Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Bebelplatz building housed the library until 1914, when the headquarters moved into new, even larger premises on Unter den Linden, designed by court architect Ernst von Ihne. This was the height of the library's development before the First World War. Today the old Royal building houses the Faculty of Law of Humboldt University.
Alte Bibliothek. The Alte Bibliothek (lit. ' Old Library '), nicknamed Kommode (), is a listed building on Bebelplatz in the historic centre of Berlin.It was erected by order of Frederick the Great from 1774 to 1780 according to plans by Georg Christian Unger and Georg Friedrich Boumann in Baroque style.
At nearly the same location, a new building was erected from 1878 to 1886. At this time, the library was renamed Königliche Landesbibliothek (Royal State Library). After the end of the monarchy, the institution was again renamed and gained its current name Württembergische Landesbibliothek. The library was nearly completely destroyed in World ...
the Berlin State Library (Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin), the largest academic library in the German language and former library of the Kingdom of Prussia; the Göttingen State and University Library (Niedersächsische Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Göttingen) is among other things the Staatsbibliothek of Lower Saxony
In German-speaking countries, History is operated by History Channel Germany, which was a joint venture of A&E Networks and NBC Universal Global Networks Germany. The channel began as the History Channel on 15 November 2004, and changed its name to History on 11 January 2009. [26] Since 1 June 2017 the channel is fully owned by A&E Networks ...
The library of Niko Gunzburg (1882–1984) of history, law and Jewish culture, were confiscated by the ERR in January 1941, and shipped to Berlin in February 1941 in ten crates. Niko Gunzburg was a noted professor of law at the University of Ghent , was a leading member of the Jewish community, a prominent Mason, and he was also a protest ...
Approximately 35,000 linear meters of archives with a library service of some 185,000 volumes and 200 periodical subscriptions. The archives include: Official papers of successive governments of Brandenburg-Prussia, including central administrative and judicial proceedings of institutions such as: Prussian Royal Supreme Court
They were found in the church library in 1879 and 16 of these manuscripts were transferred in 1880 to the Royal Library in Berlin, the present day Berlin State Library, where they are now kept, and called the Erfurt Collection. [9] According to one reference, there are bloodstains on the Tosefta manuscript. [10]