Showing 13 results

Archival description
BArch, RM 3/6807 · File · 1905-1906
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

Contains among other things: List of existing Chambers of Commerce and Commercial Corporations in the German Reich (status at the beginning of 1905) Remarks and contributions to the 1904/05 memorandum "Zeitschrift für Zollwesen und Reichssteuern", V. Volume No. 1 of 1905, VI. Volume No. 3 of 1906 "Zeitschrift für Missionskunde und Religionswissenschaft" XXI. Vol., Issue 3

German Imperial Naval Office
BArch, RM 3/6698 · File · 1897-1923
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

Contains among other things: Evidence of teams of Thuringian origin located in East Asia in Kiautschou Memorandum concerning the payment of German salaries to Schantung-Mandarine Newspaper clippings on the necessity of a national army, on German trade interests and administration of Kiautschou Report on the return of the administration of the leased area

German Imperial Naval Office
BArch, RM 3/6736 · File · 1898-1899
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

Contains among other things: Project of a steam brickworks and woodcutting plant for Kiautschou Applications for concessions for various companies Magazine "Deutscher Industrieanzeiger für Ostasien", No. 1 and 2 of 1899 Construction plans Project of a steam brickworks together with works cutting plant for Kiautschou Sheet 1, cross-section, longitudinal section, floor plan, 1:100 26. July 1898 (Fol. 15); Sheet 2, cross-section of the annular furnace (1 : 100) and press house, 27 July 1898 (Fol. 16); dry sheds (1000) comprising bricks for the steam brickworks Kiautschou, 1 : 100:, 27 July 1898, Fol. 17; front view (1 : 200), 27 July 1898 (Fol. 18);

German Imperial Naval Office
BArch, RM 3/6838 · File · 1903
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

Contains among other things: Reports about Port Arthur and Dalny Newspaper article about Russia and Manchuria Memorandum about the Kwantung area for the year 1902/03 Memorandum Dalny 1902 in Russian and translation

German Imperial Naval Office
BArch, RM 3/6711 · File · 1902
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

Contains among other things: Ordinance on compulsory service with the Imperial Protection Forces in South West Africa Imperial Ordinance on rights to real estate in the protection area Newspaper article on the protection area law

German Imperial Naval Office
BArch, RM 3/6725 · File · 1898
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

Contains among other things: Report on Schingking Province Report of the military attaché in London on China Newspaper clippings on Schantung Province, Kiautschou, Tsingtau Report on crafts and finance in China

German Imperial Naval Office
Kiautschou War 1914
BArch, RM 3/6876 · File · 1914-1918
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

Contains among other things: Newspaper cuttings about the fight for Tsingtau The war in the German protectorates The fight for Tsingtau

German Imperial Naval Office
Kiautschou War 1914: Vol. 8
BArch, RM 3/6866 · File · 1916
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

Contains among other things: Records concerning the Japanese in Schantung Conditions in Japanese prisoner-of-war camps Extract from a diary of records from the Fukuoka prisoner-of-war camp Memorandum on the foreign colonial areas which could be considered new acquisitions at the conclusion of the peace Treatment of German prisoners of war in Japan "Tokushima-Anzeiger", Zeitschrift für das Gefangenenheim, No. 15 bis 17, July/Aug. 1915

German Imperial Naval Office
Reichsmarineamt (inventory)
BArch, RM 3 · Fonds · 1889-1919
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

History of the Inventor: The Reichsmarineamt (Reichsmarineamt) was created as the successor authority to the Imperial Admiralty with effect from April 1, 1889, in the form of a cabinet order (in addition to the Navy Cabinet and the Navy High Command). As the supreme Reich authority, the Reichsmarineamt was responsible for the organisation, administration, technology, armament and fortification of the navy. At the same time, it exercised Reich competence vis-à-vis the merchant navy and in the fields of maritime transport, nautical science and fisheries protection. The RMA was in charge of the Imperial Shipyards, the Shipbuilding Inspection Commission, the Naval Depot Inspectorate, Coastal District Offices, Station Headquarters, Naval Military Sacrets, the Naval Observatory, the Naval Commissioner of the Kaiser Wilhelm Canal and the Kiautschou Government. The RMA was divided into the following organizational units: Central Department, General Navy Department, Shipyard Department/Submarine Office, Construction Department, Administrative Department, Weapons Department, Nautical Department, Kiautschou Protectorate Central Department, Medical Department, Justice Department, News Office. On 15 July 1919 the powers of the Reichsmarineamt were transferred to the Admiralty by decree of the Reich President. Characterisation of content: With the exception of the Arms Department, the Medical Department, the Legal Department and the Central Bureau of the Navy, all other organisational units in this inventory have files. Of particular importance from the Central Department are the State Secretary's files on the development of the Navy and the preparatory work for the Fleet Acts. An important part of the former hand files is also in the estate of State Secretary Tirpitz. The files handed down from the central department contain documents on protocol questions, launching, awarding of orders and central organisational matters as well as Reichstag material and a complete series of the "Allerhöchsten Kabinettsordres" for the navy from 1889 to 1918. The activities of the General Maritime Department on matters of organisation and service operation of ships and naval parts, personnel and replacement matters, questions of training in weapons service, uniforms, organisation of education, administration of justice, supply matters, military questions of ship construction and maritime law are well documented. The files of the Construction Department provide a source of considerable importance for the history of the navy and technology. This includes construction files for all heavy and medium-sized combat ships completed by 1914, as well as approx. 10,000 construction plans and other technical drawings for ships and boats. In addition, scientific research results on strength issues, material development, drag tests and general building regulations have also been handed down. The files of the budget department fully document the development of the naval budget, in particular the financing of the fleet building programmes. Here you will also find budget and administrative files on the establishment of the German protectorate Kiautschou as well as on pension and retirement matters of officers, teams and civil servants. Also well preserved are the files of the administrative department, which mainly document catering, clothing and accommodation matters of the navy. Of particular note are the files on numerous foundations for which the Reichsmarineamt was in charge. In connection with the responsibility for food and clothing, extensive series of files on the care of the German population during the war were produced. The traditional files of the news agency contain documents on the economic situation in Germany, the development of shipping, maritime traffic and fleet interests, censorship measures, the collection and distribution of war news and foreign propaganda. An extensive collection of newspaper clippings is also included. Also worth mentioning are the correspondence series on association matters, especially the German Fleet Association. The Nautical Department has files on sea mark and coastal signal matters, cutlery excerpts, travel reports and expeditions. From the shipyard department responsible for the equipment and maintenance of ships, shipyards and vehicles, only a small remainder of files on submarine matters, occasionally also torpedo matters, has been preserved. The departments and departments of the shipyard department responsible for the processing of the submarine system were made independent in 1917 to the submarine office. The documents produced during the short period of its existence reflect the measures taken to promote submarine construction, in particular the material provision during the final phase of the First World War. Worth mentioning here is still material about the planned technical evaluation of war diaries of the submarines. Scope, explanation: Holdings without growth593 lfm24181 AE, approx. 10000 ship drawings/plans (RM 3/12,000-22,600) Citation method: BArch, RM 3/...

German Imperial Naval Office
BArch, RM 3/7082 · File · 1905
Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

Contains among other things: Annex I: Orders of the blue and red parties in German Annex II: Crocis, sketches, etc. Annex III: Photographs Annex IV: Orders of the blue and red parties in Chinese Annex V: Chinese manoeuvre cards Annex VI: Newspaper cuttings

German Imperial Naval Office