archivauskunft.de

historical research service in Berlin

Nobility Reference Book: Almanach de Gotha

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Spines of early prints at Thurn und Taxis Hofbibliothek Regensburg (Foto: A. Genest)

Published annually from 1785 onwards until 1944 by Justus Perthes Publishing House in Gotha the Almanach de Gotha (Gothaischer genealogischer Hofkalender) was regarded as an authority in the classification of monarchies, ducal houses, families of former rulers, and royalty. The serial was revived in 1951 by Starke Publishing in Limburg (Western Germany) as Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels (GHdA). Rambow Genealogie provides a well-structured overview of digitized volumes that are available online free of charge: http://www.rambow.de/adelslexika.html

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Compact Memory

Compact Memory
The Jewish collections departement at the Library of Johann Christian Senckenberg University in Frankfurt a. M. in cooperation with the Library of Germania Judaica in Cologne developed a fulltext database of Jewish periodicals, which are a rich source for research in the field of Judaism in the modern era. The virtual archive Compact Memory provides free access to 118 periodicals with 700000 digitized pages. The periodicals are listed alphabetically, related issues chronologically. Beyond that fulltext query is also possible.

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Berlin Bibliography

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The online database Berlin-Bibliography, which is provided by the Center of Berlin Studies at the Central and Regional Library Berlin, contains bibliographical references to literature (monographs and articles) about Berlin from 1985 onwards. Predecessors of this database are printed series, that were published in both parts of the divided city of Berlin:

[Unser] Berlin [Hauptstadt der DDR] in Buch und Zeitschrift / Stadtbibliothek Berlin
Berlin-Bibliographie / Historische Kommission zu Berlin

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Tip of the month: Breslau Address Book 1935

Adress Book Breslau 1941

Historical adress books are an important reference for research in the field of regional, social and economic history as well as for genealogy. Libraries, archives and non profit-projects make these sources accessible for online use. We would like to draw attention to the Breslau Address Book from 1935, which is provided by the Silesian Digital Library. The address book contains a mercantile directory, lists of community facilities and all kinds of associations and organizations.

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Munich Digitisation Centre (MDZ)

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The Munich Digitisation Centre (MDZ) handles the digitisation and online publication of the cultural heritage preserved by the Bavarian State Library and by other institutions. It provides one of the largest and fastest growing digital collections in Germany.

The Digital Collections reflect the traditional special collection fields of the library: History, Classical Antiquity, Eastern Europe, Musicology. It comprises manuscripts, early prints, modern books, maps and photographic collections as well as journals and newspapers.

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5th Open door day in German archive

Archivstraße

At the occasion of the upcoming “Tag der Archive” several German archives open their doors to the public on the first weekend in march (6-7 March 2010). This years motto is “In Search of Clues”.
But also on weekdays it is possible to visit guided tours and exibitions featuring treasures from their own collections.

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OAIster

Open-Access-LogoOAIster provides access to free academic content like digitized books, articles, audio & video files, photographic images, theses and research papers. It has grown to become one of the world’s largest aggregations of records pointing to open archive collections with more than 23 million records contributed by over 1,100 institutions worldwide. OAIster was built by harvesting from open archive collections using the Open Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting (OAI-PMH). From the beginning of 2002 to the end of October 2009 it was the benchmark OAI search engine project of the University of Michigan. In October 2009 OAIster’s records transitioned to the WorldCat database, which is operated by the semi-commercial library service OCLC. As of last week, an OAIster only interface is online and ready to use.

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Biographical Portal

Volumes of the “Allgemeine Deutsche Bibliographie”

The “Biographical Portal” is a cooperative project of the Bavarian State Library, the Historical Committee at the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities, the Austrian Academy of Sciences, and the Foundation Historical Dictionary of Switzerland. A joint index makes available the following biographical dictionaries:

In this way, more than 100,000 scholarly biographies of persons from all social backgrounds and nearly all periods of German, Austrian, and Swiss history may be accessed. Further national and regional biographical works of reference are planned for future inclusion in the portal.

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Holiday Riddle: Berlin Commemorative Plaques


Technical support: Nico Knoll
Foto: Wikimedia Commons, GNU-Licence , Author: OTFW

Berlin’s white-blue plaques commemorate a link between a certain location and a notable person or an event. The current scheme was founded in 1987, in the run-up to the 750th anniversary of Berlin. The plates are designed by Wieland Schütz and manufactured at the Royal Porcelain Manufactory (KPM). The white-blue plaques are financed from private resource while the Berlin Historical Commission acts as scientific advisory council of the programm.

In this year’s advent riddle we are looking for the name of a person, whose memorial plaque you find on top of this page in form of a jigsaw puzzle. By clicking the pieces of the puzzle next to the missing one you can change the order of the jigsaw pieces.

Please send your answer to  buero@archivauskunft.de until January, 3rd 2010,  24.00 CET. The winners could choose between the following prizes:

–> solution

Tip of the month: Interactive map “Memorial Landscape of the Berlin Wall”

Berlin Wall fragment at Bernauer Straße
Berlin Wall fragment at Bernauer Straße (Picture by A. Genest)

The image most people have of the Berlin Wall today is based on this view of its western face, covered in graffiti and drawings. From the East-German point of view, it was the last in a series of insurmountable obstacles, cordoned off and concealed from sight.
A new online documentation “Memorial Landscape of the Berlin Wall” is provided by the Dept. of Conservation at Brandenburg University of Technology that strives to fill in this gap between image and reality, a reality that has become history and is nearly not visible today in downtown Berlin.
The interactive map is going to be released also in an English version.

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