Ernst G. Rüsch recorded the lectures in a notebook only until 1972; afterwards the information is missing. From then on the extensive lecture activity in the church framework and as church and city historian is no longer noted, but at most documented by reports about it or recorded in the agendas.
Contains above all: Newspaper clippings, approx. 30 sheets loose.
Nine fiches. Contains: FICHE NO 15 1 - Tracking - "The Foundation..." - "The foundation..." FICHE NR. 15 2 - Continued - "A Chagga Contribution in the Iraq Mission" Results of an Investigation in Northern Tanzania. Gertrud Heyn. Results of a trip from 1988 - "Tables on the exploration trip of the missionaries Müller and Fokken from Kilimanjaro to the southwest in June and July 1909" (printed) - Erlangen 1971. Extract from a letter from Hiller - List: 1971 and 1972 given for photocopying - Card "The Lutheran Church in Tanganyika" - "Abstract of a phonetics and grammar of Kinilamba (Iramba language)" by Ittameier (cover page only) - "Historical about her mission station Ruruma in the landscape Irumba. Evidence in the Ev.-luth. Mission sheet ... and from the files at the Ev.-luth. Mission..." (2-fold) - Bayreuth 1956. Wärthl ("On the foundation of the Leipzig mission station Ruruma in Iramba 45 years ago") - 1988. "On the history of the Iramba mission" - Lichtenfelde 1907. Meinhof - Berthelsdorf 1909. Mission Directorate of the Brethren-Unity. Chairman Hennig (2 letters) - 1909. To Berner Higher Administrative Court - 1909. Müller. FICHE NO 15 3 - Continued - "Tables on the..." (see above Fiche 15 2 ) (5-fold) - o.O., o.J. Müller - Ost-Machame. Report about the SW journey of the missionaries Müller and Fokken 1909 (in stenography) - sketch of the mission area Iramba - transmission of the stenogram (2fold) with sketch. FICHE NR. 15 4 - continued - "Mitteilungen über die auf der S.W. Expedition berührtten Sprachen" (formerly attached table missing) - sketch by Ittameier ("Iramba Plateau") - Friedenau 1909. Uhlig - Berlin 1909. Mitteilungen vom Staatssekretär - Kilrora 1909. House director to mission director - 12 photos (in copy almost nothing to recognize) - Breslau 1910. Oberkirchenkollegium to college - Leipzig 1911. Oberkirchenkollegium - Neuendettelsau 1911. Bavarian mission conference - Lorenzkirch 1911. Paul - 1911. Wärthl to accounting office of the mission to Moshi - Breslau 1911. Oberkirchenkollegium to college. FICHE NR. 15 5 - continued - Leipzig 1911. an Oberkirchenkollegium (2 letters, several times) - Leipzig 1911. an Nagel - Breslau 1911. oberkirchenkollegium - Mecklenburg 1912. Schliemann - 1912. An Schliemann (2 letters) - telegram - travel statement Mamba 1911. Ittameier - Machame 1911. Ittameier - Ruruma / Iramba 1912. Ittameier (2 letters) - Ruruma / Iramba 1912. Wärthl an Finanzabteilung des Kaiserlichen Gouvernements (transcript) - Iramba. Building plan of a house - Sketch of the mission area in Iramba - List of population - Sketch: Property of the ev.-luth. mission station Ruruma - Ruruma 1912. Wärthl - Leipzig 1912. Sektetariat an Wärthl (copy) - excerpt from a letter of Schwartz 1912 - Leipzig 1912. Power of attorney of Paul an Ittameier in Ruruma / Iramba or Wärthl in Ruruma - 1913. to Ruruma an ? - "Journey to the New Mission Area"; "Beginnings" by Ittameier in Ruruma 1912 (for Missionsblatt) - Annual Report Iramba 1912 (revised for print). FICHE NR. 15 6 - continued - Ruruma 1913. Ittameier "The latest news" (revised for printing) - Ruruma / Iramba 1912. Wärthl an Kollegium (accounting report) - estimate for 1912 for Ruruma / Iramba. Ittameier - Ruruma / Iramba 1912. Wärthl (list of the customs amounts; copy) - 1913 "Landschaftliches aus Iramba" Ittameier (for mission sheet) - Ruruma 1912. Ittameier an Kollegium (2 letters in copy) - Iramba 1912. Wärthl (cash report and invoice; 2 letters in copy) - Leipzig 1912. an? - Leipzig 1912. An? - Leipzig 1912. an Wärthl - Leipzig 1912. an Iramba missionaries (2 letters) - Leipzig 1912. secretariat an Ittameier - Leipzig 1913. after Ruruma (same content as in Fiche 15 5 ) - estimate for 1913 for Ruruma / Iramba. Ittameier - Leipzig 1913. An Missionare in Iramba - Leipzig 1913. An Schwiegervater von Everth - Ruruma o.J. Wärthl "Von den Anilamba" (revised for print) - Ruruma 1913. Wärthl an Missionsinspektor. FICHE NR. 15 7 - Annual report Iramba 1913 Ittameier - Ruruma 1914 Ittameier - 1914 An Missionare in Iramba (2 letters) - Estimate for 1914 Ruruma / Iramba. Ittameier - Shigatini 1914. mission council to missionaries in Ruruma / Iramba - 1914. telegram from Ittameier - Ruruma 1914. Wärthl to curator of Lieblinger's estate (transcript) - Ruruma 1914. to station Moshi (transcript) - Ruruma 1914. Ittameier to Kollegium - Mkalama 1914. Imperial district extension to Wärthl in Ruruma (concerning guardianship matter) - Moshi 1914. Imperial district judge / guardianship fortification to Ittameier - Leipzig 1914. To missionaries in Iramba - Ruruma 1914. Wärthl an Kollegium (copy) - Singida 1914. Imperial military post on Wärthl - Mkalama 1914. Imperial district branch (concerning school matters) - Morogoro 1914. Stage management / Singida military post on Wärthl (concerning school matters) - Mkalama 1914. Entry into the Schutztruppe) - Ruruma 1914. Wärthl at the command of the Kaiserliche Schutztruppe (concerning registration as war volunteer) - Delivery list 1914. - Ruruma 1914. Wärthl at the Kaiserliche Bezirksnebenstelle - Mkalama 1914. Imperial District Branch (Depository Receipt) - Mkalama 1914 Imperial District Branch to Missionaries in Ruruma - Ruruma / Makalama 1915. Everth - Moshi 1915. Imperial District Court to Everth (concerning appointment as guardian) - Ruruma 1915. Everth to Imperial District Branch Mkalama (with copy) - Ruruma 1915. Everth to Imperial District Court Moshi (report about guardianship) - Mkalama 1915. Imperial District Branch to Missionaries in Ruruma (report about guardianship) - Mkalama 1915. Land questions) - Shigatini 1915. fox to Everth - Makalama / Ruruma 1915. contract between Everth and Schreiber (concerning pigs) - annual report Ruruma April 1914-March 1915 - Ruruma 1915. Everth at district branch Umbulu - Mkalama 1915. Imperial district extension to missionaries in Ruruma - Morogoro 1915. Stage management to Everth - Ruruma o.J. Everth to district extension in Mkalama - Umbulu 1915. Imperial district extension to Everth - Ruruma 1915. Everth to Hermanns. FICHE NR. 15 8 - Continued - Ruruma 1915. Everth at stage command of the Schutztruppe - Kondoa-Jrangi 1915. Imperial district office to missionaries in Ruruma (concerning the Accusation, in the government school in Mkalama the natives were forced to Islam under blows) - Morogoro 1915. Stage management at Everth (concerning convocation) - Ruruma 1915. Everth at stage management - Mkalama 1915. Imperial district extension at Everth - o.O.., o.J. Everth an Gouverneur Schnee - Shigatini 1915. Fuchs an Everth (2 letters) - Neu-Moshi 1916. Eisenschmidt an Everth - Shigatini 1916. Missionsrat (Fuchs) an Everth - Umbulu 1916. Imperial district extension (concerning rejection of a new branch of the Leipzig Mission in Dongobesch) - Ruruma 1916. ? to Mission Council - Telegram - Mkalama 1916. letter in Swahili(?) - Mkalama 1916. Imperial District Officer to Everth - Mkalama "Political" to Everth (English) - 1917. Everth to "Political" (English) - Arusha 1918. Blumer to Müller (English) - Arusha 1918. Blumer to Müller (2 letters) - Machame 1918. Müller to Blumer (concerning the Lieblinger) - Mamba 1918. mission council (concerning Lieblinger) - Machame 1918. Müller with additions of Gutmann and space - Machame 1918. mission council to Blumer (concerning the "Iramba hybrid Friedrich" Lieblinger; German and English) - Machame 1918. Müller with an addition of Gutmann - excerpt from a letter of Blumer 1918 - Ruruma (headwords to various topics) - Leipzig 1919. "Discussion about the cash situation in Iramba" - Leipzig 1920. Weishaupt to District Commissioner Mkalama (copy; English) - Berlin 1920. Deutsch-Ostafrikanische Bank an Wärthl - Eschenbach 1920. Wärthl an Weishaupt - Machame 1924. Hult. "("Copy of a report presented to the Conference of the Missionaries of The Tanganyika Lutheran Mission") - 1931. Board of Foreign Missions of the Augustana Synod. (Johnson) to Ittameier (English; transcript; concerning questions of ownership in East Africa) - 1931. Board of Foreign... (MacLennan) to Johnson, Minnesota, U.S.A. - Nkoaranga 1931. Ittameier to Mission Director (on property issues) - Leipzig 1931. An Everth (on property issues) - 1931. An Johnson (on property issues in East Africa and Lpz. declaration) - Nkoaranga 1931. Mission concerning Iramba) - Iramba 1912. Wärthl an Kollegium - Estimate Ruruma / Iramba 1912. Ittameier - 1912. Kollegium an Missionare der Iramba-Mission - Ruruma 1912. Wärthl an Kollegium (concerning the report of the Iramba mission) - o.O., o.J. College to Wärthl. FICHE NR. 15 9- - continued - Ruruma 1912. Wärthl an Kollegium - 1912. Kollegium an Missionare der Iramba-Mission - Estimate 1913 Ruruma / Iramba. Ittameier - 1913. college to missionaries of the Iramba mission (5 letters) - 1913. college to Wärthl - 1913. secretariat to Ittameier - Ruruma - 1913. Ittameier to college - Ruruma - 1913. Wärthl to college with 2 letters to the financial department of the Imperial Governor in Daressalaam (copies) - estimate 1914 Ruruma / Iramba. Ittameier - Accounting reports Iramba 1912-1914. Wärthl - 1914. College to missionaries in Ruruma (5 letters) - Ruruma 1914. Wärthl (2 letters) - Telegram to Wärthl (not given up).
Leipziger MissionswerkSubject:- Andreasberg, Mission 1913- Dibombari, Church 1913- Douala, Cathedral- Edea, Church and boarding school- Einsiedeln, Church- Engelberg, Mission 1894- Ikassa, Mission 1906- Kribi, Church and Mission House- Myolye, Mission 1901; Including: Picture of Seminary Myolye, 1947- Ngowayang, Church and Mission House- Ossing, Mission 1900- Victoria (parish Bota à Limbé), Mission 1908
PallottinesNote: One piece in Ewe (1936) 1989, four pieces in German, 1951- ca. 1970.
Contains among other things: Old windmill, conversions for the Reich Governor Sauckel - home for the blind - colonial fountain, Bismarckplatz - Pestalozzi school - English church, Kreuzkirche - Lottenmühle, later Catholic parish office - residential area Am Schönblick.
Contains: Arno Lehmann, Alte Indien Post, Jan. 1959, and ders., Indigenous Art and Bible-Illustration, Feb. 1960 (reprints from the scientific journal of the Martin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg); reports and impressions of a Ghana delegation 27.12.1987 - 21.1.1980, reprint of the Lippische Mission.
Note: Two brochures and several magazines.
Two fiches. Contains: "Abschrift / Photocopie" of the book of the same name, published 1916 in Leipzig (Verlag der Ev.-luth. Mission), with an overview of the author's life, a "Kirchengeschichtlichen Abriß über die Entstehung des Ev. Luth. Kirche im Paregebirge bis zum 1. Weltkrieg" (by Kiesel, Moshi / Tanzania), a "Statistik über das Jahr 1914" (by Senior Fuchs) and "Erläuterungen" (by Dannholz), presumably written 1985. 82 pp.
Leipziger MissionswerkContains: N.K. Dzobo: Ko nu makpo, Madzipe-Ho, Ghana 1984 (print) with translation into German: Let me see you laugh, through Paul Wiegräbe, typewritten. - Note: 2 issues of approx. 50 pages each.
Contains: - Reports of the Former German Missions in Tanganyika Territory East Africa to the Commission on Younger Churches and Orphaned Missions of the National Lutheran Council of America" 1951 (ed., 94 p.) - "Mbuya ya vandu vuu. (Monthly leaf of the Lutheran parishes of Kilimanjaro and the neighbouring mountains)." Moshi, 1st year, October 1904-September 1905 - Fiedler, K.: Christianity and African culture - Conservative German missionaries in Tanzania 1900-1940 (manuscript with corrections; excerpts) with accompanying letter Fiedler an Jaeschke (Ratingen 1982) - Kiethe, S. und Drephal o. - E.: Theological final examination 1964 at the Theological Seminary of the Evangelical Lutheran Mission in Leipzig. Large term paper: Systematic theology. Topic: The church critically presented in the view of Bruno Gutmann on the basis of his book "Church Building from the Gospel". (typing; 58 or 50 p.) - Jaeschke, E.; Boehner, K.: Maisha ya Dk. Dk. Bruno Gutmann. Mwanafunzi na Mchungaji wa Wachaga. o.J. (Computer printout; 16 p.) - Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre Annual Report, Moshi 1981. (English; typewritten; 72 p.) - Kordes, H.: The ambivalent adventure of foreign educational aid in the poor world. Illustrated by the example of the "Ruralization" of primary schools in Dahomey (West Africa) o.J. (printed; with photos; copy; 5 p.) - special prints from the Schwabacher Tagblatt November 1975. "Who wants to help Africa, must provide water" for the 90th birthday of Missionary Pätzig - Erlangen 1976. Mission work of the Ev.-luth. Church in Bavaria. Africa Department. Tanzaniainformation 1/76 and 2/76 (20 and 9 p. respectively) - Nkoaranga 1975. Stroothenke an Jurkeit (typewritten; 8 p.) - Ruf, W.: Reiseerfahrungen in Tanzania. Report for the Board of the Leipzig Mission (1972) (typewritten; 5 p.)
Jäschke, ErnstNote: Collection of songs and poems in Ewe and German, approx. 50 pages, typewritten or as photocopy/print, hardback.
Preliminary remark: The present repertory essentially concludes the order and recording of the extensive files of the Ministerial Department for the Secondary Schools and its previous authorities (E 202 - E 203 IV), i.e. the files on the Secondary Schools in Württemberg from the foundation of the kingdom 1806 to 1945.While the extensive E 202 stock (1975 repertory) contains the general administrative files of the authorities, the E 203 I - E 203 IV stocks contain the files created by the personnel administration:E 203 I Personnel files of teachers in higher schoolsE 203 II Admission work for the teaching profession in higher schoolsE 203 III Personnel files of administrative officials and employeesE 203 IV Personnel file of teachers in higher schoolsAs Oberstudiendirektion was founded in 1806, renamed Studienrat in 1817 (with extended remit), the authority has since 1903 used the name Ministerialabteilung für die höhere Schulen. It was in charge of the supervision of the Protestant theological seminars, of all schools of scholars, namely the grammar schools, Lyceums and Latin schools, as well as of the educational institutions for trade education (the polytechnic school with the winter building trade school) and of the higher and lower secondary schools. The lower Latin and secondary schools, on the other hand, were directly under the control of the local school authorities and the community high schools. With the exception of the University of Tübingen, the Wilhelmstift and the elementary schools, it supervised all educational institutions, including the scientific and moral education of the pupils, the employment and dismissal of teachers and servants (by order or review), and the supervision of their official duties. She also tested the teacher candidates. The ministerial department was abolished in 1945; its tasks were now performed by the cult ministries in Württemberg-Baden and Württemberg-Hohenzollern. 1952 saw the establishment of the Oberschulämter as intermediate authorities, some of which were given corresponding responsibilities (for more details on the history of the authorities, see the preface to Repertorium E 202). the far-reaching and very comprehensive responsibility of the ministerial department may reveal the significance of the holdings of personnel files of teachers at secondary schools that were made accessible here. The individual personnel files often document the pedagogical freedom of movement (in)of the teachers as well as the supervision of the superior authority far beyond the personal life and career data. Not a few personalities who initially worked in the school service and whose personnel files are available here later achieved prestige and success in literary, cultural or political life.B. the writers Gustav Schwab and Dr. D.F. Weinland (author of the "Rulaman"), the folk and regional poet Hermann Otto Heuschele, the dignified president Johannes v. Hieber. During the final work of the listing the personnel files of the administrative officials and employees were taken out and spun off as inventory E 203 III. The files were handed over in 1949/1950 by the then Kultministerium Württemberg-Baden and in 1977 by the Oberschulamt Stuttgart.1977/1978 the files were ordered and indexed by the temporary employees Ute Radicke, Ingrid Hermann and Anita Hundsdörfer under the direction of the archive employee Erwin Biemann and the archive inspector, e.g. Heinrich Graf. After the two file deliveries (each comprising the letters A-Z) had been indexed according to numerus currens, they were merged and brought into a uniform alphabetical order. The final work was done by an archive inspector, Heinrich Graf. Ludwigsburg, March 1979Dr. Schmierer
Note: Compiled from the printed messages, approx. 50 p., hardback.
Note: Typewritten duplicated, 88 p.
Note: Loose in folder, approx. 3 cm.
Note: Contains above all: Three brochures, 1937, 1938 (photocopy), 1975.
Contains: Membership book of the Evangelical Presbyterian Church, pre-printed in Ewe, ca. 1970; teacher's salary booklet, teacher's guide book, pre-prints in Ewe, Bremen 1907; peace treaty between different West African kings, 1874, copy in English, without date; three exercise books with entries in Ewe, 1971-1973; ca. 15 coloured drawings with African child scenes, presumably collected as print templates for a publication, ca. 1920.
- on the administrative history of the Württemberg upper offices: 1. the upper offices in their context (constitutional structure, "Staatsverein"): the administrative structure, which was created at the beginning of the 19th century for the double territory of the kingdom of Württemberg compared to the duchy, remained in place with minor changes until 1938, partly even beyond that. During this period, the Land was divided into 63 senior offices plus the Stuttgart City Council (1). The average area of an upper administrative district was around 1822 5.7 square miles = 316 square kilometres, the average number of inhabitants 20,700 (1926 : 41,604), whereby in the course of time a considerable imbalance resulted (the number of inhabitants per upper administrative district varied 1926 between 18,000 and 341,000). The four district governments, which replaced the twelve bailiwicks established in 1806 (2) in 1817, were the intermediate authorities between the individual upper offices and the ministerial level. The Württemberg constitution in force from 1819 to 1919 (3) was based on the municipalities as the "basis of the state association" (4). The higher offices had the task of bringing the administrative matters directly affecting the individual citizens, which the municipalities dealt with largely on their own responsibility, into the state administration. The problem of the greatest possible integration of all those affected by administrative measures arose for the higher offices as well as the problem of a uniform implementation of domestic government measures. The upper offices were also the constituencies for the elections to the Chamber of Deputies (5). 2. functionariesThe Ministry of the Interior delegated the responsibility for the higher office administrations to one senior official each, since the 1830s as a rule a lawyer with a university degree. As a civil servant, he was responsible for all administrative matters which were not the responsibility of the judicial (6) or fiscal (7) authorities, he was in charge of the police and (in the case of infringements) the penal authorities and he supervised the local authorities. As administrative civil servants, he was subordinate to a senior secretary and (since the second half of the 19th century) a bailiff as deputy. In addition to this administration, there was the official assembly as a body with coordination and integration functions. In it the individual municipalities of an Oberamtsbezirk were combined as an official body. The number of deputies each municipality provided depended on its share of the public burdens to be borne jointly, the "official damage". As an upper limit, a municipality was allowed to provide a maximum of one third (8) of the members of the official assembly, while small municipalities sent a joint representative. The Official Assembly met twice a year. In order to maintain its presence, it elects from among its members an executive committee, an actuary (who was at the same time an assistant to the Oberamts auditor) and appointed the Oberamtspfleger (9) as well as the other officials of the administrative body (10) as responsible for cash and accounting.Thus, according to constitutionalist theory, the responsibility for continuous, active administrative work lay with government officials, while financial regulation and control functions were carried out by a body that brought together those affected by administrative measures and those who financed them. Approaches that went beyond a representative system based purely on control and finance were not evident in the administrative sector, but rather in the area of social tasks and services, where officials of the official corporation were active. 3. limits of the uniform district organisation. It was not possible from the outset for all administrative functions to have an organisation in which (as in the case of the internal and judicial administrations) (11) the administrative districts corresponded to the regional districts. In the case of the deanery offices of the two large churches, it is clear from the regional distribution of the denomination that a district administration was not established for each upper office; nevertheless, as far as practicable, deanery and upper office boundaries were often identical. Where there were practical reasons to do so, the forestry, camera, customs and building inspectorates also had jurisdictional districts which deviated from the upper administrative districts. The decisive disruptive factor for a uniform administrative organisation at district level, the patrimonial jurisdiction of the class lord restored after 1819 by the Federal Act, was eliminated in 1849. The same applies to the special rights of independent royal and noble estates which before 1849 had not been incorporated into the municipal associations and thus not into the district administration. 4. individual important changes in the supreme official organisation1842: Due to excessive distances from the head office or other economic and traffic conditions, individual municipalities are reassigned in 31 head offices (Reg.Bl. 1842, p. 386 - 389).1850 ff: The regionally different development of the country leads to a considerable imbalance between individual districts in the course of time despite the original balance. Changes to individual divisions (e.g. dissolution of the Cannstatt regional office in 1923; dissolution of the Weinsberg regional office in 1926) do not eliminate these differences.1906: The Amtsversammlungs-Ausschuss is given the name Bezirksrat (district council) and is also consulted on the business of state administration. The Official Assembly may set up committees to monitor individual institutions and facilities of the official body. The actuary shall be replaced by a secretary elected for 3 years by the Assembly. 1933: Re-establishment of an official corporation, which is limited to an advisory function and is given the name Kreisverband. The district administrator is appointed the "leader" of the district administration. The terms Kreis (for Oberamt), Kreistag (for Amtsversammlung) and Kreisrat (for Bezirksrat) are introduced. The district council consists of the district administrator as chairman, the district leader of the NSDAP and five other members appointed by the district administrator in agreement with the district leader (Reg. Bl. 1938, pp. 51 - 72, 82, 139, 189).1938: 27 district associations are dissolved and affiliated to the remaining 34 (for the regulations and distribution of the individual municipalities see Reg. Bl. 1938, pp. 155 - 162). The city management district of Stuttgart will continue to exist as a city district. The cities of Ulm and Heilbronn (with Neckargartach and Sontheim) become town districts. Mögle-Hofacker 2. The history of the Backnang upper office: Up to the reorganization of the administration at the beginning of the 19th century, the city of Mögle-Hofacker was a part of the city. At the end of the 19th century, the area of the Backnang upper office consisted of the following parts (12): town and office Backnang (town, Reichenberger office, Ebersberger office), Murrhardt monastery office, individual parts from old Württemberg offices (Marbach office, Weinsberger office - Böhringsweiler lower office), Löwensteinsiche and storm feather possessions (Württemberg fiefdom) as well as possessions of the Schöntal monastery.From 1806 the upper office Backnang was first assigned to the district Heilbronn, belonged after the division of the dukedom into bailiwicks in 1810 to the bailiwick at the lower Necker and was subordinate since 1817 to the district government of the Neckar circle. The composition of the municipalities of the Oberamtbezirk listed below essentially lasted until the National Socialist administrative reform of 1938. As a result of the new district division decreed on 1 October 1938, the Backnang district became the legal successor of the Backnang district (Oberamt). With the exception of Neufürstenhütte, the former communities remained in the Backnang district. Further communities were assigned to him from the following (now dissolved) districts or upper offices: District Gaildorf: Gaildorf, Altersberg, Eutendorf, Fichtenberg, Frickenhofen, Gschwendt, Hausen an der Roth, Laufen am Kocher, Oberrot, Ottendorf, Sulzbach am Kocher and Unterrot.District (Oberamt) Marbach: Affalterbach, Allmersbach am Weinberg, Burgstall, Erbstetten, Kirchberg an der Murr, Kleinaspach, Nassach, Rielingshausen, and Weiler zum Stein.district (Oberamt) Welzheim: Kirchenkirnberg.on January 1, 1973 the district Backnang was finally dissolved. The legal successor became the Rems-Murr-Kreis. 3. statistical data and list of municipalities: Area : 283.44 sqkminhabitants: 31,944municipalities: 30 (2 towns, 28 municipalities)markings: 119places: 1991. Backnang with Mittelschöntal, Oberschöntal, Rötleshof, Sachsenweiler, Staigacker, Stiftsgrundhof, Ungeheuerhof and Unterschöntal2. Allmersbach3. Althütte with Kallenberg, Lutzenberg, Schöllhütte and Voggenhof4. Fracture5. Cottenweiler6. Ebersberg7. Fornsbach with Harnersberg, Hinterwestermurr, Mettelberg and Schlosshof8. Grave-with Frankenweiler, Mannenweiler, Morbach, Schönbronn, Schöntalhöfle and Trauzenbach9. Großaspach with Füstenhof10. Großerlach with Liemersbach, Mittelfischbach, Oberfischbach and Unterfischbach11. Heiningen 12. Heutensbach13. Jux14. Lippoldsweiler with Däfern and Hohnweiler15. Maubach16. Murrhardt with Harbach, Hausen, Hinterbüchelberg, Hintermurrhärle, Hördthof, Hoffeld, Käsbach, Karnsberg, Kieselhof, Klingen, Köchersberg, Sauerhöfle, Schwammhof, Siebenknie, Siegelsberg, Steinberg, Streitweiler, Vordermurrhärle and Waltersberg17. Neufürsten hut18. Oberbrüden with Heslachhof, Mittelbrüden, Rottmannsberg, Tiefental and Trailhof19. Oberweissach with Kammerhof and Wattenweiler20. Oppenweiler 21st Reichenberg with Aichelbach, Bernhalden, Dauernberg, Ellenweiler, Reichenbach an der Murr, Reutenhof, Schiffrain and Zell22. Rietenau23. Sechselberg with Fautsbach, Hörschhof, Schlichenweiler and Waldenweiler24. Spiegelberg with Großhöchberg, Roßstaig and Vorderbüchelberg25. Steinbach26, Strümpfelbach with Katharinenhof27, Sulzbach an der Murr with Bartenbach, Berwinkel, Eschelhof, Eschenstruet, Ittenberg, Kleinhöchberg, Lautern, Liemannsklinge, Schleißweiler, Siebersbach and Zwerenberg28. Lower vapors29. Unterweissach with Mitteldresselhof, Oberdresselhof and Unterdresselhof30. Waldrems with HorbachQuelle: Staatshandbuch für Württemberg. Village directory. Published by the Württemberg State Statistical Office. Stuttgart 1936, pp. 12-18. 4. History of registries and holdings: The holdings F 152 III, which were newly catalogued from July to December 2004, consist of three parts: On the one hand, these are files that were delivered to the Ludwigsburg State Archives by the Backnang branch of the Waiblingen State Health Department in 1976 as part of a larger file delivery and assigned to the Oberamtsbestand (1 m; Bü 1-30). The second and largest part of the collection consists of documents that the District Office of the Rems-Murr District submitted in 1974 and 1975 at the insistence of the State Archives Administration (13.3 mf. m; Bü 31-391 and Bü 393-446)(13) A large part of these files, for which so far no finding aid was available, had been torn from their context of origin by self-proclaimed "district archivists" in the district offices Backnang and Waiblingen. In the Backnang District Office local and material pertinences had been formed which could not be returned continuously to the original order of the records and which were recorded in the last classification point as "local pertinences". In addition, the structure of the entire portfolio is based on the Flattich file plan, which also contained documents with the following third-party provenances that were segregated in the course of the registration work: Oberamtspflege Backnang: Invoice receipts, sorted by property and local pertinence (6.5 m), were assigned to F 717. Oberamt Gaildorf: Property files; partly sorted by municipalities (4 m), will in future form F 166 IV. Oberamt Marbach: Property files; partly sorted according to municipalities (4 m), were included in the inventory F 182 III. Oberamt Welzheim: Property files concerning the parish of Kirchenkirnberg (0.3 m running) form the inventory F 214 III.the files of the district office Backnang (0.4 m running) were included in the inventory FL 20/2 I.the third part of the inventory F 152 III originates from the inventory FL 20/2 I district office Backnang (10.2 m running; Bü 392 and Bü 447-935). These files, which had subsequently been arranged in the registry of the District Office according to the Flattich file plan, had previously only been indexed by a delivery list with file plan numbers and associated package numbers. This information can be found in the present finding aid book as a presignature. In the course of the revision of the inventory FL 20/2 I, documents of the provenances Oberamt Gaildorf (9 linear metres), Oberamt Marbach (1.5 linear metres) and Oberamt Welzheim (0.3 linear metres) were also sorted out and assigned to the respective inventories listed above (F 166 IV, F 182 III and F 214 III).In terms of content, the holdings excellently illustrate the diverse tasks of the Backnang Oberamt in large parts and thus supplement the previous Oberamt tradition, which the Staatsarchiv Ludwigsburg holds in the holdings F 152 I, F 152 II (volumes) and F 152 IV (construction files). Also in the inventory FL 20/2 I Landratsamt Backnang there are - especially from the transitional period of the 1930s and 1940s - files that were created in the Oberamt. Further documents of the Oberamt Backnang can be found in the district archive of the Rems-Murr-Kreis in Waiblingen (fonds A1: Oberamt Backnang). Stock F 152 III comprises 935 units of registration, 24.5 metres of shelving. It contains documents with pre- and post-files from the period from 1701 to 1973, with the emphasis of the tradition on the period from the second half of the 19th to the first third of the 20th century. The files with the order signatures Bü 660, Bü 661, Bü 711 and Bü 719 are still subject to the personal blocking periods according to § 6 para. 2 of the Landesarchivgesetz.Ludwigsburg, December 2004Dr. Matthias Röschner NachtragF 152 III Bü 936-976 were spun off there in 2011 by Dorothea Bader in the course of the indexing of fonds F 166 IV and reassigned to the present fonds according to their provenance. Footnotes: (1) 63 of the 65 districts of the Oberamtsbezirk of 1808 remained after 1819: In 1819 the districts Ulm and Albeck had been joined to the Oberamtsbezirk Ulm. In 1811 the intermediate instance (at that time bailiwick bailiwicks), which had been generally inserted for the upper offices, was no longer applicable to the ministerial level of the Stuttgart city administration district. When in 1822 the city directorate of Stuttgart was again aligned with the higher offices, it was nevertheless no longer listed as a higher office, but always independently.(2) The first bailiwicks had been introduced in 1803 for Neuwürttemberg. The district governments existed until 1924.(3) See A.E. Adam. A century of Württemberg constitution, 1919.(4) Constitutional document § 62; Regierungsblatt of 1819, p. 645.(5) The deputies of the Second Chamber, who had not been sent out as representatives of specific interests (knighthood, representatives of both large churches, chancellors of the universities, guided tours), were each elected in the 63 upper offices and the 7 "good cities" (Stuttgart, Tübingen, Ludwigsburg, Ellwangen, Ulm, Heilbronn, Reutlingen).(6) The higher administrative courts established for each higher office in 1811 originally met under the chairmanship of the higher official. Since 1819 (edict about the Oberamtsverammlungen of 31.12.1818) they were independent. The separation of the judiciary and administration was thus completed at district level; the chief magistrate was confronted by the chief magistrate.(7) Property and income of the state were administered by the camera offices (omanial, construction, forestry administration). In the course of the 19th century, they finally developed into district coffers or district tax offices. In 1895 the alignment of the camera office districts with the upper office districts was completed.(8) From 1881 two fifths; cf. Grube, Vogteien, Ämter, Landkreise in der Geschichte Südwestdeutschland, 3rd edition 1975.(9) The senior official nurse received a seat and advisory vote in the official meeting, but was not allowed to be the municipal computer of the senior official city at the same time.(10) Above all, the official doctor, senior official veterinarian, senior official master builder, senior official street builder. (11) Each district court was responsible for one district of the Oberamt.(12) For the history of the authorities of the Oberamt see the preface by Walter Wannenwetsch in the Findbuch des Rems-Murr-Kreisarchivs für den Bestand A1 Oberamt Backnang 1806 - 1938. Edited by Renate Winkelbach and Walter Wannenwetsch. mschr. Waiblingen 1997.(13) Cf. StAL, fonds EL 18, Bü 594: Files discarded at the District Office Backnang as well as the files of the State Archives Ludwigsburg E III 12/19: Files discarded at the District Office Waiblingen
Contains: approx. 20 magazine issues and approx. 50 newspaper cuttings in English and Ewe.
Note: Print, French.
To the existence: The upper office Öhringen was formed 1810 and comprised essentially former schöntalische, berlingische and hohenlohische possessions, which had fallen by the Reichsdeputationshauptschluß and Rheinbundakte to Württemberg. In 1811 Berlichingen, Schöntal and other places that had come from the dissolved Schöntal upper office to the Öhringen upper office were transferred to the Künzelsau upper office, for which the latter left Gaisbach, Neureut and Neufels to the Öhringen upper office. Mainhardt fell to the Weinsberg upper office, from which the Öhringen upper office received Geißelhardt with parcels in 1842. The municipalities mentioned below on pp. 7ff belonged to the Oberamt Öhringen, which had been assigned to the Jagstkreis since 1817. A change did not occur until the Weinsberg upper office was dissolved in 1926 and the eastern part was assigned to the Öhringen upper office (cf. below p. 10ff. the new community stock). 1938 saw the National Socialist administrative reform, in which Geißelhardt with Eschental, Finsterrot, Gnadental and Goggenbach finally fell to the Schwäbisch Hall district. In the course of the district reform of 1973, the district of Öhringen, which had been designed in this way, was dissolved; it almost completely merged into the newly created Hohenlohe district. The transfer of the files recorded here had been negotiated even before the dissolution of the district of Öhringen, so that the takeover could be completed soon after the district reform law came into force. The files were recorded under separation of the registration layers "Oberamt Öhringen" (until 1938) and "Landratsamt Öhringen" (after 1938 = inventory FL 20/14) in 1984 under the guidance of Dr. Trugenberger from the temporary employee Ibrom, after whose retirement the temporary employee Edling continued his work in 1986. The title recordings for the steam boiler files were made in 1986 by the archivist Biemann, who in 1987 randomly checked the title recordings, indexed the indexing work and structured the records in accordance with the file plan for Württembergische Oberämter. Ludwigsburg, July 1987 Dr. KretzschmarNachtrag Bü. 1820 - 1830 (from FL 20/14)Leuchtweis, August 1994 On the administrative history of the Württemberg higher offices: 1. the higher offices in their context (constitutional structure, "Staatsverein") The administrative structure, which was created at the beginning of the 19th century for the double territory of the kingdom of Württemberg compared to the duchy, continued with minor changes until 1938, partly even beyond that. During this period, the Land was divided into 63 senior offices plus the Stuttgart City Council (1). The average area of an upper administrative district was around 1822 5.7 square miles = 316 square kilometres, the average number of inhabitants 20,700 (1926 : 41,604), whereby in the course of time a considerable imbalance resulted (the number of inhabitants per upper administrative district varied 1926 between 18,000 and 341,000). The four district governments, which replaced the twelve bailiwicks established in 1806 (2) in 1817, were the intermediate authorities between the individual upper offices and the ministerial level. The Württemberg constitution in force from 1819 to 1919 (3) was based on the municipalities as the "basis of the state association" (4). The higher offices had the task of bringing the administrative matters directly affecting the individual citizens, which the municipalities dealt with largely on their own responsibility, into the state administration. The problem of the greatest possible integration of all those affected by administrative measures arose for the higher offices as well as the problem of a uniform implementation of domestic government measures. The upper offices were also the constituencies for the elections to the Chamber of Deputies (5). 2. functionariesThe Ministry of the Interior delegated the responsibility for the higher office administrations to one senior official each, since the 1830s as a rule a lawyer with a university degree. As a civil servant, he was responsible for all administrative matters which were not the responsibility of the judicial (6) or fiscal (7) authorities, he was in charge of the police and (in the case of infringements) the penal authorities and he supervised the local authorities. As administrative civil servants, he was subordinate to a senior secretary and (since the second half of the 19th century) a bailiff as deputy. In addition to this administration, there was the official assembly as a body with coordination and integration functions. In it the individual municipalities of an Oberamtsbezirk were combined as an official body. The number of deputies each municipality provided depended on its share of the public burdens to be borne jointly, the "official damage". As an upper limit, a municipality was allowed to provide a maximum of one third (8) of the members of the official assembly, while small municipalities sent a joint representative. The Official Assembly met twice a year. In order to maintain its presence, it elects from among its members an executive committee, an actuary (who was at the same time an assistant to the Oberamts auditor) and appointed the Oberamtspfleger (9) as well as the other officials of the administrative body (10) as responsible for cash and accounting.Thus, according to constitutionalist theory, the responsibility for continuous, active administrative work lay with government officials, while financial regulation and control functions were carried out by a body that brought together those affected by administrative measures and those who financed them. Approaches that went beyond a representative system based purely on control and finance were not evident in the administrative sector, but rather in the area of social tasks and services, where officials of the official corporation were active. 3. limits of the uniform district organisation. It was not possible from the outset for all administrative functions to have an organisation in which (as in the case of the internal and judicial administrations) (11) the administrative districts corresponded to the regional districts. In the case of the deanery offices of the two large churches, it is clear from the regional distribution of the denomination that a district administration was not established for each upper office; nevertheless, as far as practicable, deanery and upper office boundaries were often identical. Where there were practical reasons to do so, the forestry, camera, customs and building inspectorates also had jurisdictional districts which deviated from the upper administrative districts. The decisive disruptive factor for a uniform administrative organisation at district level, the patrimonial jurisdiction of the class lord restored after 1819 by the Federal Act, was eliminated in 1849. The same applies to the special rights of independent royal and noble estates which before 1849 had not been incorporated into the municipal associations and thus not into the district administration. 4. individual important changes in the supreme official organisation1842: Due to excessive distances from the head office or other economic and traffic conditions, individual municipalities are reassigned in 31 head offices (Reg.Bl. 1842, p. 386 - 389).1850 ff: The regionally different development of the country leads to a considerable imbalance between individual districts in the course of time despite the original balance. Changes to individual divisions (e.g. dissolution of the Cannstatt regional office in 1923; dissolution of the Weinsberg regional office in 1926) do not eliminate these differences.1906: The Amtsversammlungs-Ausschuss is given the name Bezirksrat (district council) and is also consulted on the business of state administration. The Official Assembly may set up committees to monitor individual institutions and facilities of the official body. The actuary shall be replaced by a secretary elected for 3 years by the Assembly. 1933: Re-establishment of an official corporation, which is limited to an advisory function and is given the name Kreisverband. The district administrator is appointed the "leader" of the district administration. The terms Kreis (for Oberamt), Kreistag (for Amtsversammlung) and Kreisrat (for Bezirksrat) are introduced. The district council consists of the district administrator as chairman, the district leader of the NSDAP and five other members appointed by the district administrator in agreement with the district leader (Reg. Bl. 1938, pp. 51 - 72, 82, 139, 189).1938: 27 district associations are dissolved and affiliated to the remaining 34 (for the regulations and distribution of the individual municipalities see Reg. Bl. 1938, pp. 155 - 162). The city management district of Stuttgart will continue to exist as a city district. The cities of Ulm and Heilbronn (with Neckargartach and Sontheim) became city districts. Mögle-Hofacker footnotes(1) 63 of the 65 districts of the upper district of 1808 remained after 1819: in 1819 the districts of Ulm and Albeck were merged to form the upper district of Ulm. In 1811 the intermediate instance (at that time bailiwick bailiwicks), which had been generally inserted for the upper offices, was no longer applicable to the ministerial level of the Stuttgart city administration district. When in 1822 the city directorate of Stuttgart was again aligned with the higher offices, it was nevertheless no longer listed as a higher office, but always independently.(2) The first bailiwicks had been introduced in 1803 for Neuwürttemberg. The district governments existed until 1924.(3) See A.E. Adam. A century of Württemberg constitution, 1919.(4) Constitutional document § 62; Regierungsblatt of 1819, p. 645.(5) The deputies of the Second Chamber, who had not been sent out as representatives of specific interests (knighthood, representatives of both large churches, chancellors of the universities, guided tours), were each elected in the 63 upper offices and the 7 "good cities" (Stuttgart, Tübingen, Ludwigsburg, Ellwangen, Ulm, Heilbronn, Reutlingen).(6) The higher administrative courts established for each higher office in 1811 originally met under the chairmanship of the higher official. Since 1819 (edict about the Oberamtsverammlungen of 31.12.1818) they were independent. The separation of the judiciary and administration was thus completed at district level; the chief magistrate was confronted by the chief magistrate.(7) Property and income of the state were administered by the camera offices (omanial, construction, forestry administration). In the course of the 19th century, they finally developed into district coffers or district tax offices. In 1895 the alignment of the camera office districts with the upper office districts was completed.(8) From 1881 two fifths; cf. Grube, Vogteien, Ämter, Landkreise in der Geschichte Südwestdeutschland, 3rd edition 1975.(9) The senior official nurse received a seat and advisory vote in the official meeting, but was not allowed to be the municipal computer of the senior official city at the same time.(10) Above all, the official doctor, senior official veterinarian, senior official master builder, senior official street builder. (11) Each Local Court was responsible for one Higher Administrative District.
Note: Stapled, approx. 3 cm thick.
Note: Loose, approx. 1 cm thick.
Contains: Five pieces, mostly overprints.
Correspondence on financial and personnel matters of the mission and missionaries
Evangelical Missionary Society for German East Africalarge drawing of the church in Walvis Bay by J. C. Pingel, c. 1910; plans for the reconstruction of the mission station, by Ludwig Koch, agent of the RMG, no year; statistical questionnaire, 1946-1969; correspondence for the church in Walvis Bay, 1960; thanks to Kirchengemeinde Bielefeld for donation to the kindergarten, 1965;
Rhenish Missionary SocietyCorrespondence concerning financing, printing and distribution of Bibles for African and Indonesian churches; covering letter to e. Delivery of German Bibles with instructions on the conditions under which they are to be delivered, 1833; Program of the Centenary, 1914; Program of the 125th Anniversary, 1939; Statutes, 1954
Rhenish Missionary SocietyCorrespondence and reports, 1944-1968; contract of employment as Vicar of the Nassau Church in Oberrossbach near Herborn, 1946; correspondence on employment with the Evangelical Church in Hesse and Nassau, 1957;
Rhenish Missionary SocietyNote: Loose, approx. 1 cm thick.
Correspondence, Circulars; Regulations of Employment of Pastors without University Education, 1948; Prof. Sucker: The Future of the Church. Protestant? Catholic? Ecumenical?, Dr., 1965
Rhenish Missionary SocietyCirculars, consultation protocols, concepts, 1952-1967; "Thoughts on the independence of the ELC", by Hermann Ulrich August Lübke, 1964; Agreement on cooperation between RMG and ELC, 1967;
Rhenish Missionary SocietyFormerly: Princes. Lippe Conservatory; correspondence, circular; statutes of the Lippe Missionary Association, 1949; report on the decisions on church and mission in Lippe on the parish convents of the 5 classes, 1955
Rhenish Missionary SocietyBem.: Ca. 10 Bl., lose.
Correspondence, Circulars, Minutes and Synod Papers; Provisional Order of the EKD, 1945; Report of the Chairman of the EKD, Präses Scharf, 10 p., ms., 1963
Rhenish Missionary SocietyDrafting & Negotiations; incl. pp. 134 ff: Kerk-orde van die evang. luth. prison in South Africa (Rynse Sendingkerk);
Rhenish Missionary SocietyCurriculum Vitae and Testimonies, 1929; Instructions and Vows of Deputation, 1930; Correspondence (also during internment), 1929-1947; Photo by Werner Wittenberg, 1930; Certificate of Good Conduct and Medical Certificate by Werner Wittenberg, 1932; "Jubilee of the Bukoba Church on 28.07.1935; "Etwas vom Gelde im Haya-Lande, 1936; "From the work of the mission office in Bukoba, 1937; Correspondence during the stay in Queenstown in South Africa, 1947-1956; Correspondence with Hanni Wittenberg about supply matters, 1956-1965
Evangelical Missionary Society for German East AfricaCorrespondence (s.a. M 270), 1896-1897; correspondence, reports, diary excerpts (s.a. M 273) from 1906; Easter sermon in Hohenfriedeberg, 1914; "Vom Schulbau in Mutindili, 1914; Letters by Elfriede Kraemer (stepdaughter of Hosbach) to the Trittelvitz couple, 1912-1914; Hosbach's letters from prisoner of war in Egypt, 1917-1919; "Paulo Shempahila - Lebensbild eines einheimischen Gehilfen, 1919; 3 Songs in Swaheli (Text u. Sheet music by Martha Hosbach), 1927; Letters and reports by Martha Hosbach from 1926; "Die Schule von Kijunga von Josua Hermas, translated by Wilhelm Hosbach, 1932; Jahres-, Konferenz- u. Schulberichte von Bukoba, 1932; Gutachten zur Wasserversorgung in Kigarama, 1932; draft: "Integration of the mission into the German Protestant Church of Knak; "Neue Ordnung für die Missionsarbeiter der Bethel-Mission, 1933; "Ein Wort Dankbarer Erinnerung an Frau Künzel, 1934; Correspondenz während des 2. 1939-1949; letter from an African teacher to Wilhelm Hosbach, 1949; correspondence with the Hosbach couple at home, 1949-1961; obituary for Martha Hosbach, widowed Kraemer, née Wegener; obituary, obituary and memories of Wilhelm Hosbach, 1964
Evangelical Missionary Society for German East AfricaCorrespondence; Miss. Kempgen: Report on Lübeck Mission Society, 4 p., ms., 1930
Rhenish Missionary SocietyCurriculum vitae and health certificates, 1926-1929; diploma of the mission seminar and ordination certificate, 1929-1930; letters and reports from New Guinea, 1930-1932; correspondence for Kruger's further education, 1934-1936; correspondence with him in his capacity as pastor and mission officer for the Church District of Kleve, 1951-1964
Rhenish Missionary Society