[Freyenwald correspondence II]

Identifier
990004845320304146
Language of Description
English
Dates
1 Jan 1936 - 31 Dec 1938
Languages
  • German
  • French
  • Russian
Source
EHRI Partner

Scope and Content

The file contains several letters regarding Jonak von Freyenwald and Sergjusz von Nilus, the son of Nilus, Sergieĭ. The correspondence is informing about the agrarian invention of Roman von Lassow. Freyenwald and Sergjusz von Nilus informed Fleischhauer and Richard Walther Darre, who was the Reichs Minister of Food and Agriculture about the Lassow invention. As they discribe the situation in Poland and Germany the agriculture would profit enormously if the use of Lassow invention would start. But unfortunately nether Fleischhauer nor Darre were willing to try his new system. Also handwritten notes relating to that topic are attached. Furthermore letters regarding the exceeding knowledge of the 'Protocols' of Freyenwald can be seen. He wrote to different people in order to get more informations or several documents to extent his archive and knowledge. He further tried to get more informations about Sergieĭ Nilus and his book 'The Great within the Small and Antichrist, an Imminent Political Possibility'. Freyenwald was not only writing to several people but also traveled around, to meet the people in person or in order to get the documents he asked for. Arno Schickedanz is writting in one correnspondence, that Freyenwald was most certain the person with the highest knowledge of the 'Protocols' and with the biggest archive regarding the 'Jewish question'. He is suggesting Freyenwald for journalistic work in the 'Welt-Dienst'.

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Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements

Mode of access: WWW

Note(s)

  • Electronic access only

  • Letters, Postcards, Handwritten notes and letters, maps

  • Electronic text and image data. Jerusalem : Yad Vashem 2015

  • Title viewed 28.5.2018

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This description is derived directly from structured data provided to EHRI by a partner institution. This collection holding institution considers this description as an accurate reflection of the archival holdings to which it refers at the moment of data transfer.