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        3565 Archival description results for religion

        47 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
        Zendings Study-Raad, Zeist
        RMG 826 · File · 1911-1947
        Part of Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

        Correspondence to prepare and conduct joint mission study conferences in Lunteren and Barmen; M. Schlunk: 3 weeks of Dutch mission life, summer conferences in Lunteren, 8 p., Dr., 1920; Invitations and participant lists of Study Days in Dassel and Lunteren, 1919-1921; Lunteren, no. 5 m. Report on Conference in Barmen, 1938

        Rhenish Missionary Society
        Zendings Study-Raad, Zeist
        RMG 827 · File · 1929-1949
        Part of Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

        Conference minutes; circulars; lists of participants and invitations; card by Niederl. New Guinea with mission stations, 1:5,000,000, 1930; De Internationale Zendingsraad, by Baron E. von Boetzelaer van Dubeldam, 24 p., Dr., 1932; Lunteren, No. 5, 1932; Correspondence on the establishment of the e. Mission Museum in Zeist Castle, 1933; Statistical data on the RMG Missionange members currently and formerly active in Dutch India, 1948

        Rhenish Missionary Society
        Zeitz, Werner (1911- )
        RMG 706 · File · 1929-1976
        Part of Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

        Home missionary in Wittgenstein, parish priest in Dreidorf/Dillkreis since 1949; curriculum vitae, certificates, medical examination, 1929; final certificate of the Missions-Seminars, 1937; official directive, 1937; ordination certificate, 1939; curriculum vitae, testimonies, medical examination by the bride Else Spies, 1939; correspondence

        Rhenish Missionary Society
        Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, E 70 e · Fonds · 1787-1851
        Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

        Preliminary remark: The beginnings of the Württemberg legation in the Netherlands are closely linked to the history of the Subsidy Regiment Württemberg. After Duke Karl Eugen had made the regiment - generally known as the Cape or Indian Regiment - available to the Dutch East India Company, he sent the Captain of Penasse to Holland in November 1787 to take care of matters relating to subsidies. The authorized representative was at first temporarily, since the middle of the year 1788 permanently present in Middelburg. Among his successors the mission to the legation in The Hague expanded. After the suicide of the envoy of von Hügel in 1805, it remained vacant for more than two years before a Württemberg envoy was again accredited to the king's court in July 1807. With the occupation of Dutch territory by French troops, Württemberg's diplomatic representation in the Netherlands was also abolished, and in September 1814, following the formation of the Kingdom of the United Netherlands, another envoy was sent to The Hague; however, the Consul General in Rotterdam, August Freiherr von Wächter, also served as the diplomatic representative until 1816. Until 1830, the seat of the legation changed between Utrecht, Amsterdam, Brussels and The Hague, depending on where the court was located. Due to the political changes in 1848, the Württemberg embassy in the Netherlands was abolished and the remaining tasks were transferred to the Württemberg consulate in the Netherlands. The representatives of Württemberg in the Netherlands were:Captain of Penasse, Chargé d'Affaires, 1787 - 1798Contamine, Chargé d'Affaires, 1798 - 1799Johann Christian Friedrich Freiherr von Hügel, Ministerresident, April 1799 - January 1805 Freiherr von Harmensen, extraordinary envoy and minister, July 1807 - September 1807Freiherr von Steube, extraordinary envoy and minister, October 1807 - February 1808Graf von Dürckheim-Montmartin, extraordinary envoy and authorized minister, February 1808 - September 1808Freiherr von Steube, extraordinary envoy and authorized minister, September 1808 - June 1810Freiherr Gremp von Freudenstein, extraordinary and authorized minister, October 1814 - April 1815August von Wächter, Consul General, Chargé d'Affaires, Prime Minister, April 1815 - October 1839Freiherr von Linden, appointed on 15 October 1808 - September 1808Freiberr von Steube, extraordinary envoy and authorized minister, September 1808 - June 1810August von Wächter, Consul General, Chargé d'Affaires, Prime Minister, April 1815 - October 1839Freiherr von Linden, appointed on 15 December 1818181839 October 1815, not accredited after his appointmentFreiherr von Reinhardt, Ministerresident, c. 1843Freiherr von Pfeil, Ministerresident, 1844 - 1848.the "Legation Archive" was brought to Stuttgart by Baron von Neuffer after Hügel's death and partly handed over to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, partly to the War College. In May 1807, the Legation Secretaries von Seeger and von Münch were instructed to record the files that had not yet been catalogued and to reunite the separate parts. Since the concept books left behind by Hügel were kept in chronological order, von Seeger refrained from ordering them by subject and formed chronological series. He made copies for the War Collegium of important processes concerning matters of subsidies. In July 1807, the newly appointed envoy of Harmensen took over the embassy registry in this state, and the order of registration created under von Seeger was not to be retained for the future. However, a comprehensive reorganization could not be carried out at first due to the change of envoys and legation secretaries. Only lists of new files were drawn up. It was not until March 1808 that the Legation Secretary of Münch was able to complete the necessary reorganization of the registry. The directories created by Seeger also received new signatures. The registry scheme designed by Münch with 10 group and one general fascicle was retained or extended for the following period. In the last decade of the Württemberg legation, however, more and more business technical series such as "Miszellaneen, Allerhand, Unerledigte Angelegenheiten, Varia u.a." were produced, so that these titles finally occupied one third of the stock. after the dissolution of the legation, the files were brought to Stuttgart, incorporated into the registry of the Foreign Ministry and handed over with documents of this provenance to the Haus- und Staatsarchiv around 1870. They comprised the inventories (=delivery) 42 and 43 of inventory E 70 legation files. The original handwritten repertories are now only available in a transcript made with a typewriter, and in 1976 the mixed holdings were revised to extract the written material from the legation in The Hague. The separation of the archival records and their assignment to the A and E groups, in accordance with the classification of the Main State Archives, was dispensed with, since the documents recorded for the first time in 1807 are closely related to the subsequent ones as preliminary files. For this reason, the series - concept books, relations and correspondences - were placed in front of the holdings when organizing the holdings. At the end of the factual exercises, the inputs and uses follow. They were taken over unchanged by indices because of their good development and extended by two additional tufts, so that they now make up more than a third of the stock. This can be explained by the research connected with the decline of the Cape Regiment. As a valuable supplement to the new indexing, reference is expressly made to the fully preserved registry aids. Until the introduction of the business diaries in September 1814, the events were recorded on the fascicle envelopes. The envelopes now form, exclusively III (Bü 126) and IV (Bü 129) Büschel 85, the following business daysÜbücher (1814 - 1848) Büschel 86. The previously valid archive signatures E 70 Verz. 42 and 43 with subsequent Büschel or Faszikelnummer were included in the data fields Vorsignaturen. The files of the Württemberg legation in The Hague cover the period 1787 - 1851. They document in a special way the consequences of the subsidy agreement concluded in the 18th century with the Dutch East Indian Company and the relationship between two states whose courts were related to each other. Further documents of the same subject which have grown up with other Württemberg authorities can be found in the Main State Archives mainly in the holdings A 33 Württembergisches Kapregiment and A 117 Netherlands. The stock now comprises 219 tufts in 4.1 linear metres. It was recorded and ordered by Walter Wannenwetsch from February to April 1976 as part of the training under the guidance of Oberarchivrat Dr. Cordes.Stuttgart 1976gez. Walter Wannenwetsch The completion of the present finding aid was carried out with the help of data processing on the basis of the MIDOSA program package of the State Archive Administration of Baden-Württemberg in the period from January to May 1988. At the same time as the inclusion of the title, the index terms were recorded, with a view to a later general index, separated into a place index, a person index and a subject index. The re-indexing as well as the input took place in the context of the training by the archive inspectors Corinna Pfisterer and Regina Keyler under guidance of the undersigned. Stuttgart, May 1988Kurt Hochstuhl

        Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Abt. Hauptstaatsarchiv Stuttgart, E 70 o · Fonds · 1810-1813
        Part of Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Dept. Main State Archives Stuttgart (Archivtektonik)

        Preliminary remark in 1977: After the establishment of the Grand Duchy of Frankfurt, the Württemberg envoy in Kassel was also accredited at the court of the Grand Duke of Frankfurt from 30 September 1810. During the absence of the Westphalian king, the envoy could leave Kassel and go to the court in Frankfurt or Aschaffenburg, where the Prince Primate and Grand Duke Karl von Dalberg mostly resided. With the end of the Grand Duchy of Frankfurt in October 1813, the mission of the Württemberg envoy also expired. The representatives of Württemberg in Frankfurt were: Baron von Gemmingen, Extraordinary Minister and Plenipotentiary Minister, 30 September 1810 - 13 March 1813 Baron Friedrich August Gremp von Freudenstein, Chamberlain, Extraordinary Minister and Plenipotentiary Minister, 6 May 1813 - 5 May 1813. October 1813Besides the envoy accredited to the court in Frankfurt, the former resident of Plitt, as Privy Legation Councillor, was still in the service of Württemberg, wrote, without being certified, reports on the legations and carried out individual orders of the Württemberg court. After the takeover of the files by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, they were transferred with documents from the Ministry to the archive, where they were attached to the mixed holdings of E 70 "Gesandtschaftsakten". During the reorganization, the files were separated according to their provenance without regard to the previous state of order. Afterwards only a small remainder remained, which was arranged according to the scheme of the remaining legation holdings. The previously valid archive signatures E 70 Verz. 39 Fasz. 1-3 were included as presignatures with the abbreviation "Fasz". Further documents of the same subject can be found in the files of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The holdings were recorded in October 1975 as part of the training under the guidance of Senior State Archives Councilor Dr. Cordes von Walter Wannenwetsch and finally arranged in May 1977. It covers the period from 1810 - 1813 and consists of 12 tufts in 0.03 m. Stuttgart, in May 1977Walter Wannenwetsch Preliminary remark 1988: The completion of the present finding aid was made with the help of data processing on the basis of the program package MIDOSA of the Staatliche Archivverwaltung Baden-Württemberg in February 1988. At the same time as the inclusion of the title, the index terms were recorded, with a view to a later general index, separated into a place index, a person index and a subject index. The re-indexing as well as the input took place in the context of the training by the archive inspector candidate Corinna Pfisterer under guidance of the undersigned.Stuttgart, February 1988Kurt Hochstuhl

        RMG 2.167 · File · 1907-1967
        Part of Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

        Lebenslauf u. Zeugnisse, 1907; Gesundheitsbesnisse, auch für Braut Anna Diehl, 1907-1913; Ordinationszeugnis, 1913; Briefe u. Berichte aus Neuguinea, 1913-1931; Korrespondenz mit Frau Wullenkord, 1930; Bericht über die Gehilfenschule in Amele, baptism and secondment of students and their employment, 7 p., ms, 1930; list of pupils and their school grades, 1930; health certificate for A. Wullenkord, 1931; correspondence with Adolf Wullenkord in homework, 1931-1945; health certificate for son Gerhard, 1954; death announcement for A. Wullenkord, obituary and letter of condolence, 1955; correspondence with wife Wullenkord and son Gerhard, 1956-1967

        Rhenish Missionary Society
        RMG 1.626 a-g; · File · 1890-1956
        Part of Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

        1890-1930 in Ondjiva, Omupanda, Karibib, Swakopmund, Präses d. Ovambomission, estate see RMG 1.627; extensive correspondence, annual, station and travel reports, 1890-1936; travel report by Thusnelda Wulfhorst, née. Härlin, 1892; Private letters from August and Thusnelda Wulfhorst, née Härlin to Inspector Johannes Wilhelm Karl Spiecker, 1890-1900; "Osondahe", Monatsblatt d. Finnish Mission, May 1909; Correspondence with the German Consulate and Portuguese authorities concerning property claims in Omupanda, 1920-1927; Obituary for August Wulfhorst by Johannes Georg Heinrich Olpp, 1936; Correspondence with his 2nd wife, Johanna Wulfhorst, née Härlin, 1937-1956

        Rhenish Missionary Society
        RMG 1.627 a-b · File · ca. 1903-1935
        Part of Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

        Estate:; diary entries from the years 1912-1914, 1918, 1919, 1926-1927 1 issue 1930; The Gospel of Mark in Oshikuanjama, chapters 1 and 2 (beginning) and eight short stories from the Mission, issue, ca. 1903; Mission and Colonization, 2 issues, 1905; Das Ovamboland, issue, o. J.; review of 20 years of mission work under d. Ovambo, c. 1910; sermons and reports about Ovamboland, c. 1910; Southwest Africa - country and people, c. 1910; pictures from the mission work in Ovamboland, c. 1910; about faith and superstition of Ovambo and others.., o. J.;

        Rhenish Missionary Society
        Wuga and Mshihui Station

        Travelogue Johanssen "From Dar-es-Salaam to Wuga, 1892; Untersuchungsreise von Gleiss u. Wohlrab von Hohenfriedeberg nach Wuga, 1894; Report on the founding negotiations of Wuga concerning von Wohlrab, 1895; diary reports, chronicles, letters (originals and copies), statistics especially of Gleiss, Langheinrich u. Rösler, 1895-1914 u. 1919-1920; Report on the founding of Wuga by Franz Gleiss, 12 p. printed, published as supplement to Semesterbrief Number 23 of the Greifswald Theological Society, 1896; "How it looks like in an African school by N. Rösler, 14 p., ms., January 1900; "Auf den Trümmern von Wuga von Missionar Döring, 14 p., Druck, 1902; "Die ersten Jahre der Station Wuga 33 p., ca. 1902; Berichte über die Station Mshihwi (s. a. M 603), 1908-1909

        Evangelical Missionary Society for German East Africa
        A.11-366 · File · 1914 - 1920
        Part of Central Archive of the Pallottine Province

        Contains: - Report on episcopal ordination in Duala, in: Cameroon Post 29 April 1914- "Seven years of missionary work in Cameroon. Experiences of Pallottine Bishop Franziskus Hennemann PSM, Apostolic Vicar of Cameroon", in: Zeitfragen aus der Weltmission, 1918- "Bei den'Jaunde' in Südkamerun", by Bishop Franziskus Hennemann PSM, Ap. Vicar von Kamerun, in: Illustrierte Missionsblätter, 1919, pp. 21-24- "Die Reösen Vorstellungen der heidnischen Süd-Kameruns", by Fr. Hennemann, special print from the work: Ehrengabe deutscher Wissenschaft, presented by Catholic scholars, ed. by Franz Feßler, Freiburg 1920, 12 pages, rec. in: Zeitschrift für Eingeborenensprachen, 1919/20, p. 316;Thereby: Corrected printed manuscript by Hennemann, as well as a handwritten note on the religious ideas of the Bantu tribes of South Cameroon (Ms)

        Pallottines
        Worship service in Lomé
        453 · Item · 1904-1905
        Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

        On the front edge of the picture: Missionary Oßwald (died) and wife. - In the picture: 691. - Note. Müller: Lomé, divine service in church 1904-05, contains: Carl Oßwald, municipality, Margarethe Oßwald

        North German Missionary Society
        Stadtarchiv Karlsruhe, 8/Alben 341 / 240 · File · 1914 - 1918
        Part of City Archive Karlsruhe (Archivtektonik)
        • 1914 - 1918, Stadtarchiv Karlsruhe, 8/Alben 341 Erster Weltkrieg - Postkarten "Aus großer Zeit 1914/15" description: Group photo of the ship's crew standing on a slope; in the upper right corner the folksong lines "Who God wants to show right favour, he sends to the wide world! - Undescribed Group photo of the ship's crew standing on a slope; in the upper right corner the folk song lines "To whom God wants to show right favour, he sends into the wide world!"<br /><br />Undescribed

        "Erlanger Mission Lecture by Friedrich von Bodelschwingh; "Father Bodelschwingh as pastor of his missionaries by Gerhard Jasper, no year .J.; Father Bodelschwingh, a witness of Jesus for East Africa by Curt Ronicke, 24 p., print, 1940; "News from the Bethel Mission 1950, number 3 and 4, tribute to Bodelschwingh on the occasion of his 40th anniversary of death by Gerhard Jasper.

        Evangelical Missionary Society for German East Africa
        ALMW_II._32_64 · File · 1940-1941
        Part of Francke's Foundations in Halle

        Four fiches. Contains: FICHE NR. 64 1 - Leipzig 1940. Ihmels to the Mission Societies working in East Africa - n/a List of the returned East African Missionaries of the Berlin Mission (2-fold) - n/a List of the "Mission Workers of the Bethel Mission" - Herrnhut 1940. "List of East Africa Missionaries of the Mission of the Herrnhuter Brüdergemeine" - Leipzig 1940. Ihmels to the East Africa Missionaries in his homeland (Annex: Programme for the Working Discussion of the East Africa Missionaries; 2-fold) - o.O., o.J. "List of East Africa missionaries to be invited for the working session" (6-fold) - o.O., n/a 3 lists of changes of address of members of the Berlin Mission - France / fieldpost 1940. Schmidt to Ihmels - Neukirchen 1940. orphanage and mission institute (Nitsch) to Ihmels (3 letters) - n/a 1940. Leipzig Mission to Nitsch - n/a 1941. Leipzig Mission to Berlin Mission - Berlin 1941. Berlin Mission to Leipzig Mission - n/a (probably Leipzig) 1940. ? (probably Leipzig Mission) to Müller -Gleiwitz 1940. Jaeschke to Director - Tübingen 1940. Tropical Rescue Home (Müller) to Ihmels - Hamburg 1940. Wohlrab to Ihmels - Kleinwelka 1940. Gemuseus an Ihmels - Breunsdorf 1940. Rother an Ihmels - Rödlitz 1940. Nitsch an Ihmels - Neudietendorf 1940/41. Gysin an Ihmels (2 letters) - Bethel 1940/41. Scholten an Ihmels (2 letters) - Hamburg 1940/41. Aderhold an Ihmels (2 letters) - Bethel 1940. Rosarius an Ihmels - o.O. 1940. Ihmels an Scholten - Luckenwalde 1940/41. Rudlaff an Ihmels (2 letters) - o.O. 1941. Ihmels an Aderhold - Leipzig 1941. Rother an Ihmels - Niesky 1941. Marx an Ihmels (2 letters) - Niesky 1941. Marx an Rother - o.O. 1941. Ihmels an Marx (2 letters) - o.O. 1941. Ihmels an Reckling - Berlin 1941. Reckling an Ihmels - o.O., o.J. "Working discussion of the East Africa missionaries" (program; 4-fold) - Leipzig 1941. Ihmels "To the East Africa missionaries and to the members of the home council" - o.O. 1941. Ihmels to Jaeschke (2 letters) - Tübingen 1941. Tropen-Genesungsheim (Müller) to Ihmels - o.O. 1941. Ihmels to Knak - o.O., n.a. Proposals for the working discussion of the East African missionaries - Leipzig 1940; "To the Mission Societies Working in East Africa" - Leipzig 1941; Ihmels "To the East African Missionaries at Home and to the Members of the Home Council" - Bethel 1941; Ronicke an Ihmels - o.O. 1941; Ihmels an Braun - Leipzig 1941; "To the Members of the Home Council of the East African Federation of Churches" (p. 1). FICHE NR. 64 2 - continued (p. 2-4) - Leipzig 1941: Ihmels "To the East African missionaries and to the members of the Home Council" (Annex: Agenda of the "Working discussion of the East African missionaries in the Luther Academy, Sondershausen, Schloß"; 4fold) - Berlin 1940/41. Berlin Missionsgesellschaft (Knak) an Ihmels (7 letters) - o.O. 1941. Ihmels an Schlunk - o.O. 1941. Ihmels an Freytag - o.O. 1941. Ihmels an Mergner - o.O. 1941. Ihmels an v. Wasielewski, Luther-Akademie (11 letters) - Sondershausen / Schloss Bendeleben am Kyffh. 1940/41. Luther-Akademie (v. Wasielewski) an Ihmels (8 letters) - Leipzig 1940. "To the members of the Heimische Rat des ostafrikanischen Kirchenbund - Neukirchen 1940. Nitsch an Ihmels - Bethel 1940. Bethel Mission (Ronicke) an Ihmels (3 letters) - Herrnhut 1940/41. Herrnhuter Missions-Direktion an Ihmels (2 letters) - o.O. 1941. Ihmels an Nicol - Rummelsberg 1941. Diakonissenanstalt an Ihmels - o.O. 1941. Ihmels an Knak (4 letters) - o.O. 1941. Ihmels an Kröcker - Wernigerode 1941. Erholungsheim "Gottesgabe" (Dunkmann) an Ihmels - Leipzig 1941. Ihmels "An die in der Heimat befindenindllichen Ostafrika-Missionare und an die Mitglieder des Heimischen Rat." (To the East African missionaries and to the members of the Heimischen Rat.) - o.O. 1941. Ihmels to Dunkmann - o.O. 1941. Ihmels to Vogt, Ronicke - o.O., o.J. Note "Working discussion, question: "The woman in the congregation" - Bethel 1940. Scholten an Ihmels - Leipzig 1941. Ihmels "To the members of the Home Council of the East African Federation of Churches" - Neukirchen 1941. Orphanage and Mission Institute (Nitsch) an Ihmels - Porschdorf 1941. Wohlrab an Ihmels - Aha 1941. Guth an Ihmels - Leipzig 1941. "To the East African missionaries and to the members of the Home Council". FICHE No. 64 3 - continued - Leipzig 1941. Ihmels "To the members of the Heimische Rat" - Bützow 1941. Schomerus to Ihmels - Bayreuth 1941. Ittameier to Ihmels - Neukirchen 1941. Nitsch to Ihmels - Herrnhut 1941. Vogt to Ihmels - Mölbis 1941. Suppes to Leipziger Mission - Königswinter 1941. Roehl an Ihmels (2 letters) - o.O. 1941. Ihmels an Schomerus (enclosure: letter to Landessuperintendents) - Berlin 1941. Berliner Missionsgesellschaft an Ihmels (2 letters) - France / Feldpost 1941. Schmidt an Ihmels (2 letters) - Güstrow 1941. Landessuperintendent an Leipziger Mission Bethel 1941. Bethel Mission (Ronicke) to Ihmels (3 letters) - Otterndorf 1941. Kutter to Ihmels - Leipzig 1941. Rother to Ihmels - Leipzig 1941. Ihmels to "Brothers" with additional Deacon Kutter to the - o.O. 1941. Certificates for Kutter, Rother, Fokken - Walddorf 1941. Michel to Leipziger Mission - o.O. 1941. Ihmels to Michel - Annaberg 1941. Fischer an Leipziger Mission - Hamburg 1941. Wohlrab an Ihmels - Rummelsberg 1941. Buchta an Ihmels Leipzig 1941. Ihmels "To the members of the Heimischen Rat des Ostafrikanischen Kirchenbund" - Balje / Feldpost 1941. Office (bricklayer) an Ihmels (concerning holiday from Kutter) - Sondershausen 1941. Wasielewski an Ihmels - O.O., n.e. Agenda of the "Working discussion of the East African missionaries in the Luther Academy, Sondershausen, Schloß" - Rudlaff: "Building and abandoning the native church". (Corerata; typescript; 13 p.) - Minutes. Theme: "Building and abandoning indigenous churches." - Scholten: "Theses on the paper: The construction and abandonment of the native church." - Theses on Rudloff's presentation" formulated by von Knak - "Protocol from the discussion on the presentation: Financial responsibility of the nascent church! (handwritten; 4 p.) - Bethel 1941. Rosarius: "The financial responsibility of the becoming Kirche´. Results of the meeting." (typewritten; 1 p.) - Berlin 1941. Oelke an Ihmels (Annex: Theses of the Department "The Financial Responsibility of the Coming Church.") - "Minutes of the 4th Session of the Workshop of the East African Missionaries on ...27 May 1941..." - Hamburg 1941. Aderhol an Ihmels (Annex: "Guidelines from the lecture: The Weschsel relations between christian and christian people in the world of the future family and community and community and tribal environment (in East Africa)." - Wohlrab: Theses: "The interaction between the Christian community and family on the one hand, and the African tribal world on the other." - Wismar 1941, four-stroke booklet: Presentation (typewritten; 6 p.) and theses (handwritten; 1 p.) on the presentation: "How can the Christian community be educated for the task of public hygiene? - Freienwalde 1941 Döring an Ihmels - Bethel 1941: "Summary of the result of the discussion on the topic:How can the Christian community be educated for the tasks of public hygiene? - Döllensradung 1941. Tietzen: "Fundamentals of Church Breeding in the East African Communities" (Theses) - handwritten notes (Theses?). FICHE NR. 64 4- - Continued - "Minutes of the discussion of the paper and the lecture: The missionary school, its function in community life and its relationship to village life". - Reckling: "Education in crafts and agriculture and its significance for the community" - Kleinwelka 1941. Gemuseus an Ihmels (Attachment: Gemuseus: "Leitsätze zum Vortrag in Sondershausen `Die Missionsschule, ihre Funktion im Gemeindeleben und ihre Bezelung zum Dorfleben.´") - Sondershausen 1941. Agenda of the working discussion - Gysin: "Theses on the Korreferat: Die Missionsschule, ihre Funktion im Gemeindeleben und ihre Beziehungen zum Dorfleben".

        Leipziger Missionswerk
        ALMW_II._MB_1895_9 · File · 1895
        Part of Francke's Foundations in Halle

        Author: Excerpt from Miss's diary. Althaus. Scope: pp. 132-135. Includes, among other things: - (SW: approaching completion of the house construction; leopard hunt with the English merchant Fraser; Christmas and New Year celebration; Catechist Zacharias; jurisdiction by missionaries)

        Leipziger Missionswerk
        Wolff, Walther
        Archiv der Evangelischen Kirche im Rheinland, 7NL 053 · Fonds · 1892-1961
        Part of Archive of the Protestant Church in the Rhineland (Archivtektonik)

        D. Walther (Friedrich Walther Paul) Wolff (1) (2), was born on 9 December 1870 in Neuwerk, later a district of Mönchengladbach, as the son of Friedrich Wolff, a teacher at the orphanage, and his wife Bertha. After attending Mönchengladbach grammar school, Wolff studied theology at the universities of Greifswald, Marburg and Halle from 1889 to 1893. He passed his theological examinations in Koblenz in April 1893 and October 1894. Wolff was vicar in Lobberich and did his auxiliary service in Mönchengladbach. In May 1895, he was ordained in Otzenrath and took up the pastorate in one of the oldest Reformed parishes on the Lower Rhine. In 1901, Wolff was elected to the 2nd pastorate of the Protestant parish of Aachen. This position, which he held until his death, gave him the opportunity to develop his theological and organisational skills and his literary ambitions. In 1901, Wolff founded the 'Evangelische Gemeindeblatt für Aachen und Burtscheid' (since 1916: 'Evangelisches Gemeindeblatt für Aachen und Umgebung') (3). Through his regular contributions, he provided his congregation with a wealth of spiritual inspiration and sharpened the Protestant conscience of the diaspora community through his many essays on the history and culture of Protestantism. On Wolff's initiative, a branch of the Evangelical Federation was founded in Aachen in 1904, which around 7% of the parishioners joined in 1906. From 1905 onwards, he endeavoured to found a Rhenish-Westphalian group of the Volkskirchliche Evangelische Vereinigung - the middle party - of which he became deputy chairman in 1906. He published the organ 'Die Evangelische Gemeinde' (4) from 1909 and edited it himself until issue 5 of vol. 11.1919/20. In each issue, he wrote the 'Chronicle' as a review of church life, and almost every issue contained a major article on a key issue of church work. At the 34th Rhenish Provincial Synod in Barmen, Wolff was elected President on 6 March 1919. Wolff initiated the election of a committee tasked with revising the Rhenish-Westphalian church constitution. In 1920, he was elected a member of the General Synodal Board at an extraordinary meeting of the Prussian General Synod. Wolff was particularly active in working on the draft constitution. He endeavoured to secure the presbyterial-synodal element the place and influence it deserved in the life of the constituted church. In 1921, the University of Bonn awarded him a doctorate (D. h.c.) on the occasion of the Worms anniversary celebrations. In 1922, Wolff was elected superintendent of the Aachen church district and inaugurated in 1923. Wolff had been a member of the Protestant Church Committee since 1922, and in 1925 the 1st Prussian General Synod of the new style elected him as its vice-president; as such he became deputy chairman of the Senate of the Protestant Church of the Old Prussian Union. In 1929, the General Synod confirmed Wolff in both offices. He had already been re-elected as President by the Rhenish Provincial Synod in 1925. Wolff was involved in all church congresses since 1919, most recently as Vice President. He had a particularly strong influence on the social message of the Bethel Church Congress of 1924. In 1924, he was the initiator of the first Rhenish Church Congress in Cologne, which was followed by others in Essen in 1926 and Saarbrücken in 1930. Shortly before his death, the Faculty of Law at the University of Berlin awarded him an honorary doctorate in 1931 for his services in bringing about the church treaty between the Protestant regional churches of Prussia and the Prussian state government, and President Wolff died in Aachen on 26 August 1931. His death also caused great consternation outside the Protestant Rhineland, which was reflected in obituaries in numerous newspapers (5). The estate was purchased in 1980 by Wolff's grandson, the pastor Paul-Gerhard van Spankeren, who worked in Westphalia. The documents were roughly pre-organised and placed in archive folders. The collection mainly contains an extensive collection of sermons, beginning during his studies in 1892 and ending in 1927. From Wolff's last years in office, only the sermons, devotions and sermons for special occasions have survived. The chronology of the sermons first had to be established. In the first few years, the sermons are written out in full, but from around 1900 onwards they are mostly written down as theses. Speeches on various occasions are documented; the imperial speeches and sermons show the national character of Wolff and his time. The second focus is on the lectures and manuscripts, which have been organised according to subject. Reference has already been made above to the collection of obituaries. The leather volume with Wolff's calligraphic sayings was given to the archive by Mr van Spankeren in 1994 (No. 49). Only fragments of Wolff's correspondence have survived (No. 46) The collection was catalogued in October 2006 and comprises 50 archive units. It covers the period from 1892 to 1931 as well as memorial contributions in 1941, 1956 and 1961. Only a few duplicates were collected. Some printed publications by and about Wolff are included in the holdings of the archive library, and reference should be made to fonds 8 SL 010 (Wolff Collection), which contains the collection of material relating to Hans Helmich's essay in the 'Monatsheften' 1987 (see References). Copies of Wolff's articles in the two church newspapers are also available here.Ulrich Dühr, 07.11.2006(1) The biographical outline in this introduction is a revised version of the text that Edgar Reitenbach prefixed to the Findbuch of fonds 8 SL 010 (Walther Wolff Collection) in 1987.(2) Walther Wolff's personal file is located in fonds 1 OB 009 (Personalakten der Pfarrer) W 062, 1892-1931(3) Vols. 1917 and 1919-1922 in the archive library under ZK 003(4) In the archive library under ZK 010(5) See nos. 47 and 48 of this fonds

        Wolff, Walther

        D. Walther (Friedrich Walther Paul) Wolff (1) (2), was born on 09 December 1870 in Neuwerk, a later district of Mönchengladbach, as the son of the teacher at the orphanage, Friedrich Wolff, and his wife Bertha. After attending the Gymnasium Mönchengladbach, Wolff studied theology at the universities of Greifswald, Marburg and Halle from 1889 to 1893. In April 1893 and October 1894 he passed his theological examinations in Koblenz. Wolff was vicar in Lobberich and performed his relief service in Mönchengladbach. In May 1895 he was ordained in Otzenrath and took over the rectorate in one of the oldest Reformed parishes on the Lower Rhine. In 1901 Wolff was elected 2nd pastor of the Evangelical Church of Aachen. This office, which he held until his death, gave him the opportunity to develop his theological and organisational strength and literary ambitions. In 1901 Wolff founded the "Evangelische Gemeindeblatt für Aachen und Burtscheid" (since 1916: "Evangelisches Gemeindeblatt für Aachen und Umgebung") (3). Through his regular contributions, he gave his congregation a wealth of spiritual inspiration and sharpened the Protestant conscience of the diaspora community through numerous essays on the history and culture of Protestantism. On Wolff's initiative a branch association of the Protestant Federation was founded in Aachen in 1904, to which about 7 members of the congregation joined as early as 1906. Since 1905 he tried to found a Rhine-Westphalian group of the Volkskirchliche Evangelische Vereinigung - the Mittelpartei - which he took over as deputy chairman in 1906. He published the organ "Die Evangelische Gemeinde" (4) from 1909 onwards and headed it himself until issue 5 of vol. 11.1919/20. In each issue he wrote the "Chronicle" as a review of the life of the church, almost each issue contained a larger contribution on a major question of church work. At the 34th Rheinische Provinzialsynode in Barmen, Wolff was elected president on 6 March 1919. Wolff arranged for the election of a committee which was entrusted with the revision of the Rhenish-Westphalian Church Constitution. In 1920, at an extraordinary meeting of the Prussian General Synod, he was elected a member of the General Synod Executive Committee. Wolff was particularly actively involved in the drafting of the constitution. His endeavour was to ensure that the presbyterial-synodal element would have the place and influence it deserved in the life of the church. In 1921 he received his doctorate from Bonn University on the occasion of the Worms anniversary celebration. In 1922 Wolff was elected Superintendent of the Aachen church district and in 1923 he was appointed to his office. Since 1922 Wolff belonged to the Protestant Church Committee, in 1925 the 1st Prussian General Synod of New Style elected him vice-president; as such he became vice-chairman of the Senate of the Protestant Church of the Old Prussian Union. In 1929, the General Synod confirmed Wolff in both offices. Already in 1925 he had been re-elected as President by the Rhenish Provincial Synod. Wolff participated in all Church Days since 1919, most recently as Vice President. Especially the social message of the Betheler Kirchentag of 1924 is strongly influenced by him. In 1924 he was the initiator of the first Rheinischer Kirchentag in Cologne, followed by others in Essen in 1926 and in Saarbrücken in 1930. Shortly before his death in 1931, the Faculty of Law of the University of Berlin awarded him an honorary doctorate for his services to the conclusion of the Church Treaty between the Protestant State Churches of Prussia and the Prussian State Government. President Wolff died on 26 August 1931 in Aachen. His death also caused great consternation outside the Protestant Rhineland, which was reflected in the obituaries of numerous newspapers (5). The estate was purchased in 1980 by Wolff's grandson, the Westphalian pastor Paul-Gerhard van Spankeren. The written material had been roughly pre-arranged and placed in archive folders. The collection contains above all an extensive collection of sermons, beginning during his studies in 1892 to 1927. From Wolff's last years in office, only casualties, devotions and sermons on special occasions have survived. The chronology of the sermons had to be established first. The sermons are formulated in the first years, since about 1900 mostly written down as theses. Speeches are documented on various occasions; the imperial speeches and sermons show the national character of Wolff and his time. The second focus is on lectures and manuscripts, which are arranged according to subject matter. The collection of obituaries has already been referred to above. The leather volume with Wolff's calligraphic pronouncements was handed over to the archive by Mr van Spankeren in 1994 (No. 49). Wolff's correspondence is only preserved in fragments (No. 46). the collection was recorded in October 2006 and comprises 50 archive units. The duration covers 1892 to 1931 as well as memorial contributions 1941, 1956 and 1961. Only a few double copies were collected. Some publications by and about Wolff are included in the holdings of the archive library, e.g. the holdings 8 SL 010 (Wolff Collection), which contains the collection of materials for Hans Helmich's essay in the "Monatshefte" 1987 (see literature references). Ulrich Dühr, 07.11.2006(1) The biographical outline of this introduction is the revised version of the text which Edgar Reitenbach prefixed to the finding aid book of the holdings 8 SL 010 (Collection Walther Wolff) 1987(2) The personal file Walther Wolff is located in the holdings 1 OB 009 (Personalakte der Pfarrer) W 062, 1892-1931(3) Jg. 1917 and 1919-1922 in the archive library under ZK 003(4) In the archive library under ZK 010(5) See no. 47 and 48 of this collection

        Stadtarchiv Bad Berleburg, Z (Zeitungen), Witt.Krb 56 · Collection · 1907
        Part of Bad Berleburg City Archive (Archivtektonik)

        Contains: (The numbers refer to the issue numbers) Construction history and urban development: Many construction and land issues are dealt with in the meetings of the city councilors meeting, see administration. No.36: Commemoration of the construction of Ludwigsburg 200 years ago No.74The Marburger Str. is paved from the Ederstr. to the bridge Agriculture: The newspaper brings in every issue advice for farmers, reports on new researches and experiments, reflections on the weather, statistics of the seeds and the slaughtered animals, farmer's rules, lists of the approved bulls and goats and the prize winners of the Stünzelfest, requests for further training and to the agricultural winter school, advice concerning insurance and pensions for farmers (are published). No.13,15: Advantages of land consolidation No.16: General assembly of the agricultural trade association No.21: Report on the general assembly of the agricultural trade association No.48,49: Report on the journey of the agricultural association to the German Agricultural Exhibition in Düsseldorf No.62: The rural indebtedness in the Wittgenstein district Nature and environment: No.60: Agriculture and natural monument conservation No.98: Extermination of crows by interpretation of poisoned fish at the creeks Statistics: A maid gets 18,-M monthly. A ground worker earns 40 Pf./hour Nr.19: Extrablatt with the election results of the election of the Reichstag Nr.75: Criminal statistics of the district Wittgenstein Trade, crafts and trades: Nr.58: Report about the Westphalian journeyman craftsman Nr.62: Winkel looks for accommodation for girls from the country, who work in the factory Traffic: Nr.7Delay in the construction of the line Raumland-Berleburg No.58: Start of the construction of the line Raumland-Berleburg No.60,61: Railway project Berleburg-Gleidorf No.68: Railway construction Raumland-Berleburg No.74: Expropriation of land for railway construction No.80: Report on the meeting of the Railway Committee concerning the railway Berleburg-Oberes Lahntal No.95: Cessation of work on the line School and training: No.15: Compulsory schooling regulations No.17,19,20,21: Education and training of commercial youth No.45: An association for the establishment of a toddler school is established No.76: Report on a concert in the Stadtkirche zur Besten der Kleinkinderschule No.80New acquisitions of the Volksbibliothek Kirche: No.66,67: Missionsfest am Dödesberg No.101,103: Article on the history of the churches Schüllar and Odebornskirche, dedication of the new church on 20 December 1907 Fire brigade: No.13Report on the General Assembly of the Voluntary Fire Service Administration and Administration of Justice: Announcements of the District Administrator's Office, the Police and the Princely Administration, detailed reports on the meetings of the Court of Aldermen, the City Assembly, the District Committee and the District Council as well as appointments and announcements of the District Court are published regularly, as are the appeals of the Military Authority. On 25 January 1907 Reichtag elections Vote distribution in Berleburg: Christl. Soziale 95, National-Liberale 104, freisinige Volkspartei 183, Zentrum 15, Sozialisten 55 Nr.17: Obituary to chamber director Rotberg Nr.23,26,47,74,90: Report on meeting of the municipal council Nr.29: Report on district committee meeting Nr.72: Obituary to municipal council leader Kaufmann Fingerling Vereine: Vereinsnachrichten are found in every issue of the newspaper. To the already 1900 known associations come still in addition: Stenographer's Association ''Stolze'', Cyclist's Association , Innkeeper's Association , Shooting Association , Sauerland Mountain Association (SGV) Free Craftsmen's Guild, Saxo-Borussia Youth Association Local Group of the German Fleet Association Goat Breeding Association Orchestra Association ''Grines Hitchen'' (meets in ''Kaiser Friedrich'') District Teachers' Association Wittgenstein Fatherland Women's Association Singing Association Harmony Men's and Youth Association Volksbildungsverein Railway Association No.31SGV-Herrenkommers im Wittgensteiner Hof Nr-.101: Report about the local group of the German Fleet Association Nr.103The ski club Sauerland, seat Arnsberg, which has a local group in Berleburg, counts 200 members emigration: No.17: North America resists against the immigration No.32: Emil Wolff, a Berleburger, who emigrated to America, makes a donation of 1000 M. to the hospital, likewise 1910 of the infant school No.94From Sauerland miners go to South West Africa, work in the mine, commitment 14 months, 250 m. per month, free station, clothes and laundry Other: No.10,11: In the gym photos from the war 1870/71 are shown No.91: Complaint about burglary thefts, foreign workers (Croats, Italians) are suspected, who are employed in road and railway construction Darin: