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            202 Archival description results for city

            Conrad Bush (1827-1897)
            RMG 239 · File · 1858-1959
            Part of Archive and Museum Foundation of the VEM (Archivtektonik)

            Children's house; confirmation of the professional contract by the city of Barmen, 1858; Some messages from the last days of the sel. mother Busch, 1886; celebration at the funeral of mother Busch, 28.6.1886; Some things from Conrad Busch's life, 1959

            Rhenish Missionary Society
            customs matters
            Stadtarchiv Lemgo, A 10223 · File · 1811
            Part of City Archive Lemgo (Archivtektonik)

            Contains: Varia und Generalia die Verteuerung der Kolonial- und flüssigen Waren betr., Month June-December 1811; Abolition of the consumption tax introduced in the Kingdom of Westphalia betr. 1811; Investigation matter Kaufmann Stockmeier betr. 1811

            Landeskirchliches Archiv Kassel, D 2.2 Homberg · Fonds
            Part of Regional Church Archive Kassel

            Description: from 1531(1537) 6 large Superintendenturen: Kassel (with Homberg), Rotenburg, Marburg, Alsfeld and St. Goar starting from 1585 office Homberg: forms the Superintendentur Kassel with 16 further offices beside the Superintendenturen (Rotenburg) - Allendorf, Lutherische Superintendentur Marburg, Reformierte Inspektur Hersfeld, Inspektur Hersfeld and from 1686 franz. Inspection from 1610 Convents (parish priests only): probably also Convent Homberg - at the head: Metropolitan from 1780 parish class Homberg (ecclesiastical district), Superintendententur Kassel - at the head: Metropolitan from 1886 Superintendententur Ziegenhain - Homberg with Superintendent in Ziegenhain 13 small Superintendententuren or Diöcesansynodalverbände - at the head: Superintendent with the parish classes: Ziegenhain, Neukirchen, Treysa, Homberg, the ref. communities of Marburg and the ref. Class Frankenberg - at the head of the parish class: Metropolitan from 1923 Church District Homberg - at the head: District Priest from 1945 Church District Homberg (Dean's Office) - at the head: Dean Classen, Wilhelm: Die kirchliche Organisation Alt-Hessens im Mittelalter During the restructuring of the Hessian church under Phillip, the old Catholic order had been completely abandoned and rebuilt on the secular, administrative structure of the country. The six superintendencies created in 1531 by the ecclesiastical ordinance were maintained to the same extent by the second order of 1537 and formed the basis of the entire administration for a long time. These are the following districts of 1st Kassel (Ämter Trendelburg, Sababurg, Grebenstein, Zierenberg, Wolfhagen, Hasungen, Gudensberg, Felsberg, Homberg, Borken, the three Kassel offices); 2. Rotenburg (offices Melsungen, Spangenberg, Lichtenau, Ludwigstein, Allendorf, Eschwege, Wanfried, Rotenburg, Sontra, Friedewald, Vacha, Herleshausen, Gleichen, Schmalkalden and the cities Hersfeld and Waldkappel); 3. Alsfeld (Alsfeld, Romrod, Kirtorf, Homberg-Ohm, Burggemünden, Grünberg, Ziegenhain, Neukirchen, Ulrichstein, Schotten, Nidda, Sturmfels and the cities of Treysa and Schwarzenborn) 5th St. Goar 6th Darmstadt This order remained undisturbed for a long time, initially even after the division of 1567/8 although the superintendencies and partial principalities overlapped. 1574 the first adaptation to the new political conditions took place: the offices of Ziegenhain and Neukirchen.

            Landesarchiv NRW Abteilung Rheinland, 215.03.00 · Fonds · 1807-1956
            Part of Landesarchiv NRW Rhineland Department (Archivtektonik)

            The district of Bonn was founded in 1816 by the mayors of Bonn, Godesberg, Hersel, Oedekoven, Poppelsdorf, Sechtem, Villich and Waldorf. Since October 1, 1887, the city of Bonn has been a new district of the county; from April 1, 1904, the rural communities of Poppelsdorf, Kessenich, Endenich and Dottendorf were united with it. From 1 October 1932, the municipalities of Wesseling and Keldenich belong to the administrative district of Cologne (formerly the mayor's office of Hersel); for this purpose, the mayor's offices of Adendorf, Rheinbach and Ollheim (excluding Esch, Müggenhausen and Straßfeld) of the dissolved district of Rheinbach were moved to the administrative district of Bonn. Stock of the District 1st Mayor's Office Bonn 1816-1887 2nd Mayor's Office Godesberg 1816- 2nd Mayor's Office Hersel 1816- (retired 1932 Wesseling, Keldenich) 4th Mayor's Office Oedekoven 1816- 5. Mayor's office Poppelsdorf (since 1904) Duisdorf 1816- (1904 retired Poppelsdorf, Kessenich, Endenich, Dollendorf) 6. Mayor's office Sechtem 1816 7. Mayor's office Vilich 1816- (spter Bm. resp. Amt beuel) 8. Mayor's office Waldorf 1816- 9. Mayor's office Villip before 1846 retired from Vilich 10. Mayor's office Villip 1816- (1904 retired Poppelsdorf, Kessenich, Endenich, Dollendorf) 6. Mayor's Office Adendorf 1832- 11. Mayor's Office Rheinbach 1932 12. Mayor's Office Ollheim 1932 Seat of the district administration Bonn was and is county councillor: 1816-1819 Count of Belderbusch 1820-1854 of Hymnen 1854-1888 of Sandt 1888-1903 of Sandt, Dr. 1903-1912 Graf von Galen 1913-1926 von Nell 1926-1933 von Hove 1933-1936 Dr. Haarmann 1936 - Dr. von Stedtmann The District Office in Bonn handed over 14 fascicles of files in 1889 and 14 pieces of files in 1916 to the State Archives in Düsseldorf, which form the numbers 1 - 32 of the current holdings. In 1933 the Staatsarchivrat Dr. Rohr took over the numbers 33-608. 1936 (Acc. 4/36) 26 volumes of personal files were handed over by the district committee, of which the no. 609-627 were taken over to the inventory. In 1940 the files of the district committee were handed over until 1927, no. 630-888 of the register. In 1947 the files N. 889-1000 were taken over. In October and November 1952 the same no. 1004-1023 (personal data of the mayors, deputies etc.). This file delivery in 1952 represents a rather modern collection, mainly from the first decades of the 20th century, and was completed in 1930 with a few exceptions (e.g. Secret State Police). The files originate from a uniformly numbered registry. The takeover took place in October/November 1952. (Cf. service registry). The extensive files of the District School Inspectorate Bonn/Land-Rheinbach (including the former districts Bonn and Rheinbach before 1932) were also taken over together with less numerous school files of the district administration. The files of the Bonn-Land insurance office (Dept. G) were left in the possession of the district administration. In June 1953 personnel files were also taken over for 4 office mayors (no. 1025-1028), in 1956 the same for 6 office mayors and office directors (1047-1052), in October 1956 the same for a number of higher municipal officials (1053-1059), also later further personnel files. The district of Bonn was formed in 1816 from the mayor's offices of Bonn, Godesberg, Hersel, Oedekoven, Poppelsdorf, Sechtem, Villich and Waldorf. since October 1, 1887 the city of Bonn has been separated from the district as a new urban district; from April 1, 1904 the rural communities of Poppelsdorf, Kessenich, Endenich and Dottendorf were united with it. From 1 October 1932, the municipalities of Wesseling and Keldenich belong to the administrative district of Cologne (formerly the mayor's office of Hersel); for this purpose, the mayor's offices of Adendorf, Rheinbach and Ollheim (excluding Esch, Müggenhausen and Straßfeld) of the dissolved district of Rheinbach were moved to the administrative district of Bonn. Mayor's Office Bonn 1816-18872. Mayor's Office Godesberg 1816-2. Mayor's Office Hersel 1816- (retired 1932 Wesseling, Keldenich)4. Mayor's office Oedekoven 1816-5. Mayor's office Poppelsdorf (since 1904) Duisdorf 1816-6. Mayor's office Sechtem 18167. Mayor's office Vilich 1816-8. Mayor's office Waldorf 1816-9. Mayor's office Villip before 1846 from Vilich10. Mayor's office Adendorf 1832-11. Mayor's office Rheinbach 1932-12. Mayor's office Ollheim 1932Seat of the district administration was and is BonnCouncillors:1816-1819 Count of Belderbusch1820-1854 of Hymnen1854-1888 of Sandt1888-1903 of Sandt, Dr.1903-1912 Count von Galen1913-1926 von Nell1926-1933 von Hove1933-1936 Dr. Haarmann1936- Dr. von StedtmannIn 1889, the District Office in Bonn surrendered 14 fascicles of documents to the Düsseldorf State Archives, in 1916 14 pieces of documents, which form the numbers 1 - 32 of the current holdings. In 1933 the Staatsarchivrat Dr. Rohr took over the numbers 33-608. 1936 (Acc. 4/36) 26 volumes of personal files were handed over by the district committee, of which the no. 609-627 were taken over to the inventory. In 1940 the files of the district committee were handed over until 1927, no. 630-888 of the register. In 1947 the files N. 889-1000 were taken over. In October and November 1952 the same no. 1004-1023 (personal data of the mayors, deputies etc.). This file delivery in 1952 represents a rather modern collection, mainly from the first decades of the 20th century, and was completed in 1930 with a few exceptions (e.g. Secret State Police). The files originate from a uniformly numbered registry. The takeover took place in October/November 1952. (Cf. service registry) The extensive files of the district school inspection Bonn/Land-Rheinbach (including the former districts Bonn and Rheinbach before 1932) were also taken over together with not so numerous school files of the district administration. The files of the Bonn-Land Insurance Office (Dept. G) were left in the inventory of the district administration. In June 1953 personnel files were also taken over for 4 mayors (no. 1025-1028), in 1956 the same for 6 mayors and directors (1047-1052), in October 1956 the same for a number of higher municipal officials (1053-1059), also later further personnel files.

            Landesarchiv NRW Abteilung Rheinland, 215.04.00 · Fonds · 1859-1933
            Part of Landesarchiv NRW Rhineland Department (Archivtektonik)

            District office Dinslaken The district of Dinslaken was formed in 1816 from 7 mayor's offices Dinslaken, Duisburg, Gahlen, Götterswickerham, Holten, Ruhrort and Schermbeck. In 1823 he was united with the district of Essen to form the district of Duisburg. On this occasion the mayor's office Schermbeck was beaten to the district Rees. After the city of Duisburg left the district association in 1874, Mülheim an der Ruhr was designated a district town and the district was renamed "Kreis Mühlheim an der Ruhr". In 1887 the towns of Ruhrtort and Dinslaken as well as the district mayors of Dinslaken-Land, Beeck, Sterkrade, Meiderich, Götterswickerham, Gahlen and Duisburg-Land were branched off from the district of Mühleim as Ruhrort. After the cities Ruhrort and Meiderich had left the federation of the district Ruhrort to the city circle Duisburg by the law of 26th July 1905 the cities Ruhrort and Meiderich had left the federation of the district Ruhrort to the city circle Duisburg, the district administrator seat was shifted on 1st April 1909 from Duisburg Ruhrort to Dinslaken and the circle the designation "circle Dinslaken" was given. On May 1, 1911, the city of Hamborn was removed from the district association as a city district, and on July 1, 1917, the city of Sterkrade was removed as well. The district of Dinslaken and the districts with which it was united from 1823 to 1909 were administered by the following district councillors: Term of office, councillors, county - 1816-1823, von Buggenhagen, Dinslaken - 1823-1828, von Buggenhagen, Duisburg - 1829-1846, Devens, Duisburg - 1847-1848, Hammer (by order), Duisburg - 1848-1849, Dittmer (by order), Duisburg - 1849-1850, von Armin, Duisburg - 1850-1851, Dittmer, Duisburg - 1851-1870, Kessler, Duisburg - 1870-1874, von Rosenberg-Gruszcynski, Duisburg - 1874-1879, von Rosenberg-Gruszcynski, Mühleim - 1879-1887, Haniel, Mühlheim - 1887-1899, Hammacher, Ruhrort - 1900-1906, Kötter, Ruhrort - 1907-1916, Dr. von Wülfing, Ruhrort/Dinslaken - 1920-1930, Schluchtmann, Dinslaken - 1931-1932, von Nathusius, Dinslaken - 1932-1933, Dr. Klein, Dinslaken - 1933-1945, von Werder, Dinslaken The files of the Landratsamt were taken over by the Düsseldorf State Archives on 13 June 1939 (see Service Register A 4a Vol. XI, p.264).). The fire on 7 April 1909 in the newly furnished Landrats building, which had been completed for inauguration, meant that only a small remnant of the existing files was preserved. The files concerning industry in the district of Dinslaken are completely destroyed. The focus of the preserved files is on agriculture. - In accordance with the administrative history of the district, the holdings of the Duisburg-Mülheim District Office should be used for the period prior to its reestablishment in 1909, in which certain remains of the first district administration of Dinslaken (1816-1823) can also be found as previous files. The present collection was newly recorded in the spring of 1961 by Adrian, a candidate for an archive inspector, and written by Mrs. Pumierski. Lit: 1) Willi Dittgen, "Bewegte Zeit" - The district of Dinslaken in the years 1909-1959. District of Dinslaken, Heimatkalender 1959, p.17-21. 2) Willi Dittgen, Das Schrifttum. A compilation of publications about the district and the communities, in: Jahrbuch des Kreises Dinslaken 1975, last edition December 1974, 32 Jg. p. 182 ff.

            Westfälische Hofes- und Familienarchive, D.ZurH · Fonds · 1700-1848
            Part of Archive Office for Westphalia

            Preface: I. General: The remains of the files of the court Zur Heide have been deposited by Mrs. Liesel Hengesbach in the city archive Breckerfeld. In the course of the processing it became clear that with these few individual pieces only the small part of a rural farm tradition exists, which, if it had been completely preserved, experience has shown would also cover other content-related areas (such as the real estate transactions of the farm, tax matters, the regulation of good-grandfarm relations, etc.), but this is not the case with the existing stock, whose individual pieces cover the period from 1719 to 1848. The deposit is located in the city archive Breckerfeld (Frankfurter Straße 38, 58339 Breckerfeld). TWO. Notes on the state of preservation and the mode of indexing: The files were indexed by Dr. Bernd-Wilhelm Linnemeier at the LWL-Archivamt für Westfalen in Münster. Some pieces are heavily damaged by ink corrosion and can hardly be handled without loss of substance. However, damage caused by paper decay and/or microorganisms can also be observed on other individual pieces or leaves of the stand, so that their overall state of preservation is not optimal. Therefore, reconstructible archival units (numbers 4, 9 and 10)

            Landeskirchliches Archiv Kassel, E 1 Gemünden 277 · File · 1870 - 1891, 1903 - 1914
            Part of Regional Church Archive Kassel

            Contains among other things: Leaves of the Westphalian workers' colony Wilhelmsdorf, the Jerusalem Association Berlin, the Gustav-Adolf-Werk, the Oberhessische Bibelgesellschaft, the Evangelischer Missionsverein, the Evangelische Missionsgesellschaft für Deutsch-Ostakfrika, the Deutscher Herbergsverein, the Innere Mission in Hessen and the Deutscher Verein gegen Misbrauch geistiger Getränke; Hauskollekten für das Hessische Diakonissenhaus Kassel; collection of the reformed parish Gemünden for the partly burnt down town Hünfeld (1888); call for the foundation of the Evangelical Federation of 02.10.1889; Excerpt from the founding minutes of the press committee of the diocese Ziegenhain-Homberg of 11.03.1914; training as community nurses in the Diakonissenhaus Kassel

            Stadtarchiv Solingen, G · Fonds · 1765-1940
            Part of City Archive Solingen (Archivtektonik)

            The history of the development of the collection After the town unification in 1929, the old registries of the formerly independent towns were first accommodated in the newly established Solingen town archive under the direction of Richard Erntges in the new administration building Cronenberger Straße (formerly WKC). None of the formerly independent cities had previously had their own archives. Erntges - with the help of auxiliary staff - developed these six stocks according to a uniform file plan. Therefore there are gaps in the systematics in all files of the formerly independent cities. In most cases, the individual classification group titles also served as file titles, usually only differentiated according to "generalia" (usually without local subjects) and "specialia" (the files created by the respective city administration for the local occur. Some files, which according to the file plan or tape count had originally once been available, were included in the directory by Erntges because he probably had the hope that the files could possibly appear again. To date, this has not happened, so that in these cases we have to assume cassations before 1929. In the search book you will find the note "empty" in these files. For reasons of completeness, the data records from the "Historical Archive" were also duplicated into this collection, the term of which ends after 1808. Likewise a part of the files (above all school chronicles and trade or restaurant concessions) ends only after 1930, thus correctly belongs to the stock SG. A further distortion has been omitted until today due to time reasons. May 2008 Ralf Rogge

            BArch, N 14/18 · File · 1917-1920
            Part of Federal Archives (Archivtektonik)

            Contains among other things: Requisitions regulations; proclamations of the English administrator; various editions of the "Official Gazette" for the occupied territory D e u t s c h - O s t a f r i k a 1919-1920; individual editions of the Tanganyika-Zeitung from Dares-Salam, Aug./Sept. 1920