Gnadauer Trumpet Covenant

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Gnadauer Trumpet Covenant
(GPB)
Logo of the federal government
purpose Federal Trombone Association
Chair: Hartmut Reichwald
Establishment date: 1934
Number of members: 14 regional associations with a total of 1685 wind players
Seat : Hermann-Löns-Weg 17
25362 Sparrieshoop
Website: http://www.gnadauer-posaunenbund.de/

The Gnadauer Posaunenbund is an amalgamation of fourteen (2012) regional associations that supervise Protestant community trombone choirs and are combined with a further 29 wind works in the EPiD , the Evangelical Trumpet Service in Germany, to form an association of 120,000 wind players in Germany .

Mission statement

The foundation of the association are the basic Christian values . With their music, the wind players want to draw people's attention to Jesus Christ and to blow the glorious message into the world . According to their understanding, the trombone music adapts to modern people and the present day.

Federal Trombone Festival October 10, 2004 Dresden

tasks

The nonprofit organization has the task of the member associations mentally to prepare to promote music (eg., In the form of choirmaster training or Jungbläser camps) and to assist in the organization of events. It also offers a sheet music service, an instrument exchange and organizes annual general meetings and the Federal Trombone Festival every five years. The work is done on a voluntary basis. The members receive the quarterly association magazine: bläserruf .

Surname

The association's roots lie in the Gnadauer community movement . In 1888 the first Pentecost conference of the community movement took place in Gnadau because this place owned a Moravian settlement . This name was then carried over to the community movement and related organizations.

history

prehistory

Nikolaus Ludwig founded the first trombone choirs in Zinzendorf as early as 1725 . During the Franco-Prussian War in 1870 and 1871, a field service was held in Zeiskam in the Palatinate . A military band blew chorales that were supposed to be sung. That pleased those present and the preacher Adam Ewald from Chrischona founded the first trombone choir in Germany on November 19, 1885 in Zeiskam (Palatinate). The deed of incorporation states:

§ 1 Every member of the choir undertakes: ...
f) never to use the instrument for dance music.

The notation was based on military music. Only in 1923 was the spelling of the so-called “Trumpet General” Pastor D. Johannes Kuhlo changed. There were no music stands, the handwritten notes were held by aspiring wind players and corrected by ear. For Johannes Kuhlo, the wind and trombone choir work was part of the church's youth work and work with young men .

1933 to 1945

The political conformity and the Reich Chamber of Culture Act of September 22, 1933 forced the individual trombone choirs to organize themselves in a body in order to work together with the National Socialist state. Trumpet choirs that did not organize lost the right to any public activity, including blowing in the common room. On May 8, 1934, Fritz Bachmann (* October 3, 1900; † August 11, 1961) from the Evangelical Trumpet Mission of Germany , Johannes Kuhlo , Cantor Adolf Strube from the Reich Association for Protestant Church Music , Oberlandeskirchenrat Adolf Müller from Dresden and the deacon Otto Redlitz founded the Association of Protestant Trombone Choirs , VEP Fritz Bachmann was elected Reichsobmann . But without joining the Reich Chamber of Music, it was impossible for the association to survive. The Gnadauer Bund , chaired by Pastor Walter Michaelis , delegated the task of summarizing and managing the community trombone choirs to Willi Hennes , the federal warden of the Gnadauer Evangelical Singers Association , ESB . The result was the founding of the Community Trumpet Association , Gnadauer Verband . On June 8, 1934, the newly founded Gnadauer Posaunenbund joined the Reich Chamber of Music. A special agreement in this contract guaranteed the choirs their independence.

1945 to 1989

The initiators of the federal government after 1945, (from left): Gerhard Borchers, Walter Mackscheidt, Hermann Mink, Friedrich Haase on May 24, 1963 in Waldheim am Brahmsee

After the Second World War , East and West developed separately. 1948 in the GDR brother of the country's inspector of the Saxon community work, Arthur cap from Chemnitz, Oskar bosses ; commissioned (* 1 March 1893 † 19 November, 1979) to rebuild the ailing trombone service. The Gnadauer Verband Ost was divided into five community districts in the GDR: Mecklenburg, Berlin-Brandenburg, Saxony-Anhalt, Thuringia and Saxony. Due to the permanent lack of notes, Oskar Bosse won over the composers Horst Karl Hessel and Johannes Brunner , the church musicians Herbert Gadsch , Johannes Petzold , Paul Geilsdörfer and Leopold Hassenkamp to work up new songs in appealing wind sections for the trombone choirs. This is how the three volumes Mit hellen Posaunen ( HP ) came into being, which were also popular and popular in West German choirs under the abbreviation MhP . In West Germany , development was also difficult in the early 1950s. At the board meeting from February 22nd to 26th, 1954, the preacher Friedrich Haase from Gießen was elected first chairman and the song book Alles durch Jesus was published. The development was shaped by the work of Horst Wilm , who took over the post of federal trombonist in 1965 and, in addition to his professional activity as a trombonist of the Bamberg Symphony, attended many choirs, held training courses and took part in leisure time until 1990. In 1990 the GPB-West had 151 choirs.

Since 1991

In 1991 the two parts of Germany were reunified through the official accession of the six Central German regional associations. In 2002 the federal government commissioned a DVD about the history of the Gnadauer Trumpet Covenant for internal use, which ends as follows:

Praise God, that is our office. ( EG 288.5)

Organization of the Federation

According to the interpretation of the preacher Siegfried Wahls from Bad Oeynhausen , the GPB logo goes back to the suggestion of the Leipzig graphic artist Matthias Klemm and was adopted on March 31 by the 1993 annual general meeting in Woltersdorf. It represents a circle with two ears and intersecting lines in the colors red, blue and white. The circle symbolizes the round bell of the instruments and stands for the service groups of the Christian communities, such as Bible, house, youth and wind groups. One "ear" - modeled on the voice slide of a trumpet - pointing to the top right, is to remind of ( 1 Samuel 3: 9): Speak, Lord, your servant hears! The “ear” pointing to the lower left (which resembles a trumpet) stands for the mission command of Jesus Christ in the ( Gospel according to Matthew 28: 16 ff.). The color red represents the death of Jesus Christ on the cross and the associated redemption ( Ephesians 1: 7). Blue stands for the gift of God ( 1st Epistle of Peter 1: 3) and ( Epistle of Paul to Romans 12:12). White stands for the mystery of life ( 1st letter of John 1:14) and ( Isaiah 40: 5).

Development of the associations and members

year German regional associations International national associations Number of choirs Number of wind instruments
1935 9 284 2803
1984 9 1 (Brazil) 159 1814
2000 14th 1 (Brazil) 233 2758
2001 14th 1 (Brazil) 228 2673
2009 14th 1 (Brazil) 205 2475
2010 14th 1 (Brazil) 203 2400
2011 14th 1 (Brazil) 194 2243
2012 13 1 (Brazil) 189 2169
2017 13 1 (Brazil) 163 1685

organs

Organs of the GPB are the general assembly, the board and the extended board. Marcus Liebmann is the managing director and treasurer.

1st chairperson

Period First chair place
1934-1954 Willi Hennes Wuppertal
1954-1961 Friedrich Haase to water
1961-1969 Preacher Gerhard Borchers (born April 16, 1904) Landau in the Palatinate
1969-1975 Preacher Christian Hermann (born January 1, 1934) Grünstadt
1975-1976 Gerhard Nickel Hofheim (Lampertheim)
1976-1983 Architect Jakob Albrecht Heinebach
1983-1992 Preacher Friedrich Reichwald Bad Hersfeld
1992-2000 Preacher Werner Weiser Koelleda
2000-2012 Uwe Andreas Ritschermoor
since 2012 Hartmut Reichwald Bielefeld

Regional associations

A regional association exists when it looks after several choirs in a clearly defined region. Any national association that recognizes the GPB's statutes can become a full member. The regional trombone festivals, some of which take place annually, are a highlight of the work of the regional associations. There are the following regional associations:

Regional Association of Bavaria

The second largest regional association has been part of the GPB since 1974. It consists of fifteen choirs with 174 wind instruments. The majority of the choirs can be found in the Franconian area because the former federal trombonist Horst Wilm worked there until 1999 . There are choirs in Altfeld , Aschaffenburg , Colmberg , Feuchtwangen , Gunzenhausen , Helmbrechts , Hof (Saale) , Kerkhofen-Hofen , Lauf (Zapfendorf) , Marktredwitz , Saxony , Schwabach-Katzwang , Schwarzenbach am Wald , Wasserberndorf and Wassertrüdingen .

Baden-Württemberg regional association

The origins of this regional association lie in the Brenz valley , in Sontheim . In October 1978 the trombone choir there joined the Evangelical Chrischona Congregation , the Gnadauer Trumpet Association. The regional association was founded in 1970. In 2008 there were twenty-four wind players in the choir and around one hundred young wind players were trained. There are trombone choirs in Eichstetten , Schopfloch (Black Forest) , Reutlingen , Ehningen , Sontheim (Brenz) , Urbach (Remstal) , Konstanz and Dagersheim . The regional association consists of eight choirs and 109 wind players.

State association Berlin-Brandenburg

The regional association was founded in West Berlin in 1984 with five trombone choirs and forty-one wind players. On February 10, 1991 the choirs of West Berlin united to form the new Berlin-Brandenburg regional association. A total of eleven trombone choirs with 89 wind instruments belong to the association.

National Association of Brazil

In 1927 the trombone choir Missão Evangélica União Cristã was founded in Brazil. They also played secular music. In 1934 missionaries from the Gnadauer Brazil Mission brought the Reichsliederbuch (trumpet edition) into the country and founded the regional association. In 1971 a trumpet day with 60 wind instruments was held.

State Association of Hesse

In the area of ​​the regional association there were trombone choirs as early as the turn of the 18th and 19th centuries, which were created during the revival movement in Hanauer Land, in Hersfeld and in the vicinity of Kassel. The oldest choir in Herlinghausen was founded in 1893 . In 1907 the Erdmannrode trombone choir was founded. After 1945 the trombone work increased. There was a lack of sheet music. So the desire arose for a merger of the choirs in order to better bundle the scarce resources. The State Association of Hesse was founded in Kassel in 1951 and was elected as the first chairman, Preacher Edmund Lieske. Clearly defined statutes of the regional association: to give suggestions, to arrange training courses, to provide and use suitable sheet music, and to promote the work by organizing trombone festivals. caused a spirit of optimism and, with the active state associations of the Palatinate and North Markets, brought the federal trombone work to new life in post-war West Germany. The first regional trombone festivals were on June 8, 1952 in Sterbfritz and on May 22 in Schlitz (Vogelsbergkreis) . The regional association consists of fifteen choirs and 178 wind players.

Mecklenburg State Association

The regional association has existed since 1991. The regional association includes six choirs and 42 wind players.

Lower Saxony regional association

The Lower Saxony regional association was founded on November 16, 1968 with eight choirs and 69 wind instruments in Hildesheim. Werner Russmann, who held the office until 1976, became the first chairman. The regional association includes twelve choirs and 113 wind instruments.

Trumpet Festival Kiel August 29, 1926

Landesverband Nordmark

This regional association is one of the founding associations of the Gnadauer Trumpet Association. The wind work began in Schleswig-Holstein as early as 1871. The Kiel Trombone Choir was founded in 1880 . The choir was founded within the men's and youth clubs. These associations were united under the leadership of Baron Jasper von Oertzen (1833-1893) in the so-called Nordbund . This resulted in the association of the Ev. Men and youth clubs of Schleswig-Holstein . This resulted in the Christian Association of Young Men, YMCA . On August 9, 1925, the Association of Christian Trombone Choirs of Schleswig-Holstein , Hamburg and the surrounding area was founded in Neumünster . In 1934 the name was changed to the Association of Christian Trombone Choirs of the Nordmark . The Second World War brought wind work to a virtual standstill because there were no more wind players. Just two years later, the first state trombone festival was held in Lindau . There are a total of eleven choirs and 170 wind instruments in Barmstedt , Elmshorn , Hamburg-Altona , Itzehoe , Lübeck , Neumünster, Tungendorf , Neustadt , Bargteheide , Kiel and Süderbrarup . Since 1994 there has been a brass group in Gnadau Nord. The trombone choir of the community in the Protestant Church of Elmshorn was awarded the Pro-Musica plaque for 100 years of volunteering on March 28, 2012 .

Landesverband Pfalz

In 1885 the first trombone choir was founded in Zeiskam in the Palatinate . There are other trombone choirs in Annweiler , Bad Bergzabern / Freckenfeld , Grünstadt , Haßloch , Homburg , and Kaiserslautern . Neustadt , Rodenbach (West Palatinate) , Pirmasens and Zweibrücken . After 1945 the regional association with 25 trombone choirs and 260 winds in the GPB-West was numerically the largest and one of the three major pillars of wind work in the difficult post-war period. There are ten choirs and 115 wind instruments in the regional association.

Regional Association of Rhineland-Westphalia

The regional association was founded in January 1977 in Mülheim an der Ruhr . In 1975 the regional association produced a record under the title At the time of the last trumpet under the direction of Horst Wilm, which was put on again due to the demand under the title Wachet auf, calls us the voice . The regional association includes five choirs and 76 wind instruments.

Regional association Rhein-Main-Neckar

The regional association was founded on October 6, 1962 in Hofheim (Lampertheim) . The first chairman was Gerhard Nickel from Hofheim. The regional association has seven choirs and ninety wind instruments.

State Association of Saxony

In the strongest regional association of the Gnadau Trumpet Association, 67 towns have a trombone choir with 829 wind instruments. The composer Horst Karl Hessel worked within the regional association until 2006 . A trombone choir was founded in Albernau as early as 1908. In 1947 the trombone choir was founded in Friedersdorf. In 1954 a trombone choir was founded in Hilmersdorf and in 1960 a trombone choir in Lößnitz.

Regional Association of Central Germany

The former state associations of Saxony-Anhalt and Thuringia merged in 2012 to form the state association of Central Germany. In 2012, eight choirs and 76 wind instruments belonged to the former state association of Saxony-Anhalt. The Suhl trombone choir had existed in the former Thuringia regional association since 1926. In 1958, the Ohrdruf trombone choir was founded. The Marisfeld trombone choir began its work on October 5th, 1959. In 2010 this choir comprised seventeen wind instruments. Since 1993 there was a Thuringian brass group, which gave concerts on special occasions in churches, town houses, castle halls and appearances on anniversaries of the Thuringian regional association. Up until the merger, there were a total of 14 choirs and 170 wind instruments in the former Thuringia regional association.

Regional Association of Western Pomerania

Pomerania has been celebrating trumpet festivals since 1907 under the direction of the preacher Brother Steinborn. There were choirs in Vorbruch , Alt-Sanskow , Polzin , Groß-Poplow , Schönwalde , Freienwalde , Stargard , Pyrzyce and Stettin with about 40 wind players. In 1912 Paul Zeiger took over the management. Whitsun 1927, the 9th Pomeranian Trumpet and Song Festival took place in Swinoujscie with 752 singers, 134 wind instruments and 15 trombone choirs. By 1932 the number of trombone choirs and winds rose from 20 locations to 163 winds. After the death of Paul Zeiger, Herbert Westphal took over the management. After the end of the Second World War there was no more independent trombone work in Western Pomerania. It was not until 1951 that a song and music festival took place again in Pasewalk. In 1953 contact was made with Oskar Bosse. On March 4, 1956, a trumpet festival took place in Greifswald. In 2010 there were choirs in Bansin , Barth , Demmin , Prenzlau and Stralsund . There are a total of five choirs and 66 wind instruments.

Federal Archives

The archive of the GPB contains the documentation of the annual general meetings, films, among other things, from the federal trombone festivals, photographs, documents, circulars and programs of the federal association and the regional associations. It is looked after by Rainer Sauer from Bad Hersfeld. A table of contents of the inventory is available.

Annual general meeting

Annual general meeting May 2004 at Wittensee

The members of the extended board of directors and the delegates of the regional associations meet at the annual general meetings. The tasks of the general meeting include, among other things, the resolution on:

  1. Establishment of guidelines for the work of the federal government
  2. Election of the board - with the exception of the representatives of the working group of the state trombone station
  3. Receipt of the annual reports of the board and the regional associations
  4. Admission and exclusion of full members
  5. Cash audit and amount of membership fees

Special highlights are the presentations by the host regional associations. Annual general meetings took place as follows:

Horst Wilm (federal trombonist) on April 17, 1988 at the annual general meeting in Neukirchen
year date place Regional association
1965 April 24th to 25th Darmstadt Rhine-Main-Neckar
1966 April 23rd to 24th Bad Hersfeld Hesse
1990 April 21-22 Wittensee Nordmark
1991 April 13-14 Bergkirchen (Lower Saxony) Lower Saxony
1992 April 25-26 Rothenburg ob der Tauber Bavaria
1993 April 24th to 25th Woltersdorf (near Berlin) Berlin-Brandenburg
1994 April 16-17 Bad Blankenburg Thuringia
1995 April 29-30 Splendor Rhineland-Westphalia
1996 April 20-21 Königstein (Saxon Switzerland) Saxony
1997 April 12-13 Staudernheim Rhine-Main-Neckar
1998 April 18-19 Elbingerode (Harz) Saxony-Anhalt
1999 April 10-11 Ostseebad Sellin Western Pomerania
2000 May 13-14 Waldfischbach Palatinate
2001 April 28-29 Schwäbisch Gmünd Württemberg
2002 April 13-14 mosquito Hesse
2003 April 26-27 Krelingen Lower Saxony
2004 May 1st to 2nd Wittensee Nordmark
2005 April 23rd to 24th Salem Mecklenburg
2006 April 29-30 Hattingen Rhineland-Westphalia
2007 April 21-22 Pappenheim Bavaria
2008 April 12-13 Woltersdorf (near Berlin) Berlin-Brandenburg
2009 March 28-29 Rudolstadt Thuringia
2010 April 17th to 18th Schmiedeberg (Dippoldiswalde) Saxony
2011 April 9-10 Oberwesel Rhine-Main-Neckar
2012 March 23rd to 25th Lutherstadt Wittenberg Saxony-Anhalt
2013 April 12-14 Ostseebad Sellin Western Pomerania
2014 March 28-30 Bad Munster am Stein-Ebernburg Palatinate

Federal Trombone Festival

Until the reunification, the GPB held a trumpet day . On April 29, 1994, a federal trombone festival was celebrated in Kaiserslautern for the first time , which has been held every five years since then. Until 1990 there was the office of the federal trombone warden, which was replaced by the working group AG of the state trombone warden. Federal trombone attendant from 1965 to 1990 was Horst Wilm (* August 8, 1939; † July 21, 1999).

Federal Trombone Festival on May 1st, 1988 in Giessen, (from left) Siegfried Wahls (representative of the 1st chairman of the GPB), Horst Wilm (Federal Trombone Manager ), Johannes Brunner (State Trombone Manager Berlin-Brandenburg), Kurt Schramm (State Trombone Manager Saxony)
year date place
1974 September 4th Aschaffenburg
1977 3rd to 4th September kassel
1980 August 22nd to 23rd Bochum
1984 September 22nd to 24th Boeblingen
1988 April 30th to May 1st to water
1994 April 29th to May 1st Kaiserslautern
1999 June 25-27 Mannheim
2004 October 8-10 Dresden
2009 May 1st to 3rd Baunatal near Kassel
2014 May 2nd to 4th Hamburg
2019 May 3rd to 5th Neubrandenburg

Awards

Since 1999, after 50 years of membership and to personalities who have made a name for themselves in the work of wind instruments, the GPB has been awarding the Golden Badge of Honor of the Gnadauer Trombone Association and a decorative sheet. This received u. a .:

Some regional associations award the following awards:

  • Bronze badge of honor from 1 year membership
  • Silver badge of honor from 10 years of membership
  • Gold badge of honor from 25 years of membership
  • Golden badge of honor from 50 years of membership (on behalf of the GPB)

Publications

Horn call

The colored members' magazine Bläserruf appears four times a year . The editorial work and the layout are carried out by the editors elected for a period of four years (currently: Andreas Schulz, Zeitz). The magazine, which has up to 24 pages, contains a brief devotion and reports primarily on the work of the regional associations and choirs, provides information on event dates, training courses, concerts, new editions of sheet music, etc. on and will be sent to all trombone choirs and other interested parties. In addition, current and past editions are made available for download on the Gnadauer Trumpet Association website. In 1965 the editors explained the name Bläserruf in two senses:

  1. Let him call out to the wind players: Be faithful in serving the Lord.
  2. It is supposed to remind the members of the task: To shout with their instruments: Listen, Jesus calls, everyone comes here.

The bulletin has been named after the annual general meeting in Darmstadt in 1965. The members received the first bulletins as early as the spring of 1964, and the regular brass ring since May 1965.

Sheet music editions

  • before 1949 winds edition of the community song book (GL)
  • 1949 Fritz Bachmann: Let our praise please you. , 1st volume
  • 1950 Fritz Bachmann: Praise God. , 1st volume
  • 1954 Siegfried Fritz: Praise God with joyous sound.
  • 1960 Oskar Bosse, Horst Karl Hessel: Let God's glory ring out brightly.
  • 1967 Oskar Bosse, Horst Karl Hessel: With bright trumpets. 1st volume
  • 1972 Oskar Bosse, Horst Karl Hessel: With bright trumpets. 2nd volume, 1977 second edition
  • 1975 Horst Wilm: Everything through Jesus. 1st volume
  • 1977 Horst Wilm: Everything through Jesus. 2nd volume (focus: old wind music and chorals by Johann Sebastian Bach )
  • 1980 Horst Wilm: Everything through Jesus. 3rd volume
  • 1982 Kurt Schramm, Horst Karl Hessel: With bright trumpets. 3rd volume
  • 1984 Horst Wilm: Everything through Jesus. 4th volume
  • 1995 Johannes Brunner: Worship God. 1st volume
  • 1996 Trumpet Edition of the New Community Hymn Book (NGL). (741 songs)
  • 2002 Johannes Brunner: Worship God. 2nd volume
  • 2004 Gnadauer wind band 2004
  • 2007 Gnadauer wind band 2007
  • 2010 Sings the song of joy 2nd volume

Music productions

  • Horst Wilm, Rainer Rückschloss, Birgit Voss, Burkhard Browa, Gnadauer Posaunenbund: At the time of the last trumpet. Record, Hänssler, Neuhausen (Filder), 1977.
  • Horst Wilm, Gnadauer Posaunenbund: We have a rock. Record, Verlag der Liebenzeller Mission, Bad Liebenzell, 1977.
  • Martin Jödt, Ernst Leuze, Paul Mühlschlegel, Rainer Nauber: Jauchzet the Lord all the world. Record, Verlag der Liebenzeller Mission, Bad Liebenzell, 1977.
  • Andreas Woyke, Horst Wilm, Gnadauer Trumpet Covenant: Bright Trumpets. Record, Verlag der Liebenzeller Mission, Bad Liebenzell, 1981.
  • Horst Wilm, Birgit Voss, Gnadauer Posaunenbund: Wake up, the voice calls us: Festive chorales and chorals. Record, Hänssler, Neuhausen (Filder), 1984.
  • Peter Hahne, Jean F. Michel, Gnadauer Posaunenbund: With a happy mouth. Music cassette, Verlag der Liebenzeller Mission, Bad Liebenzell, 1984.
  • Gnadauer Trumpet Covenant: We all praise you. Johann Sebastian Bach. Music cassette, Verlag der Liebenzeller Mission, Bad Liebenzell, 1984.
  • Gnadauer Trumpet Association: 4th Gnadauer Trumpet Day in Böblingen 1984. Music cassette, Verlag der Liebenzeller Mission, Bad Liebenzell, 1985.
  • G. Raabe, Gnadauer Trumpet Covenant : Rejoice in all lands. Music cassette, Hänssler CLASSIC publishing house, Holzgerlingen, 2000.

literature

  • Gnadauer Trumpet Covenant: Rejoice in the Lord: Festschrift 50 Years Gnadauer Trumpet Covenant. 4th Federal Trombone Day on September 23, 1984 in Böblingen Verlag Arbogast, 1984.
  • Wolfgang Schnabel: The Evangelical Trombone Choir Work: Origin and Order. in: Volume 26 of publications on liturgy, hymnology and theological church music research , Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1993, ISBN 3-525-57188-7 .
  • Wolfgang Schnabel: History of the Protestant Trumpet Choir Movement in Westphalia. in: Volume 26 of contributions to Westphalian church history , Luther Verlag, 2003, ISBN 3-7858-0446-6 .
  • Richard Roschy: Let's play for the glory of the Lord! 75 years of the Gnadauer Trumpet Covenant. Gnadauer Trumpet Association, May 2009, Aachen.
  • Dieter Lange: A movement is breaking new ground: the German communities in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and their position on the church, theology and the Pentecostal movement. Brunnen Verlag, Gießen and Dillenburg, 1979.

Remarks

  1. The figures given in the article always refer to the year 2010 unless otherwise stated.

Web links

  • online k. A .: Internet presence of the Gnadauer Trumpet Association. Aachen, 2010, accessed on March 3, 2010.
  • online Matthias Drechsel: Internet presence of the Evangelisch Gnadauer Gemeinschaftverband e. V. Kassel, April 12, 2007, accessed on March 5, 2010.

Individual evidence

  1. Günter Buhl: bläserruf 42nd year, January 1 - March 2005, Gnadauer Posaunenbund, Mannheim, November 19, 2004, (PDF file; 1.5 MB)  online (PDF; 1.6 MB), accessed on 3. March 2010.
  2. ^ Page “Homepage of the Evangelical Gnadauer Community Association. History. ”Status: 2010, URL: online ( memento of the original from March 13, 2010 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (Accessed March 8, 2010). @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.gnadauer.de
  3. Gerhard Nickel: Bläserruf 3, July - September 1966, Gnadauer Posaunenbund, Hofheim, 1966, (PDF file; 1.1 MB)  online (PDF; 1.1 MB), accessed on March 3, 2010.
  4. a b Gerhard Nickel: Bläserruf 1, January - March 1966, Gnadauer Posaunenbund, Hofheim, 1966, (WORD file; 1 MB)  online ( MS Word ; 1.1 MB), accessed on March 3, 2010.
  5. a b Gerhard Nickel: Bläserruf 2, April - June 1965, Gnadauer Posaunenbund, Hofheim, 13th 1965, (PDF; 830 kB)  online (PDF; 851 kB), accessed on March 3, 2010.
  6. a b c d e f Richard Roschy: Let's play to the glory of the Lord! 75 years of the Gnadauer Trumpet Covenant. Gnadauer Trumpet Association, May 2009, Aachen.
  7. a b c d e f g h i j k Gnadauer Posaunenbund: Festschrift. 50 years of the Gnadauer Trumpet Covenant. 4th Federal Trombone Day on September 23, 1984 in Boeblingen. Günter Buhl, Mannheim, August 1, 1984.
  8. ^ Page "History of the Gnadauer Trumpet Covenant". In: Gnadauer Trumpet Covenant. Editing status: 2010, URL: | Gnadauer Posaunenbund online (accessed: March 4, 2010).
  9. Günter Buhl: bläserruf 42nd year, April 2 - June 2005, Gnadauer Posaunenbund, Mannheim, February 18, 2005, (PDF file; 1.5 MB)  online (PDF; 694 kB), accessed on March 3, 2010 .
  10. a b c Statutes of the Gnadauer Trumpet Covenant in the version of May 13, 2000.
  11. Gerhard Nickel: Bläserruf 3, July - September 1969, Gnadauer Posaunenbund, Hofheim, 1969, (PDF file; 952 kB)  online (PDF; 975 kB), accessed on March 3, 2010.
  12. a b page "Homepage of the Bavarian State Association". In: Gnadauer Trumpet Covenant. Processing status: 2010, URL: online (accessed: March 5, 2010).
  13. Günter Buhl: bläserruf Volume 46, January 1 - March 2009, Gnadauer Posaunenbund, Mannheim, February 13, 2009, (PDF; 878 kB)  online (PDF; 899 kB), accessed on March 3, 2010.
  14. ^ Page "Homepage of the Baden-Württemberg State Association". In: Gnadauer Trumpet Covenant. Processing status: 2010, URL: online (accessed: March 5, 2010).
  15. ^ Page "Homepage of the Berlin-Brandenburg State Association". In: Gnadauer Trumpet Covenant. Processing status: 2010, URL: online (accessed: March 5, 2010).
  16. Günter Buhl: bläserruf Volume 45, January 1 - March 2008, Gnadauer Posaunenbund, Mannheim, November 16, 2007, (PDF file; 973 kB)  online (PDF; 997 kB), accessed on March 3, 2010.
  17. Günter Buhl: bläserruf Volume 44, October 4 - December 2007, Gnadauer Posaunenbund, Mannheim, August 17, 2007, (PDF file; 1.3 MB)  online (PDF; 1.3 MB), accessed on 3. March 2010.
  18. ^ Page "Homepage of the Mecklenburg State Association". In: Gnadauer Trumpet Covenant. Processing status: 2010, URL: online ( memento of the original from June 24, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (Accessed March 5, 2010). @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / mecklenburg.gnadauer-posaunenbund.de
  19. a b page “Homepage of the Landesverband Nordmark”. In: Gnadauer Trumpet Covenant. Processing status: 2010, URL: online (accessed: March 5, 2010).
  20. Günter Buhl: bläserruf 43rd year, October 4 - December 2006, Gnadauer Posaunenbund, Mannheim, August 18, 2006, (PDF file; 1 MB)  online (PDF; 1 MB), accessed on March 3, 2010.
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  29. ^ Page "Homepage of the Thuringia Regional Association". In: Gnadauer Trumpet Covenant. Processing status: 2010, URL: online  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (Accessed March 6, 2010).@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / thueringen.gnadauer-posaunenbund.de  
  30. ^ H. Friedrich: "History of the Pomeranian Regional Association". 2010, (Powerpoint presentation, 45 MB) online  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (Accessed March 6, 2010).@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / thueringen.gnadauer-posaunenbund.de  
  31. Dresden Latest News: “Under the Patronage of God. Nothing scares a real brass player. ”November 7, 2004, Leipziger Volkszeitung, Leipzig, 2004.
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