Posted on 03/04/2009 8:09:43 AM PST by Mike Fieschko
The collapse of the Historical Archive of Cologne on Tuesday buried more than a millenium's worth of documents under tons of rubble. Archivists and historians hope something can be salvaged, but the future of the city's past is grim.
Disaster struck in Cologne on Tuesday, as the building housing the city's Historical Archive suddenly collapsed. According to city officials, two people are officially missing and believed dead.
... Cologne's archives are one of the only collections in Germany to have survived World War II completely intact. Because of Cologne's long history, much of its heritage was stored locally rather than in a state archive. ...
According to an archivist and historian with firsthand knowledge of the situation, volunteers have already pulled close to 9,000 documents out of the building's basement and the offices of archive employees. ...
The Historical Archives contained extensive documentation from the city's Hanseatic period, as well as the archives of other Hanseatic League members, invaluable for historians looking at Europe's economic development.
The sheer numbers -- in total, the building had more than 18 kilometers of shelves -- reflect the rich history of what was once Germany's largest metropolis. The archive's collection of original documents included thousands from Cologne's golden age. The founding charter of the University of Cologne, signed in 1388, was inside, along with the documents that established Cologne as a free imperial city under Emperor Friedrich III in 1475. Two of the four manuscripts in the hand of Albertus Magnus, considered the greatest German theologian of the Middle Ages, were kept in the archive's rare books collection.
(Excerpt) Read more at spiegel.de ...
Yes, I have used many libraries over the decades, etc.
I too have German lines, immigrants from the 1740s and 1840s.
Have Dutch immigrants, some 1620s to New Amsterdam (NY)
and 1840s
Around 200+ 9th great grandparents from England 1620s-1630s.
Have gone back beyond the Middle Ages with many of the lines in detail.
Over 12 5th & 6th great grandfathers who served in the Rev. War including two sons of German immigs.
The real clue is to not take the info as fact right off.
Older books have many errors. Internet loaded with errors.
The FHL & online is overloaded with errors from many who
sent in their lines.
we were there just last July...beautiful city...Catherdral going under renovation. Amazing to see age old buildings standing....hope the Krauts are able to recover all that valuable history.
I hope they were copied and stored somewhere but just not mentioned in the article. Such a loss.
Hate the thought of all the original docs. from 1,000 yrs ago gone perhaps.
I was in the Koln Cathedral, what a great historical place that is.
What a terrible loss.
A piece at one of the links says that a “tube” tunnel was being dug under the front wall.
Thursday, March 05, 2009
Cologne Archive Collapse: All is Not Lost!
Family Tree Magazine
When the Stadtarchiv Kölnor City Archive of Colognecollapsed Tuesday afternoon, two people died, surrounding buildings were irretrievably damaged, and more than a thousand years of records were buried in the rubble.
The archive contained 65,000 documents, the oldest coming from the year 922. The archive’s holdingsmore than 16 miles of filesincluded tens of thousands of maps, photos, posters and one-of-a-kind artifacts from the Middle Ages. The collection was valued at $500 million, according to Welt.
The city archive, which first found a place in Cologne city hall in 1406, withstood World War II with no losses. Officials say the building fell into a crater created by work on a nearby subway line.
The building that collapsed was built in 1971. According to Wikipedia, it was built with an estimated service life of only 30 years. The archive reached its holding capacity in 1996; some material has been removed for storage elsewhere.
While emergency workers attempted to stabilize the building with concrete, about 100 volunteers have pitched in to save valuable documents from the rubble since Tuesday night, according to a city press release.
A small portion of the archives was in an unharmed area of the building. Rain is expected over the next few days, so a temporary roof will be set up over the collapse site to attempt to save more documents.
Hamburg genealogist Andrea Bentschneider did research at the Cologne archive once and describes its holdings as “gigantic.”
The collapse comes at an especially bad time, she says, because German privacy law recently changed to allow easier access to civil records. The city archive of Cologne had announced that as of this month, all death records up to 1978, marriage records before 1928 and birth records before 1898 would be available for research without restriction.
“We can only hope that these civil records as well as all other records were secured and saved on microfilm or a similar medium. Otherwise 1,000 years of Cologne’s history may be lost forever,” Bentschneider says.
It seems that much of the archive’s content may be safe. Welt reports that former city archive head says a large part of the archives pre-1945 files were microfilmed; the backups are stored in the Barbarastollen archive in the Black Forest.
And FamilySearch filmed 171 rolls of film from the Cologne archive in 1984, says public affairs manager Paul Nauta. The library has been able to help other archives before by providing copies of the lost documents. FamilySearchs holdings include these items from the Cologne archive:
Genealogy and coast of arms 1350-1880
Tax lists 1487-1703
Orphans house registers 1592-1788
Soldier pay records 1552-1613
Court records, inheritance and land 1220-1798
Court minutes 1413-1652
Town council minutes 1440-1653
“This is one of the clarion calls for why preservation services offered by FamilySearch and other like organizations can be so critical. Most genealogy consumers are aware of the convenient access value, but the tragedy of the Cologne archive reiterates the value for preservation,” Nauta says.
Historic preservation | Libraries and Archives | Public Records | Vital Records
Thanks!
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