The Wormsgau

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The Wormsgau. Scientific journal of the city of Worms and the Altertumsverein Worms e. V.

Area of ​​Expertise Regional history of the city of Worms and its surrounding area
language German
publishing company City Archives Worms (Germany)
First edition 1926
Frequency of publication until 1995 irregular, since 1998 mostly annually
editor City of Worms and Worms Antiquities Association
Web link Website
ISSN

The Wormsgau is a magazine published since April 1926 on the history of the city of Worms and its surroundings. The irregular, last annual publication has been published since 1926 jointly by the city of Worms and the Worms Antiquities Association , of which it is also a member. The magazine is named after the medieval district of Wormsgau .

Content

In Wormsgau, essays appear mainly on urban and regional history topics in the historical Worms area, including parts of Rheinhessen and the communities in the area of ​​the former diocese of Worms . The essays cover a broad historical and art-historical spectrum up to questions of building history and building restoration. The development of the medieval town, the development of the Jewish community in Worms, the history of the town in the 19th century and the building history of the Romanesque churches in Worms were among the priorities in recent years.

In addition to the main part of essays, the magazine always contains a part of the report on the work of municipal cultural institutions ( municipal archives Worms , City Library Worms , Museum of the City Worms etc.), reviews urban and regional historical publications and the updating of Worms- bibliography . The editorial office of the magazine lies with the city archives, which is also the office of the antiquity association Worms.

The magazine has been published by Wernerschen Verlagsgesellschaft since 2014 . Volumes 1–16 (1926–1955) have been available online since 2018.

Main series

Booklets

In addition to the main series, so-called “supplements” with monographs on urban and regional historical topics have been published at irregular intervals since 1936 ( ISSN  0342-426X ). Supplement 41 was last presented in 2014.

  1. Erich Schwan: The names of streets and alleys in medieval Worms (1936)
  2. Albert Dambmann: The urban geography of Worms (1936)
  3. Walter Bauer: Building history of the Pauluskirche and Magnuskirche zu Worms (1936)
  4. Alois Seiler: The Worms Monastery in the Middle Ages (1936)
  5. Willhelm Müller: The constitution of the free imperial city of Worms at the end of the 18th century with special consideration of the time under French occupation up to the peace of Lunéville (1801) (1937)
  6. Paulus Weißenberger: History of the Kirschgarten Monastery in Worms (1936)
  7. Carl Lepper: Seehof. The story of a vanished village (1938)
  8. Friedrich M. Illert : History of the Reformed Congregation and the Friedrichskirche in Worms from the beginning to the Evangelical Union in 1822 (1939)
  9. Anna Martin: From the files of the fishing guild. Contributions to the history of the Worms fishing industry (1941)
  10. Ludwig Knobloch: Agrarian and constitutional history of the Wormsgau in the Middle Ages (1951)
  11. Wilhelm Rudolf Alter: Studies on the History of the Constitution and Administration of the Imperial City of Pfeddersheim at the End of the Middle Ages and at the Beginning of the Modern Age (1951)
  12. Georg M. Illert : The prehistoric settlement picture of the Worms Rhine crossing (1952)
  13. Diether Weitrich: The mountain church in Worms-Hochheim and its crypt. A contribution to the architectural history of the early Middle Ages, in particular to the question of the origin and significance of four-pillar crypts (1953)
  14. Friedrich M. Illert: History of the Worms Breweries from their beginnings to the present (1954)
  15. Carl JH Villinger: History of the St. Cyriakus Foundation in Neuhausen in Worms (1955)
  16. Günter Sofsky: The constitutional situation of the Hochstift Worms in the last two centuries of its existence with special consideration of the election of its bishops (1957)
  17. Philipp Walter Fabry: The Sankt Cyriakusstift zu Neuhausen bei Worms (1958)
  18. Otto Böcher : The Old Synagogue in Worms (1960)
  19. Gundolf Gierath's OP: The Dominicans in Worms (1964)
  20. Peter Wackwitz: Was there a Burgundy empire in Worms? First part: text (1964)
  21. Peter Wackwitz: Was there a Burgundy empire in Worms? Part Two: Notes (1965)
  22. Elli Eich-Franke: Finds of the Michelsberg culture from the western Upper Rhine region (1967)
  23. Hans-Dieter Hüttmann: Investigations into the constitutional, administrative and social history of the free and imperial city of Worms 1659–1789 (1970)
  24. Dieter Wilhelm: Worms. Mittelstadt on the edge of the Rhine-Neckar conurbation. An urban geographic consideration of its development in the 19th and 20th centuries (1971)
  25. Karl Nothnagel: Staufer Architecture in Gelnhausen and Worms (1971)
  26. Hans Kühn: Political, economic and social change in Worms 1798–1866 with special consideration of the changes in the order, the functions and the composition of the municipal council (1975)
  27. Henry R. Hüttenbach: Herta Mansbacher . Portrait of a Jewish Teacher, Heroine and Martyr (1885–1942) (1981)
  28. Detlev Johannes: Luther library of the city of Worms. Complete catalog (1983)
  29. Fritz Reuter : Warmaisa. 1000 Years of Jews in Worms (1984)
  30. Wilhelm R. Alter: Pfeddersheim around 1525. At the same time, a contribution to research into the peasant uprising in southwest Germany (1990)
  31. Annelore and Karl Schlösser: Nobody was spared: the persecution of the Jews 1933–1945 in Worms (1987)
  32. Fritz Reuter: Worms between imperial city and industrial city 1800–1882. Observations and Materials (1993)
  33. Fritz Reuter (Ed.): Worms 1933. Contemporary witnesses and contemporary witnesses. With the memories of Mayor Wilhelm Rahn (1995)
  34. Fritz Reuter (Ed.): St. Martin in Worms 996/1996. Festschrift for the 1000th anniversary (1996)
  35. Gerold Bönnen , Volker Gallé (Ed.): A song from yesterday? Worms Symposium on the History of the Reception of the Nibelungenlied (1999)
  36. Mathilde Grünewald: Pilgrim signs, rosaries, pilgrimage medals. The graves from the 17th to 19th centuries from the parish cemetery near St. Paul in Worms. The collection of Gothic pilgrim signs in the Museum of the City of Worms (2001)
  37. Volker Brecher: War economy in Worms. Working conditions of foreign and German employees in the leather industry and other economic sectors 1939–1945 (2003)
  38. Monika Lange: The Franconian cemetery of Flomborn in Rheinhessen (2004)
  39. Burkard Keilmann, Margit Rinker-Olbrisch: Deo - patriae - moribus - studiis. Contributions to the history of the Wormser Gymnasium (2005)
  40. Gerold Bönnen, Ulrich Oelschläger (Eds.): 1783–2008. United Casino and Music Society Worms. Festschrift for the 225th anniversary (2008)
  41. Gerold Bönnen (Ed.): "A terribly serious time ...". Worms, the region and the "Great War" 1914 to 1918 (2014)

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