburg-Hertefeld, Maximilian Harden, Kuno Graf von Moltke and Ida Danckelmann (sister of Moltke) on the Harden Trials./Eulenburg and Harden ./. Moltke; letters from the estate of Otto Kluth (small acquisition 690) Hans Prescher (born 1930), publicist, head of the television department of Hessischer Rundfunk, correspondence with Albert Grenz on the assassination attempt on Maximilian Harden (small acquisition 939), estate of Max Bauer (1869-1929) N 1022 Colonel in the Großen Generalstab, employee of Ludendorff, emigration after the Kapp-Putsch war diary 1918; book manuscript "Der große Krieg in Feld und Heimat" with the revised version by Maximilian Harden; correspondence and a. with Gustav Stresemann, Adolf Hitler, Ludendorff and Crown Prince Wilhelm from the years of emigration; articles, memorandums of military and political content; military, political and economic political activities with the Chinese government from 1927-1929; letters from Bauer to his mother and sister; Legacy of the son Lieutenant Colonel Ernst Bauer 1914-1948, memoirs and correspondence of Max Bauer's secretary Luise Engeler 1919-1948, correspondence of the Viennese Chief Building Councillor Jacob Piegl 1925-1929 (ZDN, March 2002) Estate Georg Bernhard (1875-1944) N 2020 1901-03 Economic assistant to Harden's future (pseudonym Plutus) Estate Bernhard Fürst von Bülow (1849-1929) N 1016 Imperial Chancellor (1900-1909) and Prussian Prime Minister Documents for a planned biography; Moltke-Harden Trial 1907-1909; Daily Telegraph Affair 1908/09; Roman Mission 1914/15; Correspondence & News; Daily Telegraph Affair 1908/09 a. with Max von Baden, Wilhelm II, Herbert von Bismarck, Albert Ballin, Maximilian Harden, Lichnowsky, Walther Rathenau, Bethmann-Hollweg, Philipp Eulenburg, Holstein, Professor Hoetzsch; letters of the Emperor and Empress Friedrich as well as of the then Crown Prince Wilhelm to Countess Marie Dönhoff; Letters from Bülows to Thimme 1907/08 (ZDN, March 2002) Felix von Eckardt (1866-1931) Small acquisition 339 Editor-in-chief of the Hamburger Fremdenblatt, journalist Correspondence anda. with Emperor Frederick III, von Holstein, Maximilian Harden, Prince von Bülow, Gustav Stresemann (photocopies) (ZDN, March 2002) Estate Moritz von Egidy (1847-1898) N 2060 Estate Philipp Prince zu Eulenburg-Hertefeld (1847-1921) N 1029 Estate Adolf Gelber (1856-1923) N 2092 Editor of the Neue Wiener Tageblatt; Writer 59 Letters and cards by Maximilian Harden Arthur Landsberger (1876-1933) Small acquisition 103 Publisher in Berlin, novelist and travel writer Letters by Maximilian Harden, 5 letters and 6 cards by Werner Sombart Estate Walter Luetgebrune (1879-1949) N 1150 Estate Paul Nathan (1857-1927) N 2207 Political publicist, together with Th. Barth Publisher of the liberal weekly Die Nation, 1900-1919 City councillor in Berlin, member of the Progressive People's Party, since 1921 SPD; managing director of the Hilfsverein der deutschen Juden, board member of the Centralverein deutscher Staatsbürger jüdischen Glaubens Personal papers, records, diaries, letters, etc.a. von K. Aldenhoven, L. Bamberger, L.v. Bar, Th. Barth, E. Bernstein, W. Dietrich, O. Gildemeister, M. Harden, Ludo M. Hartmann, W. Liebknecht, Th. Mommsen, Mrs. Naumann, J. Schiff, M. Marburg (ZDN, March 2002) Estate Rudolf Pechel (1882-1961) N 1160 Estate Hans Graf Praschma (1867-1935) N 1232 Estate Arnold Rechberg (1879-1947) N 1049 Sculptor and politician Personal affairs, correspondence, in particular on German-French understanding, anda. with Maximilian Harden, Max Klinger and Max Liebermann, Auguste Rodin; political correspondence a.o. with Hermann von Eichhorn, Matthias Erzberger, Cläre von Gersdorff, Karl Helfferich, Adolf Hitler, Cornelia Irene Hoffmann, Major General Max Hoffmann, Alfred Hugenberg, Erich Ludendorff, Jesco von Puttkammer, Kurt von Schleicher, Hugo Stinnes, Gustav Stresemann, Fritz Thyssen; materials on the "Rechberg case"; Alfred Pietzsch on Adolf Hitler's politics and personality, essay on Rechberg and the Nuremberg Trial against the main war criminals; manuscripts on essays, lectures and letters by Rechberg (ZDN, March 2002) Estate of Kurt Rheindorf (1897-1977) N 1263 Estate of Helmuth Rogge (1891-1976) N 1153, (N 2246) 1921 Archivrat am Reichsarchiv Potsdam, 1941 Oberarchivrat und Abteilungleiter ibid., 1952 Regierungsrat and 1953 Oberregierungsrat in the Press and Information Office of the Federal Government Manuscript and correspondence from scientific activities, especially on his work on Imperial Germany and in particular on Friedrich von Holstein; working materials and manuscripts concerning Maximilian Harden, letters from Harden to Elfride Schmaltz; Correspondence with Norman Rich, documents on the expulsion of the Germans from the East; establishment of the archive of the Federal Press Office 1952-1958 (ZDN, March 2002) Estate of Ernst Schweninger (1850-1924) N 2281 Bismarck's personal physician, Professor of General Pathology and Dermatology, History of Medicine at the University of Berlin; inventor of a special diet and hydrotherapy against obesity Letters from colleagues, patients and friends, anda. by the Bismarck family, Bernhard von Bülow, Bethmann Hollweg, Maximilian Harden, Paul Heyse, Krupp family (ZDN, March 2002) Estate of Theodor Wolff (1868-1943) N 1207 Publicist, 1894-1906 Paris correspondent and 1906-1933 editor-in-chief of the Berliner Tageblatt, co-founder of the German Democratic Party (DDP), 1933 emigrated to Paris, 1943 in Oranienburg concentration camp diaries 1912-1919, 1940/41; Manuscripts; extensive correspondence of political and literary character; anda. Albert Ballin, Lujo Brentano, Bernhard von Bülow, Bernhard Dernburg, Hans von Flotow, Maximilian Harden, Gerhart Hauptmann, Richard von Kühlmann, Walter Leistikow, Paul Lindau, Hellmuth von Lucius, Agnes Sorma; letters from family members, partly with counter letters, including letters from Wolff to his wife; autobiographical notes (ZDN, March 2002) NS 15/195 (Dr. Ernst von Bracken; among others article "Maximilian Harden", in: Mitteilungen über die Judenfrage 1937, No. 17, Vol. I) Other facilities: Berlin Secret State Archives Prussian Cultural Heritage Berlin Alexander Helphand, Pseud. Parvus (1867-1924) Socialist writer and theorist, editor-in-chief of the "Sächsische Arbeiterzeitung" (1896-1898), founder of the social democratic journal "Die Glocke" (1914-1922), diary, notes and other documents from his activities in the Orient, editor of the journal "Die Glocke"; business correspondence 1915-1922 and 1915-1922.a. with Sklarz 1916; enriched by letters of Helphand from the Orient 1910 and by letters of Victor Naumann to Hertling; written statement of the lawyer Grünspach on the trial G. Sklarz against M. Harden (ZDN, March 2002) Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin, Prussian Cultural Heritage Kurt Breysig (1866-1940) Since 1892 at the University of Berlin, 1923 o. Professor (History, Philosophy of History, Sociology) Diary entries, unpublished manuscripts; Correspondence, including Hans Driesch, Fürst Philipp Eulenburg, Maximilian Harden, Friedrich Meinecke, Leopold von Wiese (ZDN, March 2002) Stiftung Archiv der Akademie der Künste Berlin, Archive Department Literature Erich Mühsam (1878-1934) Revolutionary and anarchistic writer, founder, editor and staff member of revolutionary and satyric journals, in Munich since 1909, member of the Central Council of the Munich Räteregierung in 1919, diaries from the period 1910-1924, correspondence, and more.a. with Gustav Landauer, Kreszentia Mühsam and Paul Scheerbarth, as well as personal documents and notes from the time of imprisonment in Niederschönenfeld; original documents and records from the written estate of Kreszentia Mühsam, especially business correspondence, personal letters, etc. to Martin Andersen-Nexö, Leon Hirsch, Erich Mühsam and Helene Stassowa; several handwritten letters, pieces and poems by Erich Mühsam as well as picture books drawn by him for Kreszentia Mühsam; Photocopies of letters Erich Mühsams wrote to Martin Andersen-Nexö, Max Halbe, Maximilian Harden, Erich Horlemann, Artur Kutscher, Kreszentia Mühsam, Charlotte Pritzel, Karl Wolfskehl and publishers; photographs; documents and material on Erich Mühsam, correspondence of the estate administrator Josef Maier with family members of Kreszentia and Erich Mühsam; documentation material on life and work. Microfilm copy of the literary legacy kept in Moscow (ZDN, March 2002) Paul Wiegler (1878-1949) editor at various newspapers, head of the novel department of the Ullstein publishing house in Berlin, writer and theatre critic; after 1945 deputy editor-in-chief of the Nachtexpreß in Berlin, co-founder and member of the Central Council of the Kulturbund in Berlin manuscripts of lyrical, epic and journalistic works; extensive correspondence anda. with Max Brod, Bruno H. Bürgel, Alfred Döblin, André Gide, Maximilian Harden, Hermann Hesse, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Leopold Jessner, Bernhard Kellermann, Detlev von Liliencron, Leo Perutz and Franz Werfel; photo collection with portraits and role photos of well-known actors and personalities from Berlin in the twenties; personal documents; printouts; documents from the provenance of Gertrud Wiegler. (ZDN, March 2002) Bonn Archive of Social Democracy of the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, Bonn Hugo Heinemann (1863-1919) Lawyer, publicist, Undersecretary of State in the Prussian Ministry of Justice, member of the Prussian Constituent Assembly (SPD) Correspondence (45 letters) with Maximilian Harden and Franz von Liszt, among others, on the subject of the following Heinemann's journalistic and professional activities (Remark: Originale im Russischen Staatlichen Staatlichen Archiv für Zeitgeschichte Moskau) (ZDN, March 2002) Bruno Schoenlank (1859-1901) 1892 editor of Vorwärts in Berlin, 1893 editor-in-chief of Leipziger Volkszeitung, reformer of the SPD party press, 1893-1901 member of the Reichstag (SPD) diary 1897/98 with excerpts of letters; letters 1890-1898 and 1890-1898, and a. by Edward Aveling, Karl Grillenberger, Maximilian Harden, Arno Holz, Max Schippel, Gustav von Schmoller, Werner Sombart concerning SPD and press matters (ZDN, March 2002) Halle Stadtarchiv Halle (Saale) Johannes Schlaf, Pseud. Bjarne P. Holmsen (1862-1941) 1875-1884 attendance of the Domgymnasium Magdeburg, after graduation 1884 study of theology and philology in Halle, from 1885 study of philosophy, German language and literature and classical philology in Berlin, 1904 move from Berlin to Weimar, there freelance writer of the naturalistic art movement (novels, stories, dramas, essays), 1932 honorary citizen of Querfurt, 1937 return there correspondence of the author with contemporaries, et al. with Friedrich Simon Archenhold (astronomer), Hermann Bahr, Ernst Barthel, Wilhelm Bölsche, Max Brod, Houston Stuart Chamberlain, Eugen Diederichs, Paul Ernst, Philipp Fauth, Gustav Frenssen, Ernst Haeckel, Max Halbe, Maximilian Harden, Gerhart Hauptmann, Karl Friedrich Henckell, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Hanns Johst, Georg Kaiser, Franz Friedrich Lienhard, Thomas Mann, Friedrich Naumann, Wilhelm Ostwald, Wilhelm von Scholz, Wilhelm Schäfer, Emil Strauß, Felix Weingartner, Richard Wittsack, Stefan Zweig, manuscripts of works by J. Sleeps, treatises on various scientific topics, diaries, newspaper clippings on sleep, dissertations and more.a. scholarly work on sleep (ZDN, March 2002) Marbach am Neckar Deutsches Literaturarchiv, Schiller-Nationalmuseum, Marbach am Neckar Maximilan Harden : individual autographs in the autograph collection Eberhard von Bodenhausen (Hans Eberhard Freiherr von Bodenhausen gen. Degener) (1868-1918) art historian, jurist, industrial director art historical investigations and essays, essays and speeches on the national economy, material collections, college transcripts and excerpts from cultural-historical works, etc.Autobiographical: "Trip to Belgium from 9 to 16 February 1915"; diary entries 1896-1918; notebooks and others.Letters to Georg Bernhard, Fanny and Hans Heinrich von Bodenhausen, George Brooke, Paul Cassirer, Georgie Ernst, Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche, Ernst Gosebruch, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Anton Kippenberg, Oscar Kohnstamm, Alfred Lichtwark, Julius Meier-Graefe, Kurt von Mutzenbecher, Karl Ernst Osthaus, Edwin Redslob, Gustav Richter, Emma Schmidt, Botho Graf von Schwerin, Henry van de Velde u.a.; Deutsche Bank Munich; Publishers Bruckmann et al, Letters from Otto Julius Bierbaum, Wilhelm von Bode, Fanny von Bodenhausen, Rudolf Borchardt, Bruno Cassirer, Paul Cassirer, Richard Dehmel, Felix Fénéon, Cäsar Flaischlen, Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche, Theodor Fontane, Max J. Friedländer, Ernst Gosebruch, Richard Graul, Maximilian Harden, Otto Erich Hartleben, Alfred Walter Heymel, Ludwig von Hofmann, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Rudolf Kassner, Harry Graf Kessler, Anton Kippenberg, Oscar Kohnstamm, Julius Levin, Alfred Lichtwark, Max Liebermann, Aristide Maillol, Julius Meier-Graefe, Georg Merleker, George Minne, Edvard Munch, Gerhard von Mutius, Karl Ernst Osthaus, Rudolf Pannwitz, Stanislaw Przybyszewski, Karl Scheffler, Rudolf Alexander Schröder, Botho Count von Schwerin, Woldemar von Seidlitz, Paul Signac, Hugo Storm, Gustav Stresemann, Otto von Taube, Hans Thoma, Henry van de Velde, Theodor Wiegand anda.; Letters concerning the Nietzsche Archive in Weimar; business reports, minutes, circulars and letters to the journal "Pan", including letters to Hans Albrecht Graf Harrach; tributes and memoirs to him by Ernst Wilhelm Eschmann, Gustav Pauli, Hermann Uhde-Bernays and others; obituaries, including "Rede am Sarge Eberhard von Bodenhausens" by Rudolf Borchardt; newspaper clippings. (ZDN, March 2002) Edwin Bormann, pseudo. Bliemchen (1851-1912) writer letters from Ludwig Anzengruber, Ernst Fleischhauer, Maximilian Harden, Carl Reinecke, Anton von Werner, Fedor von Zobeltitz and others (ZDN, March 2002) Stuart Cäsar see Cäsar Flaischlen Alfred Demel see Alfred Walter Heymel Paul Ernst (Karl Friedrich Paul Ernst), pseud. P. W. Spaßmöller (1866-1933) Writer, journalist, poetry collection "Prayer and Work", individual poems; epics, tragedies, comedies; novels, novellas and stories, memories of "youth years"; essays and essays on literature and art, religion and society (partly incomplete); reviews; translations: Letters to Wilhelm Boss, Eugen Diesel, Hanns Floerke, Ferdinand Gregori, Walter Hofmann, Arno Holz, Karl August Kutzbach, Hellmuth Langenbucher, Hans von Müller, Karl Scheffler, Johannes Schlaf, Franz Servaes and others.; Letters from Eugen d' Albert, Julius Bab, Béla Balázs, Franz Ferdinand Baumgarten, Walter Behrend, Anton Berger, Wilhelm Bergmann, Hans Bethge, Günther Birkenfeld, Hans Erich Blaich, Ernst Blass, Emanuel von Bodman, Hans Bogner, Wilhelm Boss, Friedrich Brass, Robert Breuer, Joachim von Bülow, Hermann Burger, Hans Carossa, Theodor Däubler, Georg Dehio, Richard and Ida Dehmel°, Richard Deinhardt, Max Dessoir, Eugen Diesel, Louise Dumont, Fritz Ebers, Walther Eggert-Windegg, Albert Ehrenstein, Theodor Eichhoff, Arthur Eloesser, Hanns Martin Elster, Hugo Erfurth, Emil Ermatinger, Robert Faesi, Otto Falckenberg, Paul Fechter, Hanns Floerke, Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche, Hans Franck, August Frickenhaus, Fred Fritsch, Ludwig Fulda, Franz Alfons Gayda, Rudolf Geck, Benno Gimkiewicz, Heinrich von Gleichen-Rußwurm, Herbert G. Göpfert, Ferdinand Gregori, Leo Greiner, Hans Grimm, Stefan Großmann, Johannes von Guenther, Willy Haas, Alfred Haering, Erich Härlen, Hasso Härlen, Per Hallström, Maximilian Harden, Walter Harlan, Otto Erich Hartleben, Paul von Hedemann-Heespen, Jakob Hegner, Ernst Heimeran, Wolfgang Heine, Hermann Hesse, Walter Hofmann, Walther von Hollander, Korfiz Holm, Arno Holz, Artur and Maria Louise Holz, Ernst Jünger, Franz Kaibel, Karl Kautsky, Hermann Graf Keyserling, Wilhelm Kiefer, Anton Kippenberg, Tim Klein, Paul Kluckhohn, Erwin Guido Kolbenheyer, Karl August Kutzbach, Paul Landau, Hellmuth Langenbucher, Hans Leifhelm, Karl Lerbs, Wilhelm Liebknecht, Friedrich Lienhard, Berthold Litzmann, Samuel Lublinski, Georg Lukács, Werner Mahrholz, Franz Mehring, Alfred Richard Meyer, Georg Heinrich Meyer, Rudolf Meyer, Arthur Moeller van den Bruck, Hans von Müller, Börries von Münchhausen, Carl Muth, Paul Natorp, Georg Noth, Max Oehler, Alfons Paquet, Max Picard, Henrik Pontoppidan, Eduard Reinacher, E. A. Rheinhardt, Martin Rockenbach, Walter Erich Schäfer, Wilhelm Schäfer, Johannes Schlaf, Wilhelm von Scholz, Ernst Schultze, Carl Seelig, Franz Servaes, Georg and Gertrud Simmel, Albert Soergel, Wilhelm Stapel, Hans Sterneder, Otto Stoessl, Emil Strauß, Max Tau, Otto von Taube, Frank Thiess, Johannes Tralow, Hans Vaihinger, Will Vesper, Walther Vogel, Friedrich Vorwerk, Max Wachler, Martina Wied, Paul Wiegler, August Winnig, Georg Witkowski, Max Zweig anda.; publishers, magazines and newspapers, stages, radio stations, writers' associations, etc. Related materials: certificates, contracts, invoices; documents of the Paul-Ernst-Gesellschaft; letters from and to Else Ernst. Belong to the estate: Newspaper clippings. (ZDN, March 2002) Caesar Flaischlen, pseud. Stuart Caesar (1864-1920) writer, editor of manuscripts of all genres; dissertation "Otto Heinrich von Gemmingen"; essays on literature, speeches and lectures on Johann Christoph Gottsched, Emil Milan, Friedrich Schiller; lectures etc.; aphorisms, reviews; lecture notes, notebooks, diary entries; draft of his will and testamenta.; Letters to Else Beigel, Paul Cassirer, Louise Dumont, Antonie Flaischlen, Edith Flaischlen and other family members, Hans Franck, Adele Gerhard, Otto von Güntter, Walter Harlan, Theodor Heuss, Max Immanuel, Lucy Lindner-Orban, Erika Plehn, Max Rosenfeld, Georg Witkowski and others.; Letters from Karl Bauer (painter), Peter Behrens, Josef August Beringer, Hans Bethge, Hermann Beuttenmüller, Alfred Biese, Max Bing, Eberhard von Bodenhausen, Wilhelm Bölsche, Bruno Cassirer, Helene Christaller, Anna Croissant-Rust, Louise Dumont, Walther Eggert-Windegg, Hanns Martin Elster, Eduard Engels, Gustav Falke, Ludwig Finckh, Hermann Fischer, Antonie Flaischlen, Edith Flaischlen, Hugo Flaischlen and other family members, Hans Franck, Adele Gerhard, Otto von Güntter, Max Halbe, Maximilian Harden, Walter Harlan, Selma Hartleben, Franz Ferdinand Heitmüller, Karl Henckell, Theodor Heuss, Walter Heynen, Ludwig von Hofmann, Felix Hollenberg, Wilhelm Holzamer, Harry Graf Kessler, Karl Klingspor, Max Martersteig, Walter Meckauer, Hanns Meinke, Georg Ludwig Meyn, Hans von Müller, Georg Muschner, Max Niderlechner, Hans Olde, Emil Orlik, Ludwig Pallat, Erika Plehn, Paul Remer, Georg and Johanna Rettich, Emmy Rotth, Heinrich Schäff-Zerweck, Karl Scheffler, Hans Schliepmann, Hans Sterneder, Frank Thiess, Henry van de Velde, Clara Viebig, Georg Witkowski, Heinrich Zerkaulen anda.; Künstler-Verein Bremen; correspondence with publishers, magazines, literary societies etc.; field letters; personal documents; individual poems by Otto Erich Hartleben, Paul Scheerbart; fragments of dramas, letters to Edith Flaischlen by Adele Gerhard, Richard Schaukal as well as to the publishing house Fleischel by Stefan Zweig etc.; attached: Manuscripts and editorial correspondence of the journal "Pan" and the anthology "Neuland" since 1895 (14 boxes) (ZDN, March 2002) Hans Grimm (1875-1959) Writer, press correspondent, businessman Work manuscripts of all genres; biographical, contemporary history, travelogues, essays, essays and letters; calls, speeches, open letters, critiques, reviews, etc. Drafts and notes on various works and Southwest Africa; announcement by Klosterhaus-Verlag Lippoldsberg; diaries by and about Grimm from the years 1878-1959; letters to and from Erwin Ackerknecht, Hans von Albert, Paul Alverdes, Alexander Amersdorffer, Alexander Andrae, Kurt Aram, Hanns Arens, Karl Arnhold, Peter Bamm, Friedrich K. Bartels, Ludwig Friedrich Barthel, Hans Baumann, Eduard Baumgarten, Kurt Beinhauer, Gottfried Benn, Rudolf Benze, Theodor Berndt, Werner Beumelburg, Hermann Beuttenmüller, Rudolf G. Binding, Friedrich Bischoff, Georg von Bleyleben, Walter Bloem, Walter Julius Bloem, Hans Friedrich Blunck, Herbert Böhme, Rudolf Böhmer, Julius and Agnes von Boemcken, Bruno Brehm, Arnolt Bronnen, Elsa Bruckmann, Martin Buber, Adolfo Bundies, Hermann Burte, Otto Carius, Hans Carossa, Hermann Claudius, Carlo Coeckx, Max Lucas von Cranach, Gustav Dessin, Margarete Dierks, Karl Dönitz, Eduard Donay, Edwin Erich Dwinger, Kasimir Edschmid, Arthur Ehrhardt, Fritz Endres, Theo Engelmann, Paul Ernst, Richard Euringer, Paul Fechter, Hans Fervers, Ludwig Finckh, Alois K. Fischer, Eduard von Flottwell, Hans Franck, Walter Frank, Gustav Frenssen, Karl Ehrenfried Fritsche, Karl Fuchs, Hans von der Gabelentz, Heinrich von Gleichen-Rußwurm, Joachim von der Goltz, Rüdiger von der Goltz, Georg Grabenhorst, Addi Grimm, Julius and Helene Grimm, Paula Grogger, Heinz Grothe, Heinz Guderian, Hans F. K. Günther, Friedrich and Elisabeth Gundolf, Hasso Härlen, Maximilian Harden, Agnes Harder, Adolf von Hatzfeld, Gerhart and Margarete Hauptmann, Manfred Hausmann, Eberhard Heffe, Friedrich Wilhelm Heinz, Bernt von Heiseler, Ilse Heß, Theodor Heuss, Hans Heyck, August Hinrichs, Emanuel Hirsch, Franz Höller, Robert Hohlbaum, Alfred Hugenberg, Kurt Ihlenfeld, Moritz Jahn, Karoline Janik, Hans Windekilde Jannasch, Hanns Johst, Ernst Jünger, Elisabeth Jungmann, Adolf Kaempffer, Eugen and Lien Kalkschmidt, Karl Kaltwasser, Otto Kanold, Ernst C. Waiter, Erich Kernmayr, Heinz Kindermann, Heinrich Kirchheim, Edgar Kirsch, Eva Klare, Karl Klingspor, Fritz Koch, Erwin Guido Kolbenheyer, Ernst Krieck, Arnold Krieger, Käthe Kruse, Paul Landau, Hellmuth Langenbucher, Gertrud von le Fort, Theophil Lehmann, Fritz Löffler, Maria Lorenz, Friedrich Lützow, Karl Benno von Mechow, Max Mell, Herybert Menzel, Adolf Meschendörfer, Heinrich Meyer (pastor), Agnes Miegel, Rudolf Mirbt, Arthur Moeller van den Bruck, Walter von Molo, Kurt Morawietz, Börries von Münchhausen, Franz Nabl, Werner Naumann, Gertrud Niebuhr, Ernst Niekisch, Uwe Lars Nobbe, Herman Nohl, Kurt Oxenius, Leo Perutz, Ursel Peter, Gertrud Petersen, Gustav Pezold, Wilhelm Pleyer, Heinz Jürgen Pondorf, Hermann Pongs, Rudolf Presber, Willi Rehkopf, Hanna Reitsch, Annelies von Ribbentrop, Ingeborg Rosenfeld, Eugen Roth, Hans-Ulrich Rudel, Ernst von Salomon, Kurt Saucke, Albert Schaefer, Wilhelm Schäfer, Ursula Schenk, Hermann Schneider, Wilhelm von Scholz, Percy Ernst Schramm, Edward Schröder, Rudolf Alexander Schröder, Ernst Schulte Strathaus, Gerhard Schumann, Ina Seidel, Ellen Soeding, Albert Soergel, Adolf Spemann, Wilhelm Stapel, Herbert Steiner, Hellmut Stöber, Otto Strasser, Emil Strauß, Agathe Helene Streffer, Otto von Taube, Frank Thiess, Hannes Tuch, Franz Tumler, Friedrich Franz von Unruh, August Friedrich Velmede, Hans Venatier, Bernward Vesper, Will Vesper, Helene Voigt-Diederichs, Ernst Volkmann, Max Wachler, Winifred Wagner, Carl Walbrach, Josef Magnus Wehner, Bruno E. Werner, Ernst Wiechert, August Winnig, Erhard Wittek, Helmut Wocke, Kurt Woermann, Benno Ziegler, Maxim Ziese, Kurt Ziesel, Heinrich Zillich and others; associations and foundations, publishers, magazines and newspapers, radio stations, stages, academies, university seminars and faculties, schools, authorities and offices and others. Correspondence with the Prussian Academy of the Arts Berlin and the German Academy Munich; correspondence with national groups and youth associations, with government and party offices and with the rulers in the NSDAP; expert opinions, circulars, minutes and correspondence with the Reichsschrifttumskammer, including letters from Hans Friedrich Blunck; letters from Arnold Köster, Alfred Toepfer anda.; speeches on the Lippoldsberg Poetry Days 1934-1981 by Hans Grimm and Wernt Grimm, pleas for the German Reich Party, correspondence with the party, with Adolf von Thadden, etc.; letters concerning Africa to and from: Hans Anton Aschenborn, Carl Berger, Fritz Brenner, Ernst-Ludwig Cramer, Jakob Dekker, Hugo Gutsche, Eva Kieckebusch, Hans Kisker, Eberhard von Koenen, Heinrich Vedder, Frida and Gustav Voigts, Berengar von Zastrow and others.Documents concerning America and Grimm's America voyage, including letters from Hanns Fischer (Chicago), Jane Goodloe, Frederick W. J. Heuser, Arthur Koegel and Gilbert Perleberg; letters about England and Grimm's England voyage to and from: Edmund Blunden, Rolf Gardiner, Leonard Ashley Willoughby, Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst (German Academic Exchange Service) and others Related materials Life documents, honours, obituaries; notices of fees, publishing contracts, advertising material for individual books and readings; documents from poetry weeks in Pürgg in 1953 and 1955; travel documents; acknowledgements of his work and investigations by Heinz Grothe anda.; poetry by Hans Baumann, Hermann Claudius, Karl Haushofer et al.; novels and stories by Helene Voigt-Diederichs et al.; reports and notes by various people on National Socialism, the Second World War and the post-war period, on South Africa and on the history of the country.a.; studies on literature and philosophy by Leopold Freisler and others; letters by Addi Grimm to Ellen Soeding, Helene Voigt-Diederichs and others; letters to Addi Grimm by Hermann Claudius, Helene Voigt-Diederichs and others.Letters to Holle Grimm from Georg von Bleyleben, Bruno Brehm, Sabine Fechter, Walter Haller, Günter Höhne, Erich Kernmayr, Heinz Mahncke, Wilhelm Pleyer, Karl Springenschmid, Anneliese Venatier and others; letters from Wernt Grimm to Addi Grimm, Holle Grimm and others; letters of condolence to the family on Hans Grimm's death. Belong to the estate: Special editions and magazines, newspaper clippings, tape recordings and numerous photographs from the Lippoldsberg Poetry Days 1934 to 1960. (ZDN March 2002) Ernst Hardt (1876-1947) Writer, translator, theatre and radio director Werkmanuskripte of all genres; translations: Novellas and the novel "Bel ami" by Guy de Maupassant; among others; diary entries among others letters to Fritz Adler, Karl August Düppengießer, Michel Eulambio, Tilla Goetz-Hardt, Botho Graef, Anna Lucie Hardt, Polyxena Hardt, Walther Rathenau, Georg Witkowski among others letters by Johannes R. Becher, Otto Behagel, Marcus Behmer, Rudolf G. Binding, Hedwig Bleibtreu, Rudolf Borchardt, Otto Brahm, Bertolt Brecht, Ludwig Coellen, Richard Dehmel, Franz Deibel, Adele Doré, Käthe Dorsch, Franz Dülberg, Karl August Düppengießer, Hans Ebert, Kasimir Edschmid, Michel Eulambio, Herbert Eulenberg, Caesar Flaischlen, Leonhard Frank, Ludwig Fulda, Hans von der Gabelentz, Josef Theodor Glaser, Tilla Goetz-Hardt, Botho Graef, Paul Graener, Walter Gropius, Peter Hamecher, Maximilian Harden, Anna Lucie Hardt, Donata Hardt, Paul Hardt, Polyxena Hardt, Otto Erich Hartleben, Walter Hasenclever, Carl Hauptmann, Gerhart Hauptmann, Ludwig von Hofmann, Friedrich Huch, Georg Karo, Anton and Katharina Kippenberg, Oscar Kohnstamm, Hans Kyser, Else Lasker-Schüler, Melchior Lechter, Heinrich Lilienfein, Alexander Maass, Heinrich Mann, Max Martersteig, Walter von Molo, Joachim Moras, Hans von Müller, Helene von Nostitz, Rudolf Presber, Walther Rathenau, Edwin Redslob, Eduard Reinacher, Rainer Maria Rilke, Hans Rothe, Richard Salzmann, Willi Schäferdiek, Paul Schlenther, Wilhelm Schmidtbonn, Arthur Schnitzler, Wilhelm von Scholz, Carl Stang, Paul Steinmüller, Otto von Taube, Hugo Thimig, Heinrich Vierordt, Karl Gustav Vollmoeller, Georg Witkowski, Karl Wolfskehl, Paul Zech, Stefan Zweig anda.; Anstalt für Aufführungsrecht dramatischer Werke der Literatur und Musik Berlin; publishers, magazines, theatres, literary societies, etc.; letters, contracts and other material on his activities as director of the Deutsches Nationaltheater Weimar and the Schauspielhaus Köln; documents on his work as director of the Westdeutscher Rundfunk Köln, on his dismissal in 1933 and on the so-called radio trial. Related materials: contracts and other life documents; family papers; letters to Wolfgang Goetz from Jakob Haringer and others; letters to Tilla Goetz-Hardt from Kate Kühl, Friedrich Michael, Rudolf Pechel, Peter Suhrkamp and others; family correspondence, including letters from Polyxena Hardt to Botho Graef and Anna Lucie Hardt. Belong to the estate: Newspaper clippings, posters, playbills, records, extensive photo collections. Attached: Estate of Tilla Goetz-Hardt (ZDN, March 2002) Alfred Walter Heymel, née Walter Hayes Misch, pseudonym. Alfred Demel (1878-1914) writer, publisher, editor of poetry collections and individual poems; speech at the supervisory board meeting of the "Süddeutsche Monatshefte" in 1911; lectures on German and American literature; reports on his Africa and America journeys. Translations: Single poems by Brian Hooker; play by Philip Henslowe "Ein Weib getötet durch Güte"; diary entries; letters to and by Herbert Alberti, Leopold Andrian, Fritz Behn, Georg Bernhard, Theobald von Bethmann-Hollweg, Elsa Gräfin and Max Graf Bethusy- Huc, Hermann Beuttenmüller, Otto Julius Bierbaum, Rudolf G. Binding, Franz Blei, Josef Bloch, Eberhard von Bodenhausen, Rudolf Borchardt, Marie von Bunsen, Paul Nikolaus Cossmann, Max Dauthendey, Ottonie Countess Degenfeld, Richard Dehmel, Hans Ehrenbaum-Degele, Hanns Martin Elster, Hedwig Fischer, Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche, Sophie Dorothea Gallwitz, Benno Geiger, Alexander von Gleichen-Rußwurm, Botho Graef, Hanns von Gumppenberg, Willy Haas, Maximilian Harden, Wilhelm Hausenstein, Clara Heye, Gitta von Heymel, Ludwig von Hofmann, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Josef Hofmiller, Arno Holz, Harry Graf Kessler, Anton Kippenberg, Ludwig Klages, Albert Köster, Annette Kolb, Anna von Kühlmann, Charles von Kühlmann, Richard von Kühlmann, Helene Lange, Max Liebermann, Detlev von Liliencron, Heinrich Mann, Ernst Matthes, Julius Meier-Graefe, Otto Julius Merkel, Gustav Nagel, Heinrich von Nettelbladt, Josef Olbrich, Gustav and Magda Paul, Maria von Radio, Walther Rathenau, Ludwig Roselius, Felix Salten, Paul Scheerbart, Karl Scheffler, Philipp von Schey-Rothschild, Carl Ludwig Schleich, Helene Schott, Rudolf Alexander Schröder, Marie Schultz, Rudolf von Simolin, Radulph von Stedman, Carl Sternheim, Otto von Taube, Wilhelm Trübner, Hugo von Tschudi, Fritz von Unruh, Henry van de Velde, Hans-Hasso von Veltheim-Ostrau, Heinrich Vogeler, Robert Voigt, Karl Gustav Vollmoeller, Richard Voss, Otto Vrieslander, Jakob Wassermann, Erika von Watzdorf-Bachoff, Frank Wedekind, Carola Gräfin von Yorck zu Wartenburg u.a.; Insel-Verlag a.o.; "Süddeutsche Monatshefte", "Tägliche Rundschau" (Heinrich Rippler) and other magazines; theatre, museums a.o. Related materials: Diploma of nobility; awards and officer's patents; letters to Clara Heye; letters to Gitta von Heymel. (ZDN, March 2002) Harry Graf von Keßler (1868-1937) writer, 1895-1900 co-editor of the art magazine Pan (Neoimpressionnismus), 1913 founder of the Cranach press, 1916 commissioned by the Federal Foreign Office in Bern/Switzerland, 1918-1921 envoy in Warsaw, until 1925 further diplomatic commissions, vice president of the German Artists' Association, president of the German Peace Society, committed advocate of the idea of the League of Nations, 1933 emigrated to France "Ivan Kalaïeff" and other dramatic works; Draft of the autobiography "Faces and Times"; essays and lectures on art, culture and politics, including "Der Deutsche Künstlerbund", "Kunst und Patriotismus", "Pilsudski" and "Whistler"; commemorative speech on Paul Cassirer. Diaries from the years 1881-1937; letters to Richard Dehmel and others; letters from Conrad Ansorge, Elsa Asenijeff, Johannes Baensch-Drugulin, Johannes R. Becher, Max Beckmann, Marcus Behmer, Peter Behrens, Oskar Bie, Otto Julius Bierbaum, Eberhard von Bodenhausen, Pierre Bonnard, Theodor Brodersen, Elsa and Hugo Bruckmann, Martin Buber, Bruno Cassirer, Paul Cassirer, Gaston Colin, Edward Gordon Craig, Richard and Ida Dehmel, Maurice Denis, Ludwig Derleth, Richard Dölker, Louise Dumont, Isadora Duncan, Otto von Dungern, Otto Eckmann, Gertrud Eysoldt, Felix Fénéon, Samuel Fischer, Caesar Flaischlen, Alfred Flechtheim, Ernst Moritz Geyger, André Gide, Max Goertz, Botho Graef, George Grosz, Maximilian Harden, Ernst Hardt, Otto Erich Hartleben, Gerhart Hauptmann, Ernst Heilbut, Wieland Herzfelde, Alfred Walter Heymel, Rudolf Hilferding, Ludwig von Hofmann, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Felix Hollaender, Arthur Kahane, Leopold Graf von Kalckreuth, Hermann Graf Keyserling, Anton and Katharina Kippenberg, Max Klinger, Annette Kolb, Ernst Kreidolf, Else Lasker-Schüler, Walter Leistikow, Alfred Lichtwark, Max Liebermann, Detlev von Liliencron, Maurice Magnus, Aristide Maillol, Roland de Margerie, Julius Meier-Graefe, Georg Merleker, Edvard Munch, Gerhard von Mutius, Alfred and Helene von Nostitz, Hans Olde, Gustav Pauli, Arthur von Payern, Rudolf von Poellnitz, Stanislaw Przybyszewski, Ludwig Quidde, Max Reinhardt, Gustav Richter, Raoul Richter, Rainer Maria Rilke, Auguste Rodin, William Rothenstein, Theo van Rysselberghe, Wilhelm Schäfer, Karl Scheffler, René Schickele, Rudolf Alexander Schröder, Woldemar von Seidlitz, Franz Servaes, Paul Signac, Hugo Simon, Bernhard Graf Stolberg-Wernigerode, Richard Strauss, Franz von Stuck, Hans Sutter, Wilhelm Trübner, Hugo von Tschudi, Fritz von Uhde, Henry van de Velde, Emile Verhaeren, Herwarth Walden, Ernst von Wildenbruch, Berta Zuckerkandl anda.; Deutscher Künstlerbund, Künstlerverband deutscher Bildhauer; publishers, magazines, museums, galleries, art galleries, theatres, ministries, embassies, etc.Family correspondence with Jacques Marquis de Brion, Wilma Marquise de Brion and Alice Gräfin Kessler; documents from the Nietzsche Archive Weimar, including letters to and from Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche; related materials: documents on life and work; papers and correspondence from the estates of the parents Adolf Wilhelm Graf and Alice Gräfin Kessler and the sister Wilma Marquise de Brion, including memories and diaries of mother and sister Wilma Marquise de Brion, including memories and diaries of mother and sister. Belong to the estate: Newspaper clippings; four large photo albums from Kessler's world tour 1891/92 (ZDN, March 2002) Ludwig Klages (1872-1956) (Friedrich Konrad Eduard Wilhelm Ludwig Klages), Pseud. Dr. Erwin Axel Writer, philosopher, psychologist, graphologist Fritz Mauthner (1849-1923) Editor (theatre criticism and literary feuilleton) of various newspapers and magazines, since 1876 at the Berliner Tageblatt, also writer and language critic Dramatic: chit-chat "Kein Gut, kein Muth"; novel "Inhumanisten"; fairy tale and fairy tale.a.; publication of the "Blätter zur Pflege der schönen Künste" (twenty-three issues 1866/67, together with Felix Schütz and others); letters to Victor Ottmann and others, Letters from Lou Andreas-Salomé, Ludwig Anzengruber, Hermann Bahr, Alfred Döblin, Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach, Maximilian Harden, Gerhart Hauptmann, Rainer Maria Rilke, Carl Spitteler, Hans Thoma, Hans Vaihinger and others. Added Estate Hedwig Mauthner (ZDN, March 2002) Rudolf Pannwitz (1881-1969) Writer, cultural philosopher, teacher Works "Trilogy of Life"; "Quarterly Prints"; Poetry Collections; Epics, Myths; Drama, "Dionysian Tragedies"; Tragedy "Undine"; Fun game "Die Abiturienten", dialogues; novels and short stories, essays, essays and lectures on politics, culture and philosophy; works on Robert Boehringer, Kurt Breysig, Theodor Däubler, Ernst Fuhrmann, Stefan George, Ludwig Gurlitt, Hermann Hesse, Friedrich Hölderlin, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, C. G. Jung, Melchior Lechter, Leonardo da Vinci, Alfred Mombert, Friedrich Nietzsche, Johann Paul Friedrich Richter, Georg Simmel, Albert Verwey, Karl Wolfskehl, Otto zur Linde and others; scientific writings, educational essays; aphorisms, reviews; translations: Poetry collections and individual poems by Gabriele d'Annunzio, Otokar Brezina, Edgar Allan Poe, Paul Valéry, Albert Verwey and others; Oden von Horaz; excerpts from Dante's "Divine Comedy"; William Shakespeare "Macbeth"; a.o. Published: Poetry anthology "Der goldene Zweig"; materials for a documentation of the friendship between Stefan George and Albert Verwey; school essays, lecture transcripts; note collections, excerpts; address books, notebooks, calendars and more.a.; diaries, CVs etc.; Letters to Hilde Bental, Robert Boehringer, Kurt Breysig, Wolfgang Cordan, Theodor Däubler, Ludwig Gurlitt, Alfred Guth, Marguerite Hoffmann, Paul Hoffmann (Tübingen), Erwin Jaeckle, Hugo Kauder, Melchior Lechter, Hanns Meinke, Herbert Nette, Eduard and Therese Pannwitz, Udo Rukser, Edgar Salin, Martin Stern, Walpurgis Stevenson, Margarete Wachsmuth, Otto zur Linde anda.; Letters from Franz Altheim, Otto Barthel, Ida Becker, Friedrich Kurt Benndorf, Hilde Bental, Monica Berenberg-Lepsius, Eduard Berend, Carl Bergemann, Hans Bernstein, Herta and Friedrich Bez, Ludwig Binswanger, Robert Binswanger, Eberhard and Dora von Bodenhausen, Robert Boehringer, Margot Boger, Karl Albin Bohacek, Friedrich Brandes, Fritz Brandt, Felix Braun, Kurt Breysig, Georg Britting, Martin Buber, Friedrich-Adolf Bürk, Oswald Chorus, Siegfried Copalle, Wolfgang Cordan, Richard Graf Coudenhove-Kalergi, Theodor Däubler, Adeline Dammann, Ottonie Gräfin Degenfeld, Ellen and Gerbrand Dekker, Anna Maria Derleth, Rudolf von Deutsch, Paul Eisner, Hanns Martin Elster, Franz Ernst, Robert Faesi, Ludwig von Ficker, Otokar Fischer, Salomo Friedlaender, Sonja Frisch, Wolfgang Frommel, Ernst Fuhrmann, Paul Geheeb, Benno Geiger, Hellmut Glubrecht, Joachim Günther, Ludwig Gurlitt, Alfred Guth, Willy Haas, Alfred Haering, Maximilian Harden, Emmy Hardt, Nicolai Hartmann, Gerhart Hauptmann, Werner Helwig, Hermann and Ninon Hesse, Otto Heuschele, Ernst Hoffmann (1880-1952), Immanuel Hoffmann, Margarete (Grete) Hoffmann, Marguerite Hoffmann, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Arno Holz, F. M. Huebner, Vincenz Hundhausen, Edmund Husserl, Walter Jablonski, Erwin Jaeckle, Edward Jaime, Oskar Jancke, Alfred Jeremias, C. G. Jung, Arthur Kahane, Erich von Kahler, Gertrud Kantorowicz, Hugo Kauder, Heinrich Kaun, Karl Kerényi, Gerhard Klau, Flora Klee-Palyi, Hans Joachim Koch, Bernhard Kokolsky, Hermann Kokolsky, Michael Landmann, Melchior Lechter, Sabine Lepsius, Franz Lichtenberger, Kurt Liebmann, Hans Lindau, Karl Löwith, David Luschnat, Thomas Mann, Hans Margolius, William Matheson, Friedrich Mauracher, Julius Meier-Graefe, Hanns Meinke, Alfred Mombert, Julien P. Monod, Hans Müller (1901-1965), Herbert Nette, Mea Nijland-Verwey, Alfred and Helene von Nostitz, Hermann Obrist, Berthold Otto, Helene Otto, Walter F. Otto, Charlotte Pannwitz, Eduard and Therese Pannwitz, Walther Pannwitz, Ernst Paris, Rudolf Paulsen, Werner Picht, Meta Pohl, Robert and Rosa Porndorfer, Ludwig Praehauser, Bernhard Rang, Joseph Redlich, Otto Reichl, Hans Reinhart, Karl Röttger, Margot Ruben, Severin Rüttgers, Udo Rukser, Rupprecht Crown Prince of Bavaria, Max Rychner, Edgar Salin, Rudolf H. Sauter, Theodor Scheffer, Annemarie Schimmel, Friedrich Alfred Schmid Noerr, Askan Schmitt, Hans Hinrich von Schoen, Arthur Seidl, Claude Sernet, Georg and Gertrud Simmel, Hans Simmel, Heinrich Simon, Albert Soergel, Wolfram von den Steinen, Herbert Steiner, Martin Stern, Walpurgis Stevenson, Margarete Susman, Helene von Thienen-Adlerflycht, Elisabeth Toussaint, Hans Trüb, Fritz Usinger, Maurits Uyldert, Albert Verwey, Margarete Wachsmuth, Clemens Weber, Franz Wegwitz, Paul Wegwitz, Lutz Weltmann, Max Wiederanders, Victor Wittkowski, Hans Wolffheim, Karl Wolfskehl, Gustav Wyneken, Leopold Ziegler, Hans Zöbelein, Otto zur Linde, Stefan Zweig anda.Adalbert Stifter-Institut des Landes Oberösterreich in Linz, Der Bund, Comité International d`Aide aux Intellectuels, Deutsche Akademie für Sprache und Dichtung Darmstadt, Hilfswerk der Evangelischen Kirchen der Schweiz, Jean-Paul-Gesellschaft, Nietzsche-Archiv Weimar, Preußische Akademie der Künste Berlin, "Stifterbibliothek"; publishers, periodicals and newspapers, radio stations and radio stations.a.; correspondence with Richard Zeidler and others concerning his journal "Charon"; related materials: life and family documents; investigations of his work by Anton Müller, Nicolaus Walcker and others; poetry by Theodor Däubler, Erwin Jaeckle, Kurt Liebmann, Alfred Mombert, Ernst Morwitz, Karl Wolfskehl and others.Drama by Ludwig Gurlitt; "Diary" and other poems by Konrad Ernst; "Fragments" by Hugo Hertwig and Ernst Fuhrmann; "Méditations Cartésiennes" by Edmund Husserl; treatise by Gustav Wyneken; essays by Ludwig Praehauser, Hans Trüb and others.a.; poems on the "Charon" by Salomo Friedlaender and others; letters to Margarete (Grete) Hoffmann by Elisabeth Dollmann, Immanuel Hoffmann, Johanna Hoffmann, Wilhelm Hoffmann (businessman) and others.a.; Letters to Helene Otto von Ida Maria Bauerreiss, Ilse Bock, Karl Albin Bohacek, Magda Grasmair, Mathilde Mann, Friedrich Mauracher, Irmgard Meyer-Otto, Berthold Otto, Rudolf Pannwitz and others; Letters to Meta Pohl von Irene Hellmann, Margarete (Grete) Hoffmann, Gerty von Hofmannsthal, Friedrich Mauracher, Helene Otto, Rudolf Pannwitz and others. Belonging to the estate: An author's library, special editions, periodicals, newspaper clippings added: Rudolf Pannwitz Collection Alfred Haering and Estate Charlotte Pannwitz (ZDN, March 2002) Paul Schultze-Naumburg (1869-1949) Architect, painter, writer Letters from Hans Bethge, Wilhelm Bölsche, Caesar Flaischlen, Maximilian Harden, Elisabeth von Heyking, Josef Hoffmann, Ludwig von Hofmann, Georg Kolbe, Richard Muther, Hans Thoma, Paul Ludwig Troost, Otto Ubbelohde, Henry van de Velde, Joseph Wackerle and others. (ZDN, March 2002) Kurt Tucholsky (1880-1935) Journalist and writer, editor-in-chief of the Ulk, 1924-1929 correspondent, mostly in Paris, permanently living in Sweden since 1929, employee of the magazine Schaubühne, the later Weltbühne, 1926 temporary editor of the latter single poems and chansons; Comedy (together with Walter Hasenclever) "Christoph Kolumbus oder Die Entdeckung Amerikas"; plans for a play under the title "Etzliche Gedanken den Herrn Casanova betreffend"; play after an idea by G. W. Pabst "Seifenblasen"; narratives, reflections, sketches, glosses, comments, dissertation "Die Vormerkung aus §1179 BGB und ihre Wirkungen"; reports for Siegfried Jacobsohn; notebooks, titled "Eigenes" and "Fremdes"; autobiographical: "Q-Tagebuch" in twenty-nine parts 1934-1935; "Sudelbuch"/"Unreines"; testament and others. Letters to Marcel Belvianes, Marierose Fuchs, Maximilian Harden, Walter Hasenclever, Hedwig Hünicke, Siegfried Jacobsohn, Emil Jannings and Gussy Holl, Kate Kühl, Käthe Löffler, Emil Ludwig, Hilde Majewskaja, Ellen Milo-Tucholsky, Hedwig Müller, Mark Neven-Dumont, Heinz Pol, Lisa von Schönebek, Ernst Toller, Fritz Tucholsky, Mary Tucholsky and others, Letters from Hans Erich Blaich, Salomo Friedlaender, Felix Gasbarra, Claire Goll, George Grosz, Maximilian Harden, Ludwig Hardt, Moritz Heimann, Magnus Hirschfeld, Hedwig Hünicke, Berthold Jacob, Siegfried and Edith Jacobsohn, Emil Jannings, Erich Kästner, Irmgard Keun, Max König, Annette Kolb, Gertrud Lasch, Emil Ludwig, Heinrich Mann, Walter Mehring, Hedwig Müller, Ada Nigrin, Alfred Polgar, Emmy Sachs, Ernst Toller, Alexander Tucholsky, Mary Tucholsky, Jakob Wassermann, Kurt Wolff, Theodor Wolff, Heinrich Zille, Arnold Zweig anda.; Letters from Erich Mühsam and others concerning the fortress detention in Niederschönenfeld. Related materials; testimonies, contracts; correspondence and documents on membership in Masonic lodges; documents on residence permits in Sweden; correspondence on the Tucholsky family and letters from individual family members; materials on various Kurt-Tucholsky works and individual editions; adaptations of his texts for stage, radio and television; musical settings by Friedrich Holländer, Peer Raben and others.Studies, essays, appreciations and examination papers on Tucholsky and his work, including works by Fritz J. Raddatz, Klaus-Peter Schulz, Walther Victor and Harry Zohn; letters from and to Mary Tucholsky on the care of graves in Sweden; correspondence between Mary Tucholsky and Gerhard Zwerenz and others concerning the Kurt-Tucholsky biography of Zwerenz; letters from Oskar Panizza; letters to Siegfried Jacobsohn from Frank Wedekind, etc. The archive includes: A comprehensive documentation of Tucholsky's work and impact: In addition to the first editions, numerous anthologies and reading books, magazines, a large collection of newspaper clippings, tapes, records, graphics, posters, numerous photographs. (ZDN, March 2002) Karl Gustav Vollmoeller (1878-1948) Writer's poetry collection "From the Second War"; cycles, individual poems and fragments; plays and film exposés, drafts and fragments; novels and stories "The Miracle" and others.Reports (also correspondences) from the First World War; aphorisms etc.; translations: "Orestie" by Aischylos; "Antigone" by Sophokles; letters to and from Eugen d' Albert, Gabriele d' Annunzio, Raoul Auernheimer, Arnold Bergstraesser, Rudolf G. Binding, Ferruccio Busoni, Florence of Delden, André Gide, Botho Graef, Johannes von Guenther, Maximilian Harden, Ernst Hardt, Alfred Walter Heymel, Engelbert Humperdinck, Emil Jannings, Johannes V. Jensen, Oskar Kokoschka, Annette Kolb, Ruth Landshoff-Yorck, Norina Princess Matchabelli, Gabriel Pascal, Rainer Maria Rilke, Arthur Schnitzler, Herbert Schoellenbach, Jean Sereine, Josef von Sternberg, Fritz von Unruh, Jakob Wassermann and others; Bote
Harmsen, Hans (inventory)
BArch, N 1336 · Fonds · 1885-1988
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the Inventory Designer: Old and New Topics in Population Science. Festschrift for Hans Harmsen. Ed.: Hermann Schubnell. Boppard 1981 citation method: BArch, N 1336/...

Hertling, George Count
BArch, N 1036 · Fonds · 1862-1918
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the Inventory Designer: NDB 8, p. 702 ff. MdR (Zentrum, 1875-1912), Bavarian Prime Minister (1912-1917), Reich Chancellor (1917-1918) Inventory description: correspondence with family members (mainly political content), manuscripts on publications and speeches, correspondence on the Zentrumspartei, Catholicism, the Görres Society, German relations with the Vatican, and matters of Reich politics. Further documents in the Archbishop's Archive in Munich. (as of 1977) Citation method: BArch, N 1036/...