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By Julius A. Kolatschek Translation of Chapter 12 (Pages 146 to 191) by Hieke Wolf
Die evanglisch Kirche Oesterreichs in den deutsch-slavischen (The Evanglical Church of Austria in German-Slavic Areas) by Julius A. Kolatschek Translation of Chapter 12 (Pages 146 to 191) by Hieke Wolf Abbreviations: A. B. Augsburg Denomination D. Diaspora F. Branch fl. Florin (also called a Gluden) (1 Florin = 60 Kreutzer) G.A.V. Gustav Adolf Association Gr. Foundation H.B. Helvetian Denomination Kon. Constitution kr. Kreutzer (1 Florin = 60 Kreutzer) L.P. Last Post S. School Community Sel. Number of Souls (inhabitants) Statsp. Government lump sum Ter. Territory XII. Galicia We first want to give a few explanations in order to improve understanding for the special conditions of Galicia's protestant parishes. The protestant parishes of Galicia are exclusively German parishes and have mainly emerged from the country's colonization carried out by Empress Maria Theresia and Emperor Josef II in the second half of the last century. Immigrants mainly came from South Germany. Protestant colonists received considerable rights and privileges through the patents of October 1, 1774 and September 17, 1781. One to mention before all others is the „ Freie Religions Exercitium “ (free practice of religion), at first only in the cities Lemberg, Jaroslau, Brody, Zamosc and Zaleßezyki, later „without any restriction to this or that location“ in the whole country, with the rights to build prayer houses and churches, as well as the appointing and employing of pastors. In the cities gratuitous bestowal of citizens' rights 1 and right to possession 2. Furthermore exemption from all personal taxes and dues, at first for 6, then for 1 Not every citizen automatically had citizens' rights (mainly rights to vote). -
© in This Web Service Cambridge University Press Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-00830-4
Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-00830-4 - The German Minority in Interwar Poland Winson Chu Index More information Index Agrarian conservativism, 71 Beyer, Hans Joachim, 212 Alldeutscher Verband. See Pan-German Bielitz. See Bielsko League Bielitzer Kreis, 174 Allgemeiner Schulverein, 36 Bielsko, 25, 173, 175, 203 Alltagsgeschichte, 10 Bielsko Germans, 108, 110, 111 Ammende, Ewald, 136 Bierschenk, Theodor, 137, 216, 224 Anschluß question, 51, 52 Bjork, James, 17 Anti-Communism, 165 Blachetta-Madajczyk, Petra, 9, 130, 136 Anti-Germanism, 214, 244, 245 Black Palm Sunday, 213–217 Anti-Semitism, 38, 79, 151, 159, 166, 178, Blanke, Richard, 9, 65, 76, 90, 136, 162 212, 215, 244, 260 Boehm, Max Hildebert, 31, 39, 46, 54, 88, Association for Germandom Abroad. See 97, 99, 110, 205 Verein fur¨ das Deutschtum im Ausland Border Germans and Germans Abroad, 44 Auslandsdeutsche, 98, 206.SeealsoReich Brackmann, Albert, 45, 208 Germans; Reich Germans, former Brauer, Leo, 221 Auslands-Organisation der NSDAP, 180, Brest-Litovsk Treaty, 42 205 Breuler, Otto, 103 Austria, 34, 165, 173, 207 Breyer, Albert, 153, 155, 212 annexation of, 51 Breyer, Richard, 155, 216, 272, 274 Austrian Silesia. See Teschen Silesia Briand, Aristide, 50 Bromberg. See Bydgoszcz Baechler, Christian, 53 Bromberg Bloody Sunday. See Bromberger Baltic Germans, 268 Blutsonntag Baltic Institute, 45, 208 Bromberger Blutsonntag, 4, 249 Bartkiewicz, Zygmunt, 118 Bromberger Volkszeitung, 134 Bauernverein, 72 Broszat, Martin, 205 Behrends, Hermann, 231 Brubaker, Rogers, 9, 26, 34, 63, 86, -
Germany's Policy Vis-À-Vis German Minority in Romania
T.C. TURKISH- GERMAN UNIVERSITY INSTITUTE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES EUROPE AND INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS DEPARTMENT GERMANY’S POLICY VIS-À-VIS GERMAN MINORITY IN ROMANIA MASTER’S THESIS Yunus MAZI ADVISOR Assoc. Prof. Dr. Enes BAYRAKLI İSTANBUL, January 2021 T.C. TURKISH- GERMAN UNIVERSITY INSTITUTE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES EUROPE AND INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS DEPARTMENT GERMANY’S POLICY VIS-À-VIS GERMAN MINORITY IN ROMANIA MASTER’S THESIS Yunus MAZI 188101023 ADVISOR Assoc. Prof. Dr. Enes BAYRAKLI İSTANBUL, January 2021 I hereby declare that this thesis is an original work. I also declare that I have acted in accordance with academic rules and ethical conduct at all stages of the work including preparation, data collection and analysis. I have cited and referenced all the information that is not original to this work. Name - Surname Yunus MAZI ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS First of all, I would like to thank my supervisor Dr. Enes Bayraklı. Besides my master's thesis, he has taught me how to work academically for the past two years. I would also like to thank Dr. Hüseyin Alptekin and Dr. Osman Nuri Özalp for their constructive criticism about my master's thesis. Furthermore, I would like to thank Kazım Keskin, Zeliha Eliaçık, Oğuz Güngörmez, Hacı Mehmet Boyraz, Léonard Faytre and Aslıhan Alkanat. Besides the academic input I learned from them, I also built a special friendly relationship with them. A special thanks goes to Burak Özdemir. He supported me with a lot of patience in the crucial last phase of my research to complete the thesis. In addition, I would also like to thank my other friends who have always motivated me to successfully complete my thesis. -
Domesticating the German East: Nazi Propaganda and Women's Roles in the “Germanization” of the Warthegau During World Wa
DOMESTICATING THE GERMAN EAST: NAZI PROPAGANDA AND WOMEN’S ROLES IN THE “GERMANIZATION” OF THE WARTHEGAU DURING WORLD WAR II Madeline James A thesis submitted to the faculty at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in the History Department in the College of Arts and Sciences. Chapel Hill 2020 Approved by: Konrad Jarausch Karen Auerbach Karen Hagemann © 2020 Madeline James ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ii ABSTRACT Madeline James: Domesticating the German East: Nazi Propaganda And Women’s Roles in the “Germanization” of the Warthegau during World War II (Under the direction of Konrad Jarausch and Karen Auerbach) This thesis utilizes Nazi women’s propaganda to explore the relationship between Nazi gender and racial ideology, particularly in relation to the Nazi Germanization program in the Warthegau during World War II. At the heart of this study is an examination of a paradox inherent in Nazi gender ideology, which simultaneously limited and expanded “Aryan” German women’s roles in the greater German community. Far from being “returned to the home” by the Nazis in 1933, German women experienced an expanded sphere of influence both within and beyond the borders of the Reich due to their social and cultural roles as “mothers of the nation.” As “bearers of German culture,” German women came to occupy a significant role in Nazi plans to create a new “German homeland” in Eastern Europe. This female role of “domesticating” the East, opposite the perceived “male” tasks of occupation, expulsion, and resettlement, entailed cultivating and reinforcing Germanness in the Volksdeutsche (ethnic German) communities, molding them into “future masters of the German East.” This thesis therefore also examines the ways in which Reich German women utilized the notion of a distinctly female cultural sphere to stake a claim in the Germanizing mission. -
Galicia: a Multi-Ethnic Overview and Settlement History with Special Reference to Bukovina by Irmgard Hein Ellingson1 Tam I Kiedys - There Once Upon a Time
Galicia: A Multi-Ethnic Overview and Settlement History with Special Reference to Bukovina by Irmgard Hein Ellingson1 tam i kiedys - there once upon a time Family history researchers place great value upon name of the village from which he emigrated or the place in primary source documents. We want to seek out the original which he settled, we assume that no one does - and that we church records, ship lists, census lists, land records and other will be the ones to discover the family’s “origin.” forms of documentation that may establish someone’s If you had German ancestors in Galicia or Bukovina, presence at a certain location and at a particular point in time. whether they were Evangelical or Catholic, from Most will begin by visiting a local Family History Center to southwestern Germany or from Bohemia, much of this determine record availability and as soon as possible, want information may already be a matter of record and has been to read films to find ancestors and their family groups. for decades. Researchers such as Dr. Franz Wilhelm and Dr. Very few, however, take any time to read and learn Josef Kallbrunner as well as Ludwig Schneider reviewed about the people, places, and the times in which their lists of late eighteenth-century immigrants who registered at ancestors lived. Instead they tend to dive into the records various points on the route to settlement in the eastern with a Star Trek mentality: Genealogy, the final frontier. Habsburg empire. Wilhelm and Kallbrunner’s Quellen zur These are the voyages of the family history researcher. -
A History of Al- Berta’S German-Speaking Communities
Biographical directory of clergy in Alberta’s German-speaking communities: From the 1880s to the present i Introduction This reference book deals with the lives and work of hundreds of pastors in eleven religious groups who have ministered to their German-speaking congregations in Alberta since the 1880s and have provided spiritual guidance and comfort. In their dedication the pioneering pastors often not only served, but led, bringing their faithful to Alberta and assisting them in establishing their families in the new homeland. They preached and taught, visited and counseled, performed the rites of passage, administered and di- rected, provided practical leadership in establishing the new congregations and played a pivotal role in developing their internal cohesion. No doubt, these pastors fulfilled an essential function in the settle- ment history of Albertans of German origin. Each of the eleven chapters commences with an outline of the early settlement history in Alberta of immi- grants of German origin before introducing the German-language pastors themselves. This Introduction attempts to examine and document in some detail the wider context in which the mem- bers of these religious groups and the pioneer pastors came to settle in Alberta (a more exhaustive exami- nation of the issues is available in several books by the compiler on the cultural history of the German- speaking communities in Alberta1). Three themes will be addressed: the reasons that brought these fami- lies to Alberta from countries in central and eastern Europe, the United States and Canadian provinces; the settlement history of immigrants of German origin in localities across the province and their religious affiliation; and the groups that facilitated their immigration to Canada. -
FEEFHS Journal Volume X T a B L E O F C O N T E N T S F R O M T H E E D I T O R a N D P R E S I D E N T ’ S M E S S a G E This Issue
FEEFHS Journal Volume 10, 2002 FEEFHS Journal Who, What and Why is FEEFHS? The Federation of East European Family History Societies Editor: Thomas K. Edlund. [email protected] (FEEFHS) was founded in June 1992 by a small dedicated group of Editorial Assistant: Susan Howell American and Canadian genealogists with diverse ethnic, religious, and national backgrounds. By the end of that year, eleven societies FEEFHS Executive Council had accepted its concept as founding members. Each year since then 2002-2003 FEEFHS officers: FEEFHS has grown in size. FEEFHS nows represents nearly two President: Irmgard Hein Ellingson hundred organizations as members from twenty-four states, five Ca- 1st Vice-president: Laura Hanowski, c/o Saskatchewan Genealogical nadian provinces, and fourteen countries. It continues to grow. Society, P.O. Box 1894, Regina, SK, Canada S4P 3E1. About half of these are genealogy societies, others are multi-pur- [email protected] pose societies, surname associations, book or periodical publishers, 2nd Vice-president: Kahlile Mehr, 412 South 400 West, Centerville, archives, libraries, family history centers, on-line services, institu- UT. [email protected] tions, e-mail genealogy list-servers, heraldry societies, and other eth- 3rd Vice-president: Marsha Gustad, 19415 Tara Drive nic, religious, and national groups. FEEFHS includes organizations Brookfield, WI. 53045-4807. [email protected] representing all East or Central European groups that have existing Treasurer: Miraim Hall-Hansen genealogy societies in North America and a growing group of world- wide organizations and individual members, from novices to pro- Other members of the FEEFHS Executive Council: fessionals. Founding Past President: Charles M. -
Bulletin of the German Historical Institute
GERMAN HISTORICAL INSTITUTE,WASHINGTON DC BULLETIN ISSUE 42 SPRING 2008 CONTENTS List of Contributors 5 Preface 7 FEATURES The Future of the European State: Some Historical Reflections on the German Case 9 James J. Sheehan Comment on James Sheehan’s Lecture 21 Cornelia Rauh-Kühne “Under Open Skies”: Reflections on German Unification 27 Bärbel Bohley The Early Years of the GHI: An Interview with the Institute’s Founding Director, Hartmut Lehmann 39 Carola Dietze and Richard F. Wetzell GHI RESEARCH “I Am No Anti-Semite, but I Am Also No Jew”: German Liberalism and the “Jewish Question” in the Third Reich 49 Eric Kurlander “Spaceship Earth”: Envisioning Human Habitats in the Environmental Age 65 Sabine Höhler STERN PRIZE Death in Berlin, 1933–1961 87 Monica Black The Geography of Germanness: Recentering German History in Interwar Poland 95 Winson Chu CONFERENCE REPORTS Local, Regional, and Global Constructions of Christianity: Religious Communication Networks, 1680–1830 105 Gisela Mettele Reading Hamburg: Anglo-American Perspectives 111 Christoph Strupp Uncertain Environments: Natural Hazards, Risk, and Insurance in Historical Perspective 118 Uwe Lübken and Christof Mauch Pleasure, Power and Everyday Life under National Socialism 125 Stefan Becker, Stephanie De Felice, Philipp Hertzog A Humanitarian as Broad as the World: Abraham Lincoln’s Legacy in International Context 133 Uwe Lübken Medieval History Seminar 2007 139 Carola Dietze Practices and Power in the Everyday Life of the Twentieth Century: A Symposium in Honor of Alf Lüdtke 144 Kathleen Canning Terrorism in Pre-Revolutionary Russia: New Research and Sources in Europe and the United States 149 Samuel Ramer 16th Annual Symposium of the Friends of the GHI and Award of the Fritz Stern Dissertation Prize 152 Richard F. -
Germans from Russia and Eastern Europe Settlement Locations
GERMANS FROM RUSSIA AND EASTERN EUROPE SETTLEMENT LOCATIONS TABLE OF CONTENTS German - Russian Settlement Map, courtesy of Mitch Roll .......................................................... Page 3 Belowesch area Colonies (6), currently in the Ukraine ................................................................... Page 4 Beresan area Colonies (105), currently in the Ukraine ................................................................... Page 4 Bessarabian area Colonies (205), currently in the Ukraine and Moldova ...................................... Page 7 Bukovina area Colonies (65), currently in Romainia and the Ukraine. .......................................... Page 15 Caucasus area Colonies (220), currently in Russia, Georgia and Azerbaijan ................................ Page 17 Central Asian Colonies (23), currently in Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan & Tajikistan .. Page 24 Chortitza area Colonies (125), currently in the Ukraine ................................................................. Page 25 Crimean - Krim area Colonies (294), currently in the Ukraine (de jure), Russia (de facto). ........ Page 30 Dobrudscha area Colonies (75), currently in Romainia and Bulgaria. ........................................... Page 40 Don Cossacks area Colonies (181), currently in the Ukraine and Russia ....................................... Page 42 Early Black Sea area Colonies (4), currently in the Ukraine .......................................................... Page 49 Galizien area Colonies (462), currently -
In the Central Archives of Historical Records (CAHR) in Warsaw by Małgorzata Kośka (Translated by Anna Kessling) What and Where Can Be Found in Our Guide — Contents
Practical advice for people planning genealogical investigations (mostly, but not only) in The Central Archives of Historical Records (CAHR) in Warsaw by Małgorzata Kośka (translated by Anna Kessling) What and where can be found in our Guide — contents 1 Preparing to search the Archives; translator’s note 2 General information 3 How to establish the name of the parish or community 9 How to access Civil Registers in the CAHR 10 Where to look for records which are not in the CAHR 19 Where to find registers from regions now within Lithuania and Belarus 23 Brief overview of Civil Registers of various religions and denominations 32 How to conduct a search, and what to note 1 Preparing to search the Archives All available information and documentation should be gathered together in preparation for any search, whether of the State or a Church archives. Every certificate, copy of register entry or photocopy is important – even these which are damaged, hard to read or even incomprehensible to the amateur genealogist. With help from an experienced person, it may be possible to attempt to read information from these documents and extract what is of interest. Searching registers and parish documents is a good way to start, and is one of the paths to obtain data on ancestors. Translator’s note gmina, the first level of administration, is given here ascommune ; powiat (the second level of administration) is given as county; województwo – voivodeship – is the third level of administration; zasób has been rendered as holding; zespół has been rendered as fonds, throughout; zabużański has been rendered as beyond the River Bug; Ukrainian localities names are as transliterated by the Ukrainian government https://mfa.gov.ua/; Ukrainian oblast is given as region. -
Zeitweiser Index
Author Title Year Page Note Dressler, Hans Our Emperor for aniversary celebration 1909 31 poem Peter, John The Malingerer (Assentierungsgeschichte from the Bohemian Forest) 1909 32 Hebbel, Friedrich A Sleeping Child 1909 46 poem Meyer, Ch. Heinrich The Beautiful Garden 1909 46 Ertl, Adolf Forest Ghosts 1909 47 Dressler, Hans When Spring Comes 1909 50 poem Z. An Evening at the Forester's House 1909 50 Geib, Georg Adolf May Greetings 1909 54 Mauer, Hans The German Michel 1909 54 poem Sch. J. How the German School Assoc. & the German Welfare Org have 1909 56 emerged Kr. A Blow From The Sword 1909 59 poem Rasser, E. O. Do Good! Thoughts of a Lonely Person 1909 59 N.N. Sayings 1909 63 N.N. Queen Louise (for our image, "Queen Louise in Prayer") 1909 64 Wagner, Valentin The Homecomers - a Story from German Galizien 1909 68 N.N. Use Your Time Wisely 1909 70 Müller, Karl You Are a German Child 1909 72 poem N.N. Dialects of the Counties of Pilsen & Eger in Bohemia 1909 72 poems Haas, Rudolf Benedikt Liebtrau. Happy Hoaxes from the Good Old Days 1909 74 Appelt, Wilhelm The Witch. A tale 1909 83 Dressler, Hans Turning of the Year 1909 89 Kiesler, Georg Greetings to Mother 1909 90 Schmidt, J. The Story of the German Culture in Galizien until Kaiser Josef II's Time 1909 90 Hennig, Martin, Prof. To the Association of German Christians in Galizien 1909 94 Kopf, J. German Heart, Sleep in Peace! 1909 94 Sch. J. A German Party in the Forest 1909 95 Sch. -
Monografie 12 (2011) : Political Migrations on Polish Territories
MONOGRAFIE INSTYTUT GEOGRAFII I PRZESTRZENNEGO ZAGOSPODAROWANIA IM. STANISŁAWA LESZCZYCKIEGO PAN http://rcin.org.pl POLISH ACADEMY OF SCIENCES STANISŁAW LESZCZYCKI INSTITUTE OF GEOGRAPHY AND SPATIAL ORGANIZATION MONOGRAPHIES, 12 Piotr Eberhardt MIGRACJE POLITYCZNE NA ZIEMIACH POLSKICH (1939–1950) WARSZAWA 2011 http://rcin.org.pl POLSKA AKADEMIA NAUK INSTYTUT GEOGRAFII I PRZESTRZENNEGO ZAGOSPODAROWANIA IM. STANISŁAWA LESZCZYCKIEGO MONOGRAFIE, 12 Piotr Eberhardt POLITICAL MIGRATIONS ON POLISH TERRITORIES (1939–1950) WARSZAWA 2011 http://rcin.org.pl Redakcja / Editorial Board: prof. dr hab. Leszek Starkel prof. dr hab. Teresa Kozłowska−Szczęsna prof. dr hab. Piotr Korcelli Oryginał / Polish original: Migracje polityczne na ziemiach polskich (1939–1950) Instytut Zachodni, Poznań 2010 Recenzenci / Reviewers: prof. dr hab. Tomasz Kaczmarek prof. dr hab. Zbigniew Mazur dr hab. Andrzej Rykała Tłumaczenie / Translated by: Jan Owsiński Ilustracja na okładce / Cover illustration by: Monika Trypuz PL ISSN 1643−2312 ISBN 978- 83- 61590- 46- 0 Technical editors: Ludmiła Kwiatkowska Aleksandra Deręgowska © Copyright (English edition) by Instytut Geografii i Przestrzennego Zagospodarowania im. Stanisława Leszczyckiego PAN, Warszawa 2011 Druk i oprawa / Printed by: Drukarnia Klimiuk 00−719 Warszawa, ul. Zwierzyniecka 8a http://rcin.org.pl To Adam http://rcin.org.pl http://rcin.org.pl Contents Preface for English edition (L.A. Kosiński) .................................................. 9 Foreword (A. Sakson) ................................................................................