Archival Descriptions

Displaying items 5,201 to 5,220 of 55,818
  1. Behörden des Schutzgebietes Samoa

    Bestandsbeschreibung Deutsche Kolonialverwaltgung; Geschäftsstelle; Kaiserlicher Hof; Deutscher Konsul. Erschliessungszustand vorläufiges Findbuch (englische Sprache) Zitierweise BArch R 1004-F/...

  2. Behr, Winrich (Major)

    Geschichte des Bestandsbildners Winrich Hans Hubertus Behr Lebensdaten 22.01.1918 geb. in Berlin 25.04.2011 gest. in Hubbelrath Werdegang 06.04.1936 Eintritt als Fahnenjunker bei der 3./A.A. 3 04.01.1937 Kommandiert zur Kriegsschule München 15.01.1941 Unterstellung zur 5. (mot.) Division in Afrika 15.05.1941 Chef der 3./A.A. 3 10.09.1941 Versetzung an die Schule für Schnelle Truppen nach Wünsdorf 15.02.1942 Versetzung Pz.Tr.Schule Krampnitz 01.12.1942 1. Ordonnanzoffizier (O 1) beim Generalstab der 6.Armee in Stalingrad 01.03.1943 Versetzung Führer-Reserve und kommandiert zur 79. Infanterie...

  3. Beil, Gerhard

    Geschichte des Bestandsbildners geb. 28. Mai 1926 in Leipzig, gest. 19. Aug. 2010 in Berlin, Minister für Außenhandel Bearbeitungshinweis unbearbeitet Bestandsbeschreibung Bestandsgeschichte: Übernahmen im Febr. und Okt. 2013, noch kein Nachlassübereignungsvertrag Erschließungszustand unbearbeitet Vorarchivische Ordnung keine Zitierweise BArch N 2605/...

  4. Beil, Gerhard.- Bildbestand

    Geschichte des Bestandsbildners geb. 28. Mai 1926 in Leipzig, gest. 19. Aug. 2010 in Berlin, Minister für Außenhandel Bearbeitungshinweis unbearbeitet Bestandsbeschreibung Bestandsgeschichte: Übernahmen im Febr. und Okt. 2013, noch kein Nachlassübereignungsvertrag Erschließungszustand unbearbeitet, vom Schriftgutbestand noch nicht separiert Vorarchivische Ordnung keine Zitierweise BArch N 2605-BILD/...

  5. Beim ITS verwahrte Effekten

    • Arolsen Archives: International Center on Nazi Persecution
    • DE ITS 1.2.9
    • German
    • digital reproductions 19854 Ziel des ITS ist eine Rückgabe der Effekten an ehemalige Verfolgte und Familienangehörige. Weitere Informationen hierzu befinden sich auf der ITS-Webseite. Leihgaben an museale Einrichtungen erfolgen lediglich in Sonderfällen.

    Bei den Effekten handelt es sich um persönliche Gegenstände, die Häftlingen bei ihrer Einlieferung ins Konzentrationslager abgenommen wurden, wie etwa Brieftaschen, Ausweispapiere, Fotos oder Briefe. Geld und Wertgegenstände hatten die Nationalsozialisten damals konfisziert. Die Effekten haben von daher zumeist keinen materiellen, aber einen hohen ideellen Wert für die Familienangehörigen.Die ehemaligen Eigentümer der im ITS verwahrten Effekten waren überwiegend politisch Verfolgte. Vermutlich sind Angehörige aller Nationen darunter, deren Länder von den Nationalsozialisten besetzt wurden. ...

  6. Beit Din documents

    Consists of documents from a Beit Din established in the Central Bureau of Orthodox Communities of Hungary for the purpose of releasing agunot. These official documents grant religious permission to remarry after the Holocaust. Includes a marriage permission document for men whose wives were murdered at Auschwitz, a form for documenting testimonies given by the survivors, a form for stating the acceptance of Beit Din's authority, and a form regarding the death of a wife.

  7. Beit Din in Warsaw collection

    Collection of letters and documents from the Beit Din (rabbinical court) in Warsaw from the latter part of 1939, immediately before the outbreak of the war. Includes handwritten and printed documents concerning family matters signed by the dayanim of the Warsaw Beit Din.

  8. Beitar Austria collection

    Photos of the Beitar movement in Austria from 1935 - 1937; Copper symbol of the Beitar movement in Austria

  9. Bekennende Kirche: various papers

    This material relates to the growing opposition to the Nazi-supported German Christian Movement by members of the German Evangelical community. In particular, the newly formed Confessing Church (Bekennende Kirche) rejected the authority of the National Synod which was presided over by Nazis and demanded allegiance to Adolf Hitler. Correspondents include pastor Heinrich Vogel; Otto Dibelius, general superintendent of the Brandenburg Church; Albertz, superintendent of the Bekennende Kirche, Berlin-Brandenburg; Dr Duckert, Gauobmann Deutsche Christen.

  10. Bela and Gisa Pless collection

    Documents and photographs related to Bela and Gisa Pless [donors' parents], Czechoslovakian Jews who survived Sered and Theresienstadt; also includes Bela Pless's memoir and a yellow star, as well as letters.

  11. Bela E. Holocaust testimony

    Videotape testimony of Bela E., one of three children. She recalls attending schools in Vilnius; her father's and brother's prewar deaths; German invasion; ghettoization; her sister's deportation; her deportation to Kaiserwald; slave labor digging trenches, then in a factory; escaping with a fellow prisoner; a Pole hiding, then denouncing, them; escaping and hiding with another man; liberation by Soviet troops; traveling to Austria in 1946; marriage; and emigration to the United States in 1949. Ms. E. discusses learning her sister was killed in Auschwitz; nightmares; and her husband's murde...

  12. Bela F. Holocaust testimony

    Videotape testimony of Bela F., who was born in Radom, Poland in 1924. She recalls her happy, observant childhood; attending Jewish school; being rounded-up in September 1939 while playing; forced labor in Polano?w; joining her family in the Radom ghetto; continued forced labor in Polano?w; obtaining false papers; her father's arrest outside the ghetto; his execution in February 1942; working in a factory outside Radom; her mother's refusal to join her; the ghetto's liquidation (she never saw her mother, sister, and brother again); transfer to Bliz?yn in May 1943; forced labor; beatings; co...

  13. Bela Friedman document collection

    Contains a Schutzbrief (protective letter) issued to Bela Friedman by the Swiss Legation in Budapest; dated October 23, 1944.

  14. Bela G. Holocaust testimony

    Videotape testimony of Bela G., who was born in Radzyn? Podlaski, Poland, one of four sisters. She recounts attending school; German invasion; ghettoization; forced factory labor; round-ups; hiding in a bunker for eight days; transfer to Miedzyrzec Podlaski ghetto; briefly returning to Radzyn? with her family, then going back to Miedzyrzec; hiding with her father during a round-up (her mother was deported and killed); deportation to Auschwitz; separation from her father; sending bread to him through a friend; a privileged assignment to the Canada Kommando; sharing extra food with a friend; ...

  15. Bela Gondos family collection

    The collection consists of a drawing, three chemises, a doll, eyeglasses, food container, handkerchief, suitcase, wallet, wristwatch, documents, photographs, and writings relating to the experiences of Dr. Bela Gondos, his wife Anna, and their daughter Judit before the Holocaust in Budapest, Hungary, during the Holocaust in Budapest, on the Kasztner train, in Bergen-Belsen, and Switzerland, and after the Holocaust in Switzerland and the United States.

  16. Bela Herskovits collection

    Consists of one long playing 33 1/3 RPM record entitled "Two Cantors at Carnegie Hall: Eddie Cantor and Bela Herskovits," released by Tikva Records. This record was probably recorded around 1958. Also includes articles regarding the Holocaust experiences of Bela Herskovits, the former chief cantor of a synagogue in Budapest, Hungary; included are articles entitled "Cantor of the Ghetto" and "He poisoned his wife to save her life!."

  17. Bela Imredy makes a speech

    Interior shot of a hall, crowded with people. Hungarian fascists salute. Bela Imredy addresses the crowd (natural sound) against a backdrop marked "HARC - Gyözelemig!"

  18. Béla Ingber family papers

    The collection consists of correspondence and photographs documenting the Holocaust-era experiences of Béla Ingber, originally from Munkács, Hungary (now Mukacheve, Ukraine) as a forced-laborer in Hungary during World War II and as a Jewish refugee in Italy from 1945-1947. Correspondence includes postcards to Béla while he was a forced-laborer from his father Kálmán Ingber in Munkács, and post-war letters from his brothers Jóska, Miki, and Oli and his sister Libu. Photographs include depictions of pre-war family life, Béla and his brothers in the Czech Army, Béla as a forced-laborer in Hung...

  19. Bela K. Holocaust testimony

    Videotape testimony of Bela K., who was born in ?o?dz?, Poland in 1929. She recounts a happy childhood despite pervasive antisemitism; a large extended family; her father's mobilization immediately before the war; German invasion; her father's return, seriously wounded; ghettoization; her father's death; forced labor; the deaths of many relatives; hiding during round-ups of children; her grandfather's death; hiding during the ghetto's liquidation; discovery; deportation to Auschwitz; separation from everyone but one aunt; learning about the gas chambers; assistance from her aunt when she wa...

  20. Bela M. Holocaust testimony

    Videotape testimony of Bela M., who was born in Sharkowshchyna, Poland (presently Belarus) in 1931, the oldest of three daughters. She recalls her father was a Lubavitch Hasid; attending a Jewish school, then Polish school; antisemitic harassment; Soviet occupation; German invasion; ghettoization; a group escape; separation from her family; walking to Pastavy; her father finding her and bringing her to the Glubokoye ghetto; rumors of liquidation; a non-Jew hiding her family; returning to the ghetto when it became too dangerous; hiding in a bunker; escaping when the Germans bombed them (her ...