market

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      market

      market

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        market

        • UF Gütermärkte
        • UF Marché économique
        • UF Marchés
        • UF Market (economics)

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        market

          79 Archival description results for market

          79 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
          A visit to the Massai
          ALMW_II._MB_1894_10 · File · 1894
          Part of Francke's Foundations in Halle

          Author: Report by Miss. Althaus in Kwarango, Feb. 5, 1894. Scope: pp. 237-245. Includes among others: - (SW: Missionaries Faßmann, Müller, Althaus visit the Maasai; newly built street; market; cattle trade with Maasai did not come about; description of the Maasai)

          Leipziger Missionswerk
          F 133 - B. W. Stroetmann

          Headquarters: Emsdetten Industry: Textile industry, trade (textiles) As schoolmaster and sexton, members of the Stroetmann family have belonged to the rural upper class in Emsdetten since the early 18th century. Johann Bernhard Wilhelm Stroetmann (1730-1811), who worked as a notary and sexton in Emsdetten, deserves special mention. His grandson Bernard Wilhelm (1799-1886) founded the company B. W. Stroetmann as a factory weaving mill. In the 1820s, however, in which the tradition of the stock began, he was active as a trader. He not only imported colonial and other goods, but also bought linen cloth, which was used for weaving the home trade in and around Emsdetten. The 1850s were marked by the transition from home trade to weaving in factory halls. After Th. Hollefeld

          Findbuch: 4745 AE = 1816-1976; unlisted: 20 lfm files as well as approx. 500 maps and plans The company, founded in 1717 at the latest, was traditionally strongly export-oriented in its traditional business of knife and scissors production. The main markets were Holland and Belgium, and since the end of the 19th century also overseas markets. The focus here was on the colonial areas of Asia, at the latest with the establishment of a branch in Buenos Aires in 1908, but trade with South America also experienced a significant upswing. However, the development of North American, African and other European markets failed. After the First World War, the company invested in its own drop forge, which also allowed it to act as a supplier to domestic industries. At the peak of its development, Herder employed around 450 factory workers and salaried employees as well as about the same number of home workers. Herder retained its character as a manageable and probably conservative family business until the end, which was unable to diversify any further apart from the production of drop forgings. In 1993 the company finally had nothing left to oppose the intensifying price competition on its traditional markets towards the end of the 20th century: It filed for bankruptcy after the traditional knife and scissors production had already been sold. The focus of overdelivery is on relationships with suppliers and customers. The network of business partners, the focus of which was the Herder company, and the transformation of this network over the decades become recognisable. Documents on the company's internal relations, work organisation, cost calculations, etc., on the other hand, are only sparsely available.

          karakul breeding
          RMG 2.576 · File · 1937-1938
          Part of Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

          Correspondence, expert opinions, calculations; minutes of the board meeting in Karibib, 1938; newspapers: ; "S.W. Persianer-Markt", 3 issues, 1937; "Der Karakulzüchter", 4 issues, 1937-1938; "Die Lederindustrie", No. 51, 1938;

          Rhenish Missionary Society
          195 · Item · vor 1914
          Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

          Note from another hand: m. View of Bödecker and Meyers Faktorei. - Note. Müller: Atakpame, market with a view of the Bödecker and Meyer Faktorei before 1914, contains: market, Atakpame, Bödecker and Meyer, factorial, houses, food, everyday life

          North German Missionary Society
          Market in Moschi
          ALMW_II._BA_A6_26(176) · Item · 1900-1914
          Part of Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig

          Phototype: Photo. Format: 7,5 X 5,5. Description: large group of women, clothed with scarves, goods, e.g. bananas, almost identical with the printed pattern book, no. IXe/ 319. Reference: See printed pattern book, no. IV/553 (8,2 X 11,0) "Brüderchen und Schwesterchen", faded.

          Leipziger Missionswerk
          Market in Mwika
          ALMW_II._BA_A10_40(159) · Item · 1909-1914
          Part of Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig

          Photographer: Hohlfeld?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 16,5 X 11,0. Description: Crowd, clothed with cloths, some loads on head, cloths spread out in front.

          Leipziger Missionswerk
          Market in Mwika
          ALMW_II._BA_A10_44(163) · Item · 1909-1914
          Part of Evangelical Lutheran Mission Leipzig

          Photographer: Hohlfeld?. Phototype: Photo. Format: 16.5 X 11.0 Description: See Alb. 10, Nr 40(159): written in the same place, here left man with sewing machine.

          Leipziger Missionswerk