Archdiocese archive Paderborn
As a diocesan archive, the Archdiocese of Paderborn is an institution of the Archdiocese of Paderborn . As a Catholic diocese archive, it performs the tasks according to Canons 486 to 491 CIC . It was first mentioned in a document in 881. The acting archivist is Arnold Otto.
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/8e/Paderborn_Konrad-Martin-B%C3%BCste.jpg/220px-Paderborn_Konrad-Martin-B%C3%BCste.jpg)
history
The beginnings of the archive go back to the time when the Diocese of Paderborn was established in 799. The episcopal archive in Paderborn is mentioned as early as 881 when documents from the archive were presented to the German emperor.
The first inventory of parts of the holdings was carried out in 1920 by Johannes Linneborn . The air raids on Paderborn survived the holdings of the archive, which were actually housed in the city center, largely unscathed, as most of them had been relocated in good time.
In 1930, in addition to the diocese archive, an archive office was established to look after the parish archives. There the parish archives are organized, bound and then inventoried and returned to the parish offices. In 1981 this archive site was finally incorporated into the diocese archives. Since the 1980s, the diocese archive has also managed the archive of the metropolitan chapter .
In 2006 the archbishopric archive moved into the Konrad-Martin-Haus. The Konrad-Martin-Haus was originally designed and built as a residential building for Archbishop Lorenz Cardinal Jaeger . After completion, his successor Johannes Joachim Degenhardt did not want to move into the house because it was too ostentatious for him. The diocese's archives are now stored in the bunker built for hunters.
Stocks
Certificates
- Vicariate General Paderborn (964–1989)
- Exemte Abbey and Diocese of Corvey (823–1837)
- Böddeken Monastery (1180–1663)
- Willebadessen Abbey (1155–1696)
- Coming Brackel (1476–1655)
- Deposit from various parishes
Files
- From the time of the Principality of Paderborn until 1821
- Correspondence with parishes, monasteries and monasteries (13th-19th centuries)
- Vicariate General Paderborn: Bishops, elections, persons, principality to the outside world, secular government, clerical government, church teaching, church. Life (approx. 1360-1825)
- Vicariate General Cologne , later Deutz: decrees, reports, Haarensia, Archidia-conalia, clerical jurisdiction, synodal statutes, commissariats, ecclesiastical organization of the Duchy of Westphalia , specials of individual parishes (approx. 1500–1825)
- Commissariat Haardistrikt : rulings , ordinances, visitation cases , broadcasting courts, concordat 1821 (approx. 1730–1833)
- Exemte Abbey and Diocese of Corvey : Acta et diplomata, Jurisdiktionsstreit Paderborn-Corvey, Sendgericht, correspondence with Rome, administration of church property, ordinances and dispositions, monastery and diocese, history, prince abbots, jurisdiction, Corvey and Rome, cathedral monastery, vicariate general, Petri pen, feudal matters , Processes, protocols, marriage matters, school matters (approx. 12th century – 1825)
- General Vicariate Osnabrück : Status religionis, Dekanalia, ecclesiastical jurisdiction, synodalia, church assets, school system, faculties, church services, church celebrations, converts, benefits, etc. (1517–1823)
- Deans, Christianities, circles (1644–1823)
- Coming Brackel: (1670-1850)
- From the time of the (arch) diocese of Paderborn from 1821
- Vicariate General Paderborn: Correspondence with the parishes.
- General Vicariate Paderborn: Diocese, jurisdiction, bishops, concordats, constitution, laws, episcopal ordinances, asset management, buildings, processes, employments, benefit, coming, church employees, bishops. Educational institutions, boys' seminar, medals, worship, school system, pastoral care, brotherhoods and associations, settlements, Bonifatiusverein, political parties, war, real schemes, foundations, properties (1823-1945)
- Commissariat Magdeburg : Correspondence with the parishes, alphabetically from approbation to circular (1803–1859), dean's archives (1832–1950)
Official books and manuscripts (14th – 19th centuries)
- Consecration catalogs
- Protocols: Vicariate General, Officials, Archdeaconates, Visitations, Exjesuit Commission
- Liturgica: missals, processionals, necrologists
- Official registers of individual monasteries and monasteries: Abdinghof , Böddeken , Herstelle , Holthausen , Willebadessen
Collections
- Scientific work; Chronicles and manuscripts
- Parchment manuscripts (fragments)
- Paper and watermarks
- Seal stamp
- cards
Legacies / partial legacies / personal collections
u. a. from
- Johannes Bell (1868–1949), former Reich Minister. D.
- Johannes Joachim Degenhardt (1926–2002), Archbishop, Cardinal
- Hans Leo Drewes (1922–1999), provost, auxiliary bishop
- Franz Kaspar Drobe (1808-1891), bishop
- Ferdinand von Fürstenberg (1626–1683), Prince-Bishop
- Heinrich Haehling von Lanzenauer (1861–1925), auxiliary bishop
- Franz Hengsbach (1910–1991), auxiliary bishop, later bishop of Essen , cardinal
- Johannes Hillebrand (1874–1931), auxiliary bishop
- Lorenz Jaeger (1892–1975), Archbishop, Cardinal
- Caspar Klein (1865–1941), vicar general, bishop, first archbishop of Paderborn
- Bruno Kresing (1929–2020), Apostolic Protonotary, Cathedral Chapter, Vicar General
- Konrad Martin (1812–1879), bishop
- Kurt Matern (1884–1968), architect, cathedral and diocesan master builder in Paderborn
- Margatete Niggemeyer (* 1932), professor for religious education at the Catholic University of Applied Sciences North Germany Osnabrück-Vechta
- Paul Nordhues (1915-2004), auxiliary bishop
- Friedrich Wilhelm Saal (* 1934), member of the Commission for Church History
- Franz Egon Schneider (1880–1943), papal house prelate, university professor, dean of the theological faculty of Münster
- Wilhelm Schneider (1847–1909), professor of morality, provost, bishop
- Karl Joseph Schulte (1871–1941), bishop, later Archbishop of Cologne , cardinal
- Heinz Schürmann (1913–1999), Msgr., Professor in Erfurt
- Hubertus Simar (1835–1902), bishop, later archbishop of Cologne
- Paul Simon (1882–1946), professor of patrology and philosophy, provost of the cathedral
- Christian Stamm (1837–1920), from 1864 chaplain and secret secretary of Bishop Konrad Martin, cathedral chapter, official
- Franz Stock (1904–1948), pastor of the Germans in Paris, Regens
- Wilhelm Tuschen (1903–1961), Regens, vicar general, auxiliary bishop
- Georg Wagner (1915–1991), cathedral vicar, professor of religious folklore
- Karl-Heinz Wiesemann (* 1960), auxiliary bishop in Paderborn, later bishop of Speyer
Church records
- Church records as deposits from parishes in the archdiocese
- Filming of church book entries before 1874 from all parishes that have old registers accordingly
- Church registers of dissolved foreign missions (1962–2008)
literature
- Johannes Linneborn : inventory of the archives of the Episcopal Vicariate General in Paderborn ; Münster 1920 (5 pages).
- Alfred Cohausz : A millennium diocese archives Paderborn (address for the opening of the archives on April 8, 1976 in the newly furnished rooms in and above the Romanesque chapter house of the Paderborn cathedral monastery from the 12th century) ; in: Paderborn studies, born 1976, issue 2/3, pp. 5–12.
- Alfred Cohausz: Half a century of archive maintenance in the Archdiocese of Paderborn ; in: Die Warte, No. 15, October 1977, pp. 31/33.
- Guide through the diocese archives of the Catholic Church in Germany (“yellow guide”), Siegburg 1991, pp. 152–156.
- Gerhard Sander: The church archives in the Archdiocese of Paderborn (lecture at the 47th Westphalian Archive Day 1995 in Bielefeld-Bethel) ; in: Archivpflege in Westfalen und Lippe, Issue 42, October 1995, pp. 8–9.
Web links
- Archive website
- Detailed presentation of the archive history
- Presentation of the holdings of the archive
Individual evidence
- ↑ Brief presentation of the archive , accessed on September 3, 2013.
- ↑ William Krüggeler: The undistorted files from Corvey the Archdiocesan Archives Paderborn , "the wait," 70th year, No. 144, Christmas 2009, accessed September 4, 2013..
- ^ Magnificent building in Paderborn: Archbishop refused to move in , Neue Westfälische, October 16, 2013, accessed on October 17, 2013.
Coordinates: 51 ° 43 ′ 12.9 " N , 8 ° 45 ′ 24.2" E