Meyers Orts- und Verkehrs-Lexicon des and 50 similar items
Meyers Orts- und Verkehrs-Lexicon des Deutschen Reichs Vol 1-2-3 & Companion Vol
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View full item details »
Shipping options
Return policy
Full refund available within 90 days
Purchase protection
Payment options
PayPal accepted
PayPal Credit accepted
Venmo accepted
PayPal, MasterCard, Visa, Discover, and American Express accepted
Maestro accepted
Amazon Pay accepted
Nuvei accepted
Item traits
Category: | |
---|---|
Quantity Available: |
Only one in stock, order soon |
Condition: |
Brand New |
ISBN: |
Does not apply |
Author: |
Raymond S. Wright III |
Book Title: |
Meyers Orts- Und Verkehrs-Lexicon |
Language: |
German |
Topic: |
Books |
Book Series: |
Meyers |
Format: |
Hardcover |
Publisher: |
Abrams |
Genre: |
History/Research/Genealogy |
Publication Year: |
2000 |
Original Language: |
German |
Country/Region of Manufacture: |
United States |
Listing details
Seller policies: | |
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Shipping discount: |
No combined shipping offered |
Posted for sale: |
More than a week ago |
Item number: |
1711559767 |
Item description
Meyers Orts- und Verkehrs-Lexicon des Deutschen Reichs Vol 1-2-3 Plus Blue Companion Volume. Still in original box from Chicago University - complete and unread. I will ship it in the same box. Low price as I am closing store.
Background
Almost all serious German research begins with Meyers Orts- und
Verkehrs-Lexikon, the massive gazetteer that describes approximately 210,000
cities, towns, hamlets, and dwelling places in the German Empire prior to World
War I. It is an essential tool for locating information about every inhabited
place in the former Empire, be it an independent community such as a city,
village, market, estate, or hamlet, or a place with a few inhabitants belonging
to another community. The millions of facts presented about these localities
represent an entire library of reference works and enable the researcher to determine
the whereabouts of civil, religious, court, and military records.
The Reprint To use
Meyers effectively, readers must understand its purpose, be able to interpret
the gothic font in which it is printed, and grasp how the information contained
in locality entries will guide researchers to records in today's archives,
record offices, and libraries. Accordingly, this reprint of the last great
edition of 1912-1913, in German, contains a new Researcher's Guide" and
translations of the original Introduction and Instruction for the Use of the
Gazetteer by Professor Raymond S. Wright of Brigham Young University, rendering
the greatMeyers Orts- und Verkehrs-Lexikon accessible to the average
researcher. In addition, this reprint edition includes a third volume
consisting of the often omitted Appendix to Volume II and the scarce Supplement
of September 1913. Thus a rare and indispensable work, encompassing thousands
of pages and dozens of maps--previously found in only a handful
libraries--is not only available to researchers but is now a
practical research tool.
Contents Throughout this
vast work locality entries are arranged alphabetically and describe each place
in terms of the type of community it is (city, village, hamlet, etc.) and the
civil, court, military, and religious jurisdictions under which it falls. An
understanding of these several jurisdictions will assist researchers in their
efforts to find original records that are housed today in church or government
offices and archives.
In the old German Empire
three levels of government existed: national, state, and local. In Meyers,
civil registration districts, court districts, and military districts are the
national jurisdictions most often noted in the locality entries. Most of the
other entries described in the entries are state and local. In the past, each
of these levels of government maintained their own archives, and this support
continues today. All three levels of government have preserved records that
will interest historians and genealogists. Records created by all levels of
state government in the former Empire, including records of provinces and
districts, are normally preserved in the state archives of the present-day
German state whose boundaries encompass the historic state or province. Records
of cities and towns, such as citizen's lists, tax lists, and property lists,
are maintained in local archives, although in some cases they have been
transferred to the nearest state archive. More localized yet, records of birth,
marriage, and death from 1876, when mandatory civil registration became law,
are sometimes found in local city or town halls, while records of even smaller
jurisdictions--villages, hamlets, etc.--can often be found in nearby civil
registration offices.
Religious records, in
particular records of baptism, confirmation, marriage, and burial, are found in
the various parish jurisdictions noted in the work. The parish continues to be
the basic unit of church government for Germany's dominant
religions--Evangelical Lutheran and Roman Catholic--and most of their records
remain in the custody of local churches or in larger ecclesiastical archives.
Many of these parish records have been microfilmed by the LDS Church and are
available at the Family History Library in Salt Lake City or in Family History
Centers throughout the country.
Much the same is true of
court records and military records, the former containing details of probates,
school records, records of births, marriages, and deaths, and civil suits; the
latter containing important personal information about an individual: name,
birth date, birthplace, marriage date and place, spouses's name, names of
dependents, and service record. Again, using the locality tools provided by
this gazetteer, the researcher can quickly determine if the records are held on
microfilm/microfiche by the LDS Church.
In Brief Summing up the
merits of this monumental work, we can safely say that it is the best tool
available to help genealogists identify the agencies and jurisdictions that
created records about people who lived in Germany. Because the locality entries
describe the government, court, religious, and military jurisdictions of
Germany, researchers can use this information to identify the location of each
community's records in modern archives or government offices. The same
information helps researchers determine whether original records are available
on microfilm or microfiche at the Family History Library and at LDS Family
History Centers worldwide.
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