Germany
Found in 1120 Collections and/or Records:
"Clementine Churchill": letters from MS to CSC and Winston Churchill, 1945, 1945-01 - 1945-10
Colonial League Bulletins, 1939-02 - 1940-03
Prints of the Colonial League weekly news bulletin, mainly on Germany's claim to her former colonies in Africa and colonial affairs in general, particularly relating to Africa.
Also includes: notes by LSA on publishing colonial propaganda through the weekly bulletins, and on the League's purpose.
Colonial League correspondence, 1938-10 - 1946-05
Commemorative programme of King Edward VII's visit to Kiel, 1904
Detailing schedules, names of ships, procedure and guest list.
With maps showing the route.
Common Market, 1994-01 - 1997-07
Conservative Research Department: reports, 1952-04 - 1954-07
Subjects include: old age pensions; the Transport Bill; the convertibility of sterling; foreign affairs, particularly Germany, the Soviet Union and Korea [North Korea and South Korea]; the Colonial Development Corporation; the political situation in Nigeria; the Economic Survey, 1953; housing; the Finance Bill, 1952; the Empire Settlement Bill, 1952; the Government's first six months in office.
Copies and originals of correspondence and notes by Martin Gilbert on the origins of the Second World War, 1931 - 1968-08
Copy extracts from the diary of the German Naval Attaché in Stockholm, 1940 and 1942
Papers comprising a memoir, correspondence and official papers about his work as Naval Attaché in Stockholm, 1940-5
Correspondence, 1921 - 1967
Correspondence A - Z, 1936-12 - 1937-12
Correspondence A - Z, 1938-01 - 1938-12
Correspondence: general, 1867-08 - 1930-01
This series of papers includes correspondence with MPs and notables of the period about current affairs and daily business. Correspondents include Herbert von Bismarck, Joseph Chamberlain, William Thomas Stead, Arthur John Bigge [later first Baron Stamfordham], Francis Knollys [later Viscount Knollys, Private secretary to King Edward VII and George V], Winston S. Churchill, and Maurice Hankey. Some of the volumes also include cuttings and printed material.
Correspondence of Airy, Christie and others, 1876 - 1890
Correspondence on a quartz crystal clock, 1951
Correspondence regarding the disposal of a quartz crystal clock, which was removed from Germany after the Second World War as part of the German reparations.
Correspondence on foreign observatories, 1958 - 1961
Correspondence regarding foreign observatories, including those in Czechoslovakia, Italy, Mexico, Switzerland, Argentina, Turkey, Portugal, Japan, Germany, Belgium, Finland and Denmark.
Correspondence on German observatories, 1945 - 1951
Correspondence regarding German observatories, including correspondence with Professor A. Kopff, Heidelberg, Germany; a comparison by Kopff of the systems of the General Catalogue and Third Fundamental Catalogue, 1949; and correspondence with O. Heckmann of the Bergadorf Observatory, Germany.
Correspondence on planetaria, 1946 - 1947
Correspondence with the Admiralty and the Science Museum regarding proposals for a London Planetarium; correspondence with the U.S.S.R. Embassy and Trade Delegation concerning Zeiss Planetaria; reports on planetaria in Vienna and Germany; and correspondence with the Australian Scientific Research Liaison Office.
Correspondence on the Göttingen Lectures, 1950
Correspondence with foreign observatories, 1964 - 1968
Correspondence with German observatories, 1955 - 1960
Correspondence with German observatories, including correspondence with Professor O.H.L. Heckmann, Dr H. Haffner, J. Dick and Professor G. Rienacker.
Correspondence with MPs and Peers, surnames "HOWE (GEOFFREY) 2", October 1976-circa January 1978, 1976-10 - 1978
Correspondence with the Control Office for Germany and Austria, 1946 - 1947
Originally stored in small brown files, some of which were parcelled up in brown paper, and numbered in Roman numerals.
Correspondence between Quintin Hogg and government departments, mainly comprising correspondence about concerns or complaints of his Oxford constituents, 1938-50.
With some later correspondence in response to letters from members of the public, 1973-7.