Krankenpflege

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    • http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q121176

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      Krankenpflege

      Krankenpflege

        Equivalent terms

        Krankenpflege

        • UF Krankenpflege
        • UF Pflegedienst
        • UF Pflegepersonal
        • UF Pflegetag
        • UF Soins infirmiers

        Associated terms

        Krankenpflege

          124 Archival description results for Krankenpflege

          124 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
          BArch, R 2/814 · File · 1929-1932
          Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

          Contains among other things: Case of damage of the German Women's Association of the Red Cross by loss of the Queen Charlotten Hospital in Lomé Also includes: Application of the German Women's Association of the Red Cross for Nursing Care in the Colonies for a different arrangement of its relationship to the Central Committee (1908); Contract between the State Treasury of the Togo Protectorate and the German Women's Association of the Red Cross for the Colonies (1914)

          ALMW_II._BA_A13_39 · Item · 1932-1940
          Part of Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig

          Sister Jenny v. Stebut, African nurse? with infants at the bedside of patients. Photographer: Mergner?. Type: Photo. Format: 8,5 X 5,4. Description: 2 african. Women in bed, two Africans. Women sitting by the bed, Schw. Jenny puts infant in bed standing box/ or takes it out.

          Leipziger Missionswerk

          Evangelischer Afrikaverein, a.o. leaflets; German Colonial Society; "Philafrican Liberators League in New York: Statutes and Call of Chatelain; German Oriental Mission; Theological Society in Greifswald; Mission Conference of the Province of Brandenburg; YMCA Berlin; Student Union for the Mission; "Eine deutsche Kolonialschule, Denkschrift des Evangelischen Afrikaverein; Evangelischer Verein für Kirchliche Zwecke in Berlin; Deutscher Frauenverein für Krankenpflege in den Kolonien

          Evangelical Missionary Society for German East Africa
          ALMW_II._BA_DV_IXc/219 · Item · 1900-1914
          Part of Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig

          Phototype: Photo. Format: 10,8 X 8,1. Description: Sister sitting in a deckchair in front of a hedge, next to her in a basket african. Toddler, leaning over to this one. Remark: dark, pale.

          Leipziger Missionswerk
          ALMW_II._BA_A22_114 · Item · 1932-1940
          Part of Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig

          Photographer: Mergner?. Type: Photo. Format: 11,2 X 8,5 Description: European house (plastered walls, corrugated iron roof), in front sister (Käte Reuter?), with 14 African men/women/young people (European dress).

          Leipziger Missionswerk
          ALMW_II._BA_A22_113 · Item · 1932-1940
          Part of Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig

          Photographer: Mergner?. Type: Photo. Format: 11,1 X 8,4 Description: in front of house (plastered walls, corrugated iron roof, veranda), sister with African group of people, men, women, children (European clothes, cloths/ kanga cloths), sitting closely on bench.

          Leipziger Missionswerk

          Darin: 1. the limited liability company. A legislative study by Rob. Esser II, Cologne. Berlin: Julius Sittenfeld, printed as manuscript. Confidential, 1886; 2nd utilization of E. Nagel's contract on land acquisition in Pondoland, South Africa, 1886; 3rd annual report of the South American Colonization Society of Leipzig for 1885, 1886; 4th draft of a law regulating emigration in the German Empire. By A.W. Sellin, o.D.; 5. statutes of the German Women's Association for Nursing in the Colonies; 6. map of Kaiser-Wilhelms-Land and Bismarck-Archipel; 7. circular letter of the Colonial Society.

          1-21-21872-1945/1-2/010- 8 · File · 1898 - 1904
          Part of Erfurt City Archive

          Contains among other things: Table of contents, - provision for widows and orphans (several times), - promotion of fruit-growing and horticulture (several times), - borrowing and debts of the city, general (several times), - coinage, revocation (several times), - Honorary sponsorships (several times), - plaque with warships 1898 (6 ff), - Luisenpark 1898 (28 ff), - district president Dewitz 1899 (31), 1903 (213), - introduction of thermometers with Celsius division 1900 (89 f), 1901 (152), 1903 (180), - tomato cultivation 1901 (143), - protectorates, civil servants 1901 (146 ff), - incorporation in principle 1901 (150), - honours for forester 1901 (158) - spelling, new 1903 (179, 208), - Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church in Berlin 1903 (189 ff, 240), - Chausseegeld 1903 (194 f), - Regierungspräsident Fidler 1903 (215), - Krankenpflege für Deutsch-Südwestafrika 1904 (228, 234, 240 ff), - Originalblatt des Reichs- und Preußischen Staatsanzeiger 1904 (231).

          ALMW_II._BA_A7_46(8) · Item · 1905-1914
          Part of Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig

          Phototype: Photo. Format: 9,4 X 6,5. Description: above mentioned sister at ju. Mother m. Infant, 2 other women, the right m. Infant, in front of an open grass roof, bananas on the right. Reference: Planfilmneg. and cardboard no. 185 in negative box 2 prints. See album 4, no. 36 (7.9 X 5.7).

          Leipziger Missionswerk
          Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, M 1/8 · Fonds · 1855-1920
          Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

          Foreword: Due to the military convention with the North German Confederation (21, 25 November 1870) and in the course of the foundation of the Reich, the entire military situation had to be reorganized. For the Württemberg War Ministry this resulted in the following structure from 1871 (29 September): Central Office / Military Department / Economics Department1874 and 1896 respectively were added: Military Medical Department (28 March 1874) Justice Department. (30. March 1874)/Waffen-Abteilung (1. April 1896) 1906 (12. September) the last adaptation before the beginning of the war came into force: The ministry was structured as follows: Central Division (Z) = Holdings M 1 / 3Division for General Army and Personal Affairs (A)= Holdings M 1 / 4 and M 1 / 5Division for Weapons and Field Equipment (W),= Holdings M 1 / 9Supply and Justice Division (C), = Holdings M 1 / 7Administrative Division (B), = Holdings M 1 / 6Medical Division (MA) = Holdings M 1 / 81907 was included in the description of duties for the Medical Division: Administration of budget chapter 29 (military medicine), all military medical and hospital administration matters (including convalescent homes); winter work and literary work of medical officers. Registration of students for the Kaiser Wilhelms Academy. Accounting of the costs for operation courses; patient reports, military medical statistics, clarification of suicide cases and statistics on them; personnel matters of the corps staff pharmacist, the staff pharmacist, the pharmacists on leave and the hospital administration officials; allocation of the pharmacists /year-old volunteers and sub-pharmacists) to the hospitals;Civil servant appointments, retirements, award of orders to civil servants; authorisation to purchase artificial limbs under examination by the supply department; compilation of patient list extracts from the field hospital lists; spa treatments for officers, active and inactive teams and admission to civilian sanatoriums; medical and medical treatment of soldier's wives and children.1917 the following tasks in particular had been added: Reserve and association hospitals, convalescent homes and lung sanatoriums; relief and association hospital trains; confiscation and dismissal of all doctors, dentists and pharmacists on duty; employment and dismissal of the approved medical officers and former sub-medicals, as well as the civilian doctors contractually accepted; Appointment and employment of undersurgeons, field undersurgeons and field assistants to the field and crew armies, granting of marriage permits to them; regulation of the staffing of doctors, dentists and pharmacists, as well as replacement; voluntary nursing;War invalidity care, vocational training matters for war invalids, procurement of artificial limbs, fracture tapes; ambulances and ambulances; prisoners of war (medical service in the camps), exchange of severely wounded persons, deportation of minor severely injured prisoners of war to Switzerland; Schömberg Foundation for officers with lung diseases; Admission of women and children to the recreation home for family members; vaccinations of substitute crews and prisoners of war; transfer of the bodies of fallen persons from the theatre of war to their homeland; estate of fallen persons; delousing measures; investigation for sick, wounded and fallen persons from earlier wars; epidemic control in the home area.The office of head of the department was held during the time of peace by Corps physician XIII. A.K.:1874General staff physician Dr. v. Klein and general staff physician Dr. v. Chalons, royal Prussian medical officer 1875 - 1878 unoccupied 1878 General physician Dr. v. Fichte1896General physician Dr. v. Schmidt1905General Physician Dr. v. Wegelin1912Königlich p reußischer General Physician Prof. Dr. Lasser (from 1914 War Medical Inspector)During the World War, a separate head of the medical department was appointed (Prof. Dr. Lasser), who was also deputy corps physician of the XIII century. In October 1919, the entire military medical service was transferred to the department of the Reich Labour Ministry.The files of this department of the Ministry of War were newly recorded in the years 2002/2003 by the archive employee Gerd Mantel under the guidance of the undersigned, who also took care of the revision of the structure, editing, database support, etc. The inventory comprises 18 linear metres of shelf files mainly from the period between 1874 and 1920 or 312 archive units.Stuttgart, in April 2004Dr. Franz Moegle-Hofacker

          Medical office (inventory)
          Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Generallandesarchiv Karlsruhe, 456 F 113 · Fonds · 1815-1920
          Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. General State Archive Karlsruhe (Archivtektonik)

          History of the authorities: The establishment and expansion of a military medical service took place in the second half of the 19th century. A Prussian medical corps had been in existence since 1873, headed by the General Staff physician of the army, who was also head of the medical department of the War Ministry, director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Academy for Military Medical Education and chairman of the scientific senate there. He was also responsible for the personal affairs of the military doctors and other medical personnel. Since 1906, the four medical inspectorates in Poznan, Berlin, Kassel and Strasbourg have held the liaison from the General Staff Physician to the medical offices of the army corps established in the second half of the 19th century, which in turn were under the exclusive supreme command of the Reich in accordance with the Military Convention of 25 November 1870. In 1912 another inspection was set up in Gdansk. Among senior general practitioners in the rank of Major General, as the supreme supervisory authorities, they covered the territory of several army corps, each of which was assigned a medical office under a corps general practitioner. Personally subordinate to the commanding general and the general staff physician of the army, he was the medical-technical advisor of the general command in all questions of health and medical care as well as head of the medical office as military-medical provincial authority of their area of competence. In the case of the medical office of the XIV Army Corps, these were the lands of Baden and Hohenzollern as well as parts of the Upper Alsace with the exception of the Baden and Hohenzollern areas, which were part of the fortresses of Germersheim, Strasbourg, Neubreisach and Idstein. His tasks in peace included health and medical service in the army and military institutions as well as all preparations and facilities required for military medical service. Organizationally, a distinction was made between the medical service of the troops, which included all units, military authorities, institutions, etc., and the military hospitals. Their administration was shared between the Sanitätsamt and the Korpsintendantur (at the XIV AK, Divisions IV b and VI were responsible), the former being responsible for medical matters, the latter for economic and administrative matters. In the event of war, a deputy corps general physician assumed the tasks, duties and rights of the corps general physician assigned to the field army and thus the responsibility for the organization of the medical service in the home area. In this capacity, he is responsible for the construction of reserve hospitals in suitable buildings, their staffing with medical and nursing staff and the training of substitute reservists as military nurses. If several reserve hospitals were set up in one place, he could delegate the overall management of these hospitals to an older medical officer as reserve hospital director. The latter had to inspect the military hospitals under his authority and to report grievances, which he was not able to rectify on his own responsibility, to the medical office, which in turn informed the deputy directorate if necessary. The deputy general corps physician was also responsible for all voluntary nursing facilities, in particular the club hospitals, convalescent homes and private nursing homes. Her supervision he shared with the Territorial Delegate of Voluntary Nursing. Inventory history: The archive history of the Sanitätsamt des XIV. Armeekorps is identical with that of the Deputy General Command and can be read in the Repertorium Abt. 456 F 8 Stellvertretendes Generalkommando XIV. Armeekorps (1914-1924). The only thing to note here is that, in accordance with the provisions of the Treaty of Versailles, the formations of the imperial army had to be dissolved. For this purpose, a civilian authority was created, the so-called Winding-up Office of the former XIV Army Corps, and the dissolution and descendants of the former XIV Army Corps were renamed Winding-up Offices. Accordingly, the department responsible for the Sanitätsamt was the Sanitätsabteilung 14, where the files of the Sanitätsamt and the individual military hospitals were collected until 1922. Via Heilbronn, where the settlement office had been moved to under pressure from the Allies in 1920, the files first reached its successor authority, the Reichsarchiv branch office Heilbronn, after the dissolution of the settlement office in 1921, and via this branch office in 1924 to the Reichsarchiv branch office Stuttgart. According to the register of deportees drawn up there (EV 113), the stock originally comprised 740 units, of which 73 were already indicated as missing in the register of deportees and 59 units were accounted for by the Deputy General Command. Before the XIV Army Corps was handed over to the General State Archive in Karlsruhe in 1949386, 33 of these units were destroyed as part of the General Command IV b. Processing report: The present holdings were recorded in June and July 1989 by the State Archives referees Norbert Haag and Dieter Speck under the guidance and supervision of the undersigned as part of the training for the higher archival service. Thereby 4 federations, which had arisen at the General Command of the XIV Army Corps, Dept. IVb, were eliminated and classified according to provenance. The collection now includes documents from the Sanitary Office XIV Army Corps (Peace), the Sanitary Office XIV Army Corps (War) and the Sanitary Department XIV with a total of 6 metres. Kassationen were not accomplished Karlsruhe, in October 1989Kurt high chair