Archival Descriptions

Displaying items 4,861 to 4,880 of 10,181
  1. Министерство на правосъдието

    • Ministerstvo na pravosudieto
    • Ministry of Justice

    This collection contains reports, protocols, correspondence, telegrams, statements, requests, circulars, name lists, annual reports, and maps. Collection consists of correspondence with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Forensic Medicine Institute of Sofia, the Ministry of Finance, the Ministry of War, the Ministry of Welfare, the Ministry of Trade and Industry, the Ministry of Public Education, the Bulgarian National Bank, General Union of Agricultural Economic Cooperative, the Directorate of National Propaganda, Council of Ministries, and Bulgarian cit...

  2. Opérations de recensement

    1. Préfecture de Constantine. Service des questions juives et des sociétés secrètes
    2. Statut des Juifs
    3. Recensement des Juifs
    • Census operations

    Census of foreigners of Jewish race: Prefectural circular no. 8236/P of 5 November 1940. Application in Algeria of the Law of 2 June 1941: acknowledgement of receipt by the municipalities of prefectural circular no. 13501/AC2 8 of 29 August 1941. Dispatch of census forms to the prefecture: prefectural circular no. 14045/AC2 of 12 September 1941, reply from the mayor of Batna (Algeria). Census of foreign or naturalised Israelites established or refugees in French territory since 1 January 1936: Prefectural Circular no. 6780/SE1 of 1 April 1942. Declarations under Article 1 of the Law of 2 Ju...

  3. The concentration camp in Šabac

    1. Државна комисија за утврђивање злочина окупатора и њихових помагача

    Materials about the concentration camp in Sabac. The camp was active from 1941 to 1944. It was established first of all for the Jews of the so called "Kladovo Transport", a group of about 1.200 Jewish refugees who had fled from Nazi persecution in the Third Reich in 1938. In their attempt to reach Palestina, they were stopped on the Yugoslav-Romanian border and sent to Šabac. After the German invasion they were all arrested. Men would be all shot in October 1941, while women and children would be sent in December to the Sajmiste concentration camp in Belgrade and then killed with the other ...