Ludwigsburg history sheets

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Ludwigsburg history sheets

description Local history specialist journal for the city and district of Ludwigsburg
language German
publishing company Commission publisher J. Aigner, Ludwigsburg (Germany)
First edition 1900
Frequency of publication yearly
Editor-in-chief Thomas Schulz
ISSN (print)

Ludwigsburger Geschichtsblätter is the magazine of the "Historischer Verein für Ludwigsburg und Umgebung" founded in 1897, today "Historischer Verein für Stadt und Kreis Ludwigsburg e. V. « history association with its seat in Ludwigsburg . Its office is located in the Ludwigsburg city archive .

The magazine contains articles on the history of Ludwigsburg and the places in today's Ludwigsburg district . A total of 12 issues had been published by 1939. Issues 13, 14 and 15 were not published until 1957, 1960 and 1963 after a long break. Since the last year mentioned, the Ludwigsburg history sheets have been published once a year; In addition to the regular issue (No. 42), a second (No. 41) was only published in 1988 as a jubilee publication on the occasion of the 90th anniversary of the historical association founded in 1897.

Editing

editor from booklet to issue
Christian Belschner 1 (1900) 12 (1939)
Oscar Paret 13 (1957) 14 (1960)
Heinrich Gaese 15 (1963) 20 (1968)
Willi Müller 21 (1969) 29 (1977)
Paul Sauer 30 (1978)
Wolfgang Schmierer 31 (1979) 51 (1997)
Thomas Schulz 52 (1998) 72 (2018)

Article directory

Issue 1 (1900)

  • Karl Weller : The economic development of the Ludwigsburg landscape up to the foundation of the city. (Pp. 1–18)
  • Albert von Pfister : Festive days in Ludwigsburg from two centuries. (Pp. 19–30)
  • Friedrich Haaß: Something about the road system in the Duchy of Württemberg and the construction of the Stuttgart-Kornwestheim-Ludwigsburg highway . (Pp. 31–47)
  • Christian Belschner: Brief history of the development of the city of Ludwigsburg . (Pp. 48–54)
  • Christian Belschner: The school history of Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 55–67)
  • Christian Belschner: Imperial Count Johann Carl von Zeppelin and his tomb in the old cemetery in Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 68–87)

Issue 2 (1901)

  • Karl Erbe: The Ludwigsburg family names. A linguistic and historical investigation. (Pp. 1–34)
  • Oscar Paret: The Ludwigsburg Prince Hill. (Pp. 37–46)
  • Anton Nägele: Ludwigsburg 100 years ago. According to the notes of a traveling scholar. (Pp. 50–55)
  • Christian Belschner: Official files on the history of the founding of Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 56–91)
  • Christian Belschner: The Scheffauer'sche marble picture of the imperial count Joh. Carl von Zeppelin. (Pp. 92–93)

Issue 3 (1903)

  • Karl Eduard Krauss: Local history of Eglosheim . (Pp. 1–28)
  • Heubach: Folk traditions in the district of Ludwigsburg . (Pp. 29–52)
  • Friedrich Kübler: The building of the palace chapel in Ludwigsburg and its use. (Pp. 53–80)
  • Friedrich Raunecker: Ludwigsburg around 1730. Based on the memoirs of Baron Karl Ludwig von Pöllnitz . (Pp. 81–96)
  • Christian Belschner: The beginnings of the Württemberg State Library in Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 97-100)

Issue 4 (1905)

  • Christian Belschner: The royal palace of Ludwigsburg . On the 200th anniversary of the laying of the foundation stone. (Pp. 3–13)
  • Karl Erbe: The art treasures of Ludwigsburg and its surroundings. (Pp. 14–34)
  • Heinrich Krockenberger: Eduard Mörike as a lyric poet. (Pp. 35–70)
  • Albert Bacmeister: Ernst Friedrich Kauffmann. (Pp. 71–78)
  • Christian Belschner: Schiller's three-time stay in Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 79–131)
  • Friedrich Kübler: The family gallery of the Württemberg dynasty in the royal residence palace in Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 132–185)

Issue 5 (1909)

  • Christian Belschner: Friedrich Theodor Vischer . (Pp. 1–23)
  • Robert Vischer and Johanna Fißler: Three letters from Friedrich Theodor Vischer. (Pp. 24–26)
  • Hermann Hieber: David Friedrich Strauss as a thinker and poet. (Pp. 27–94)
  • Alois Marquart: On the history of the silk culture in Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 95–108)

Issue 6 (1911)

  • Oscar Paret : The prehistoric and early historical settlement of the Oberamt Ludwigsburg . (Pp. 3–33)
  • Otto Leuze: Political letters from DF Strauss. (Pp. 34–50)
  • Heubach: Popular traditions in the district of Ludwigsburg, part 2. (Pp. 51–75)
  • Otto Schanzenbach: The former museum building and the current Ratskeller building in Ludwigsburg .. (p. 76–88)

Issue 7 (1913)

  • Christian Belschner: Württemberg and Hohenzollern . (Pp. 1–13)
  • Eugen Schübelin: The state development of the district of Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 14–35)
  • Christian Belschner: The Vischer room in Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 36–43)
  • Christian Belschner: Letters from Friedrich Vischer. (Pp. 44–47)
  • Christian Belschner: Letter from Eduard Mörike to his sister Clara. (Pp. 48–49)

Issue 8 (1916)

  • Eugen Schübelin: Nippenburg . (Pp. 8–23)
  • Paul Weizsäcker : A forgotten monument in Monrepos. (Pp. 24–30)
  • Christian Belschner: History of the salon near Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 31–39)
  • Christian Belschner: The Beyer family of carpenters. (Pp. 40–46)

Issue 9 (1923)

  • Christian Belschner: For the 25th anniversary of the historical association. (Pp. 3–10)
  • Richard Meißner: Yes and no. Friedrich Theodor Vischer in the roll-call votes in the Frankfurt Parliament. (Pp. 11–43)
  • Hermann Römer : The Markgröninger Latin School 1354–1922. (Pp. 44–77)
  • Eugen Schübelin: The Lords of Stammheim and their heirs, the Barons Schertlin of Burtenbach . (Pp. 78–104)
  • Christian Belschner: Lord Mayor Heinrich von Abel. (Pp. 105–116)

Issue 10 (1926)

  • Hermann Dieterich: History of Pflugfelden . (Pp. 3–52)
  • Eduard von Kallee: Monrepos . (Pp. 53–69)
  • Hermann Römer: Markgröningen in the Peasants' War 400 years ago. (Pp. 70–76)
  • Robert Müller: Eduard Mörike . (Pp. 77–85)
  • Christian Belschner: The Mörike room in the Favorite Castle. (Pp. 86–90)
  • Eugen Schübelin: KL August and Henriette von Phull . (Pp. 91–104)

Issue 11 (1930)

Issue 12 (1939)

  • Christian Belschner: The first years of construction of the Ludwigsburg Palace. (Pp. 3–14)
  • Christian Belschner: Augustin Fischer. The adventurous life of a Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 15–35)
  • Christian Belschner: Friedrich Silcher in Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 37–40)
  • Outstanding Ludwigsburgs. (Pp. 41–46)

Issue 13 (1957)

  • Friedrich Blumenstock and Oscar Paret: The end of the Second World War in the Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 9–42)
  • Gerhard Hess: On the history of the old Ludwigsburg mark. (Pp. 43–80)
  • Oscar Paret : New prehistoric and historical finds from the Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 81–99)
  • Oscar Paret: Natural and architectural monuments that have disappeared in the Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 103–120)

Issue 14 (1960)

  • Gerhard Hess: Houses and people in Alt-Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 6–17)
  • Oscar Paret: Ludwigsburg people as a mirror of Ludwigsburg city history. (Pp. 18–47)
  • Oscar Paret: Dr. Paul Aldinger von Heutingsheim , 1869–1944. Pastor and colonist. A pioneer of Germanness in Brazil. (Pp. 48–55)
  • Oscar Paret: Prehistory from the Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 56–59)

Issue 15 (1963)

  • Wolfgang Bollacher: The development of the Cistercian gang Geisnang. (Pp. 7–21)
  • Willi Müller: On name research and settlement history. (Pp. 22–28)
  • Hans Schmäh: Ludwigsburg Manufactories in the 18th Century. (Pp. 29–51)
  • Oscar Paret: From Ludwigsburg life at the end of the Biedermeier period . (Pp. 52–78)
  • Walter Hagen: Justinus Kerner , life and work. On the 100th anniversary of the poet's death. (Pp. 79–106)
  • Walter Hagen: Three unknown documents from Justinus Kerner from the years 1850/51. (Pp. 107–113)
  • Oscar Paret: New prehistoric finds in the Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 114–125)
  • Julius Friedrich Kastner: The margravial Baden fief "Castle and Village of Mundelsheim ". (Pp. 126–134)
  • Albert Groß: The renovation of the Aldinger Church. (Pp. 135–138)
  • Otto Majer: The church in Beihingen . (Pp. 138–141)
  • Markus Otto: The restoration of the Kilian's Church in Bissingen. (Pp. 141–142)
  • Ernst Kühnle: The Martinskirche in Großingersheim . (Pp. 142–145)
  • Elisabeth Zipperlen: The Cyriakus Church in Bönnigheim . (Pp. 145–151)
  • Elisabeth Zipperlen: The church in Hofen . (Pp. 151–153)
  • Elisabeth Zipperlen: The grave slab of Hans-Konrad von Auerbach in the church at Hofen. (Pp. 153–154)

Issue 16 (1964)

  • Wolfgang Bollacher: The authorities on the old Ludwigsburg mark. (Pp. 7–29)
  • Markus Otto: Post-Reformation paintings in the churches of the Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 30–56)
  • Elisabeth Zipperlen: In the footsteps of the sculptor Jacob Müller. (Pp. 57–67)
  • Otto Conrad: The pile yard at the Wunnenstein . A contribution to the settlement history of the 18th century. (Pp. 68–90)
  • Oscar Paret: A building magic from Bietigheim aa der Enz. (P. 91–97)
  • Theodor Bolay: Emigration from Asperg in the 18th and 19th centuries. (Pp. 98–126)
  • Walter Hagen: Justinus Kerner as Ludwigsburg in political events in 1817 and 1848. (pp. 127–134)
  • Heinrich Gaese: Eduard Mörike's youth country. (Pp. 135–156)
  • Ilse Manke: Two Ludwigsburg city maps from the years 1782 and 1805–1820. (Pp. 157–162)
  • Walter Hagen: An unknown letter from David Friedrich Strauss from 1838. (p. 163–165)
  • Oscar Paret: New prehistoric finds in the Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 166–178)
  • Theodor Bolay: Short history of the Asperger Michaelskirche. (Pp. 179–184)
  • Robert Simen: The interior renovation of the Johanneskirche [sic!] In Erdmannhausen . (Pp. 184–187)
  • Paul Krüger: Restoration and repair work in Ludwigsburg Palace from the post-war period until today. (Pp. 187–196)

Issue 17 (1965)

  • Willi A. Boelcke : Kornwestheim from Roman times to the Middle Ages. (Pp. 7–35)
  • Willi Müller: On name research and settlement history. Alliterating place names in and around the Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 36–51)
  • Wolfgang Bollacher: The founding of Ludwigsburg and the old Wirtemberg church property. (Pp. 52–69)
  • Markus Otto: Post-Reformation paintings in the churches of the Ludwigsburg district. 2nd part: paintings on gallery parapets. (Pp. 70–92)
  • Hans Schmäh: The Ludwigsburg workhouse . (Pp. 93–117)
  • Erhard Lenk: Mag. Rudolf Friedrich Heinrich Magenau , pastor, poet, writer, local researcher and educator, 1767–1846. (Pp. 118–146)
  • Walter Hagen: From the life and work of Tony Schumacher (1848–1931). (Pp. 147–164)
  • Ilse Manke: The Ludwigsburg Museum of Local History. (Pp. 165–174)
  • Oscar Paret: Of new prehistoric finds in the Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 175–178)
  • Gerhard Braun: The Georgskirche in Schwieberdingen . Interior renovation 1962–1964. (Pp. 179–184)
  • Elisabeth Zipperlen: Five renewed churches in our district ( Erligheim , Hofen , Hohenstein , Freudental and Löchgau ). (Pp. 185–202)

Issue 18 (1966)

  • Oscar Paret: Ottmarsheim in prehistory and early history. (Pp. 7–21)
  • Willi A. Boelcke: Ottmarsheim in the Middle Ages. (Pp. 22–46)
  • Gerhard Deibel: From the Reformation to the Present. (Pp. 47–58)
  • Emil Unkauf: The new road to Besigheim. Construction of the aqueduct. (Pp. 59–60)
  • Hermann Schütz: Ottmarsheim today. (Pp. 61–70)
  • Markus Otto: The parish church of St. Hippolyt . (Pp. 71–84)
  • Wolfgang Bollacher: The Ottmarsheim village law from 1571. (pp. 85–92)
  • Elisabeth Zipperlen: Liebenstein and the Liebensteiner . (Pp. 93–104)
  • Willi Müller: The place name and its history. (Pp. 105–108)
  • Willi Müller: A look across the hallway and the names of the fields. (Pp. 109–113)
  • Hans Peter Weber: Old Ottmarsheim families. With lists of pastors, teachers and mayors (Schultheißen). (Pp. 114–125)
  • Karl Kramer: Our names - once completely different. (Pp. 126–128)
  • Theodor Bolay: Emigrants tell. (Pp. 128–135)
  • Emil Unkauf: The people of Ottmarsheim on workdays and on public holidays. (Pp. 135–141)
  • Willi Müller: Soldier Luitle from Ottmarsheim. (Pp. 141–143)
  • Willi A. Boelcke: Kornwestheim in the late Middle Ages. (Pp. 144–162)
  • Gislinde Gaese: On the history of the Ludwigsburger Alleen. (Pp. 163–179)
  • Walter Hagen: Friedrich Notter and Eduard Mörike . (Pp. 180–191)

Issue 19 (1967)

  • Willi A. Boelcke: Kornwestheim on the threshold of modern times. (Pp. 7–31)
  • Otto Kleinknecht: On the earliest history of the Murrgau. (Pp. 32–70)
  • Willi Müller: Names - Zelgen - Graves - Markings. A preliminary contribution to the Alemannic-Franconian settlement history. (Pp. 71–89)
  • Erhard Lenk: Magister Ludwig Friedrich Heyd . Pastor, historian and historiographer (1792–1842). (Pp. 90–112)
  • Gislinde Gaese: On the history of the Ludwigsburger Alleen. (Pp. 113–119)
  • Oscar Paret: For the Kirschler-Schupp exhibition on January 21, 1967 at the Volkshochschule Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 120–124)
  • Walter Kirschler and Kurt Schupp: New Stone Age finds on Ludwigsburg soil. (Pp. 125–130)
  • Oscar Paret: The Pleidelsheim Primer. (Pp. 131–133)
  • Günter P. Fehring and Barbara Scholkmann : First results of the excavation in the Martinskirche in Kornwestheim. (Pp. 134–137)
  • Markus Otto: The Katharinenkirche in Eglosheim . (Pp. 138–144)
  • Elisabeth Zipperlen: The renovation of the Besigheim town church. (Pp. 145–152)
  • Elisabeth Zipperlen: The Protestant parish church in Gemmrigheim . (Pp. 153–159)

Issue 20 (1968)

  • Heinrich Gaese: On the foundation of the city of Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 7–31)
  • Theodor Bolay: How Asperg lost official and city justice to Ludwigsburg (1718–1740). (Pp. 32–52)
  • Otto Schifferer: The economic development of Ludwigsburg from the founding of the city to the beginning of the 2nd World War. (Pp. 53–81)
  • Walter Hagen: Dr. August Hermann Werner , the doctor, the Christian, the child friend. (Pp. 81–94)
  • Erhard Lenk: Johannes Buhl, founder of Protestant teacher training in Württemberg (1810–1868). (Pp. 94–105)
  • Heino Gaese: To Mörike's honorary doctorate. With two letters from Mörike and one from F. Th. Vischer. (Pp. 105–111)
  • Rudolf Kieß: On the history of Hart near Steinheim an der Murr . (Pp. 112–135)
  • Wolfgang Bollacher: Stone crosses in the Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 135–161)
  • Werner Fleischhauer: The sculpture of the Renaissance period in the area of ​​the Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 162–176)
  • Oscar Paret: Roman consecration stone from the Neckar near Marbach. (Pp. 177–179)
  • Markus Otto: The parish church of St. Georg zu Höpfigheim . (Pp. 180–187)
  • Elisabeth Zipperlen: The renovated church in Kirchheim am Neckar . (Pp. 187–193)

Issue 21 (1969)

  • Willi Müller: The development of the Bietigheim an der Enz brand . (Pp. 7–43)
  • Kurt A. Schupp: Alemannic-Franconian row graves in Pleidelsheim . (Pp. 43–50)
  • Willi Müller: First documentary mention of the places in the Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 50–55)
  • Reinhold Rau: The gentlemen from Urbach zu Mundelsheim and Höpfigheim. (Pp. 56–65)
  • Otto Schifferer: The economic development of Ludwigsburg from the foundation of the city to the Federal Republic. (Pp. 66–83)
  • Willi Müller: The renovated old castle in Beihingen am Neckar . (Pp. 83–86)

Issue 22 (1970)

  • Reinhold Rau: The Speth von Höpfigheim. (Pp. 7–15)
  • Reinhold Rau: Hans von Urbach zu Mundelsheim, the enemy of the city. (Pp. 16–21)
  • Markus Otto: The stained glass from St. George's Church in Kleinbottwar . (Pp. 22–39)
  • Elisabeth Zipperlen: The Imperial Counts of Stadion and their castle in Bönnigheim . (Pp. 40–60)
  • Theodor Bolay: Bietigheim's struggle against beggar-ness at the end of the 18th century. (Pp. 60–66)
  • Gudrun Vogt-Schnapper: On the history of traditional costumes and clothing in the Ludwigsburg district. An inventory and consideration based on archival and other surveys in Schwieberdingen and other places. (Pp. 67–106)
  • Willi Müller: Gasthaus zur Sonne in Besigheim . A little obituary. (Pp. 107–109)

Issue 23 (1971)

  • Reinhold Rau: Contributions to the genealogy and history of the gentlemen of Nippenburg . (Pp. 7–38)
  • Walter Meyer: Carl Friedrich Höllwarth from Oßweil . A gardener journeyman in Paris from 1789–1790. (Pp. 39–55)
  • Walter Meyer: Two military farewells of Württemberg corporals (1775 and 1806) and their historical background. (Pp. 56–67)
  • Heinrich Gaese: Ludwigsburg affairs and trials in the German pre-March . (Pp. 68–83)
  • Eberhard Sieber: A prisoner's diary from Hohenasperg. (Pp. 84–112)
  • Willi A. Boelcke: Kornwestheim on the threshold of modern times. (Pp. 113–125)
  • Willi A. Boelcke: Kornwestheim in modern times. (Pp. 126–133)
  • Karl Rohm: A village changes its face. Structural change using the example of Neckargröningen . (Pp. 134–172)

Issue 24 (1972)

  • Bernd Ottnad: 75 years of the Historischer Verein Ludwigsburg (district and city) e. V. (pp. 7–35)
  • Cord Meckseper: Castles in the Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 37–64)
  • Wolfgang Irtenkauf : About the origin of Johann Grüninger from Markgröningen. (Pp. 65–74)
  • Siegfried Greiner: From the life of Johannes Hippolyt Brenz . For the 400th birthday of student friend Johannes Kepler and in memory of the “jubilee sermon” for the Brenz theologian family 350 years ago. (Pp. 75–96)
  • Hans-Martin Maurer : Fame and fall of the Hohenasperg . The drama of the first national fortress in the Thirty Years War . (Pp. 97–111)
  • Hans-Martin Maurer: Documents on the siege of Hohenasperg in 1634/35. (Pp. 113–143)
  • Willi A. Boelcke: Kornwestheim in modern times. (Pp. 145–235)
  • Hermann Josef Dahmen : The “New Choral Music Ludwigsburg”, a piece of the cultural history of the city of Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 237–243)
  • Markus Otto: The parish church of St. Pankratius in Möglingen and its works of art. A contribution on the topic of monument preservation in the Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 245–262)

Issue 25 (1973)

  • Gregor Richter: Historical remarks on the district reform of 1973 and the area of ​​the greater Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 7–21)
  • Karl Rohm: Alemanni graves and early settlement in Neckargröningen . (Pp. 23–49)
  • Elisabeth Zipperlen: On ecclesiastical and monastic life in Bönnigheim before the Reformation. (Pp. 51–65)
  • Paul Sauer: On the social and economic history of Affalterbach , primarily in the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries. (Pp. 67–90)
  • Willi A. Boelcke: About historians and historians on the recent history of Kornwestheim, especially the achievements and merits of Ch. L. Kerner and G. Rümelin. (Pp. 91–110)
  • Walter Hagen: Legends about Mörike. (Pp. 111–124)

Issue 26 (1974)

  • Robert Koch: The early medieval spur of Bietigheim. (Pp. 7–16)
  • Theodor Bolay: History of the city of Asperg in the 17th century. (Pp. 17–33)
  • Karl Rohm: Balthasar Sprenger (Springer) on his 250th birthday. Prelate and abbot, professor and duke. Württ. Rat, a son of our group. (Pp. 35–50)
  • Ernst Benz: David Friedrich Strauss . On the 100th anniversary of death. (Pp. 51–68)
  • Siegfried Greiner: David Friedrich Strauss and his student Hermann Gundert. (Pp. 69–78)
  • Erich Faßl: Ludwigsburg is changing from a hunting lodge to a regional center. (Pp. 79–103)
  • Elisabeth Zipperlen: The new organ in the Bönnigheim Cyriakus Church. (Pp. 105–114)

Issue 27 (1975)

  • Willi A. Boelcke: Roman heritage, Alemannic conquest and the emergence of manorial rule in the German south-west. (Pp. 5–57)
  • Otto Conrad: Wolf von Wunnenstein , called the glistening wolf. (Pp. 59–67)
  • Heinrich Gaese: Sebastian Schertlin von Burtenbach . (Pp. 69–88)
  • Wolfgang Irtenkauf: Johann Wolff, bailiff at Mundelsheim (1537–1600). (Pp. 89–116)
  • Walter Hagen: From Eduard Mörikes Suffering, Dying, Death and Burial. (Pp. 117–123)
  • Markus Otto: The St. Kilian cemetery church in Mundelsheim and its art treasures. (Pp. 125–140)
  • Erich Fassl: Historical fountains in the Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 141–172)

Issue 28 (1976)

  • Franziska Countess Adelmann: Dr. Dietrich von Plieningen zu Schaubeck (around 1453–1520). (Pp. 9–139)
  • Wolfgang Irtenkauf: The book of hours of the gentlemen of Plieningen . (Pp. 141–149)

29 (1977)

  • Robert Uhland: Karl Freiherr von Kerner. Officer, technician, innovator of the Württemberg mining and metallurgy industry. (Pp. 5–68)
  • Martin Brecht: The pious and the church - a tense relationship, illustrated by examples from the church history of Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 69–86)
  • Walter Ringwald: Johannes Rebmann 1820–1876. Missionary, explorer, linguist. (Pp. 87–109)
  • Joachim Duwe: The Michaelskirche in Hochdorf near Vaihingen / Enz. (Pp. 111–125)
  • Theodor Bolay: On the history of the community bakeries . (Pp. 127–153)

Issue 30 (1978)

  • Paul Sauer : The persecution of the Jewish citizens by the National Socialist regime, especially in Württemberg (1933–1945). (Pp. 9–21)
  • Beate Maria Schüßler: The fate of the Jewish citizens of Ludwigsburg during the time of the National Socialist persecution. (Pp. 23–125)

Issue 31 (1979)

  • Alois Seiler: The beginnings of the medieval church organization in the central Neckar area. (Pp. 7–22)
  • Bernhard Theil: Steinheim's development into an old Württemberg market town in the 17th century. (Pp. 23–38)
  • Robert Uhland: Duke Carl Eugen of Württemberg. Personality and work. (Pp. 39–56)
  • Rudolf Mikeler: The police in the course of history. (Pp. 57–69)
  • Gerhard Rüschen: Old and new advertising graphics - from Franck to Unifranck . (Pp. 71–77)
  • Wolfgang Schneider: The Franck-Unifranck advertising media archive. (Pp. 79–83)
  • Paul Sauer: The end of the Third Reich in Württemberg. (Pp. 85–97)

Issue 32 (1980)

  • Jörg Biel : The early Celtic find of Hochdorf in the context of the princely graves of southwest Germany. (Pp. 7–21)
  • Alois Seiler: The German Order in Southwest Germany. Hospital orders, knight orders, clergy orders from the 12th to the 20th century. (Pp. 23–42)
  • Paul Sauer: Church and Church Life in Tamm through the Centuries. (Pp. 43–58)
  • Theodor Bolay: The Hessigheimer Weiberzeche. (Pp. 59–78)
  • Wolfgang Schmierer: On the history of the origins of Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 79–94)
  • Herbert Felden: From the history of Hoheneck. (Pp. 95–102)
  • Norbert Stein: The fighting for Montbéliard in the war of 1870/71. (Pp. 103–116)
  • Günter Cordes: The revolutionary year 1918/19 in Württemberg and the events in Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 117–138)

No. 33 (1981)

  • Arnd Breuning: The Aldinger font. Branches - arbor - demons. (Pp. 7–23)
  • Hans Joachim Krämer: Schubart and Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 25–40)
  • Bernhard Zeller: Friedrich Schiller in Marbach. (Pp. 41–54)
  • Günther Mahal: Not just a parody. Comments on Friedrich Theodor Vischer's "Faust III". (Pp. 55–75)
  • Norbert Stein: Ludwigsburg and its regiments in the war of 1870/71 . (Pp. 77–112)
  • Wolfgang Schmierer: The State Archive Ludwigsburg - data storage for family history research. (Pp. 113–129)
  • Alois Seiler: In the service of the general public. On the tasks of the Ludwigsburg City Archives. (Pp. 131–134)
  • Wolfgang Läpple: The holdings of the Ludwigsburg city archive. Tradition, structure, content. (Pp. 135–183)

Issue 34 (1982)

  • Klaus Merten: Favorite Palace in Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 7–19)
  • Alois Seiler: Freiberg - roots of a young city. (Pp. 20–35)
  • Theobald Nebel: The History of the Freudental Jews (Part 1). (Pp. 36–74)
  • Norbert Stein: Father Augustin Fischer from Ludwigsburg - last cabinet secretary of Emperor Maximilian of Mexico . (Pp. 75–133)
  • Ulrich Kull: Gottlieb Löffler - a Swabian painter. (Pp. 134–143)

Issue 35 (1983)

Issue 36 (1984)

  • Reinhard Wolf : Gruhen in the Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 7–84)
  • Helmut Orth: Bissinger stone monuments. (Pp. 85–128)
  • Paul Sauer: Marbach in 1933. (pp. 129–144)
  • Franziska Countess Adelmann: Disappeared - Forgotten? What will happen to the small towns and their names? (Pp. 145–155)
  • Theobald Nebel: The History of the Freudental Jews (Part 3). (Pp. 156–205)
  • Else Schäfer: Traugott Haffner, Stadtschultheiß in Marbach 1883–1903. (Pp. 206–221)

Issue 37 (1985)

  • Willi Müller: 30 essays on name and field name research.

Issue 38 (1985)

  • Reinhard Wolf : Landscape change in the wider area of ​​Marbach aN in eight centuries. Explanations for the map »Landscape change 1900–1950–1980«. (Pp. 9–31)
  • Paul Sauer: 700 years of the city of Bönnigheim. (Pp. 32–45)
  • Renate Leibfried: The Church of St. Pankraz in Hochdorf, municipality of Eberdingen . (Pp. 46–58)
  • Renate Leibfried: The "sleeping Johannes" in the church of Hochdorf, parish of Eberdingen. (Pp. 59–60)
  • Norbert Stein: Music and theater in Ludwigsburg of the 18th and 19th centuries. (Pp. 61–87)
  • Paul Sauer: On the history of the Jews in Württemberg. (Pp. 89–103)
  • Stefan Beck u. a .: Playground halls from the Weimar Republic in Erdmannhausen, Marbach and Steinheim. The centers of the labor movement culture in the proletarian province. (Pp. 104–131)
  • Paul Müller: 1945. From the war diary of Mayor Hermann Käser von Asperg. (Pp. 132–152)
  • Paul Kopf: Building blocks from the year of the »Zero Hour« (1945). (Pp. 153–159)

No. 39 (1986)

  • Kurt A. Schupp: The Ludwigsburg porcelain and faience manufacture 1758–1824 in the light of new excavation finds. (Pp. 7–30)
  • Franziska Countess Adelmann: Civil spiritual life in the imperial knighthood village of Heutingsheim in the late 18th and early 19th centuries: Pastor Johann Friedrich Christmann and Oberamtmann Johann Mader. (Pp. 31–76)
  • Rudolf A. Paulus: The scientific educational institute at the salon near Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 77–180)
  • Horst Janssen: Mörike's relationship to Catholicism. (Pp. 181–184)
  • Willi A. Boelcke: The local council in Kornwestheim 1880–1980. Structures and changes in a local leadership elite. (Pp. 185–200)

Issue 40 (1987)

  • Dieter Planck: On the topography of the Roman whale home . (Pp. 7–72)
  • Anneliese Seeliger-Zeiss: The inscriptions of the Ludwigsburg district. Their role as a historical source and mirror of the social structure of the population of past centuries. (Pp. 73–92)
  • Wolfgang Bollacher: Georg Sebastian Zilling (1725–1799) - much maligned dean and pastor in Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 93–114)
  • Martin Bollacher : Jud Suess Oppenheimer . His image in German literature. (Pp. 115–128)
  • Wolfgang Kircher: The escape helper S. From the life of the Schiller friend Andreas Streicher (1761-1833). (Pp. 129–141)
  • Rolf Bidlingmaier: The order chapel in Ludwigsburg Castle. (Pp. 143–169)
  • Wolfgang Läpple: From the Waiblinger Amtshaus to the main guard building and schoolhouse. The Marktplatz 11 building in Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 171–190)
  • Hans Joachim Krämer: A memorable concert in Ludwigsburg last century. Franz Liszt played on November 17, 1843 in the Ludwigsburg "Waldhorn". (Pp. 191–196)
  • Hermann Schick: The church fight in Marbach. A contribution to the history of Marbach during the Third Reich. (Pp. 197–209)

Issue 41 (1988)

  • Wolfgang Bollacher: 90 Years of the Historical Association for the City and District of Ludwigsburg e. V. (pp. 7–12)
  • Albert Sting : Ludwigsburg 90 years ago. (Pp. 21–39)
  • Ingo Stork: On the state of knowledge of Roman manors in the Ludwigsburg district. Questions, maintenance, tasks. (Pp. 41–52)
  • Alois Seiler: World in the Middle Ages. From the nobility and monks, farmers and citizens in today's Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 53–69)
  • Alois Seiler: Medieval life in contemporary images. (Pp. 71–112)
  • Paul Sauer: From administrative towns and rural communities in today's Ludwigsburg district . (Pp. 113–135)
  • Bernhard Zeller: Ludwigsburg and its poets. (Pp. 137–155)
  • Markus Otto: 650 years of church art in the Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 157–175)

Issue 42 (1988)

  • Wolfgang Läpple: The fate of the Ludwigsburg synagogue. A contribution to the history of the Jewish community in Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 7–44)
  • Eberhard Kulf: The Marbach Latin school teacher Simon Studion (1543-16?) And the beginnings of archeology in Württemberg. (Pp. 45–68)
  • Reinhard Wolf : The former Marbach city forest near Siebersbach 1680–1794. (Pp. 69–142)
  • Manfred Scheck: The Enzweihingen schoolmaster Gottlieb Mittelberger - a Swabian traveler to America in the 18th century. (Pp. 143–174)
  • Berthold Leibinger : Feudalism and Economy. Notes on the history of Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 175–182)
  • Paul Müller: Asperg in World War II. From the memories of Mayor Hermann Käser. (Pp. 183–186)

Issue 43 (1989)

  • Thomas Schulz: On the history of the imperial knighthood in today's Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 9–25)
  • Bernhard Zeller: Ludwigsburg in the age of the French Revolution. (Pp. 27–36)
  • Hermann Schick: The Schillerhöhe in Marbach and its significance for Marbach's urban development. (Pp. 37–55)
  • Wolfgang Schmierer: From bold experiment to solid success. 125 years of Volksbank Ludwigsburg in the course of history. (Pp. 57–75)
  • Stefan Beck: "The influence of the city is particularly damaging." Parish reports on industrialization and social differentiation in the former Oberamt Marbach between 1890 and 1914. (pp. 77–110)
  • Karl Moersch: It was the biggest in the whole country. Notes on the fifty-year history of the Ludwigsburg district . (Pp. 111–125)
  • Ulrich Müller: Displaced persons (DPs) in Ludwigsburg barracks 1945–1951. (Pp. 127–139)

Issue 44 (1990)

  • Wolfgang Läpple: General Ferdinand Friedrich Heinrich von Mylius and his street in Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 7–50)
  • Stefan Uhl: Harteneck Castle near Ludwigsburg. Comments on the late medieval building stock. (Pp. 51–63)
  • Friedrich Freiherr von Gaisberg-Schöckingen: The "original line" of the Barons von Gaisberg . (Pp. 65–79)
  • Hans Hartig: Jakob Friedrich Kammerer from Ludwigsburg. Inventor of the matches. (Pp. 81–116)
  • Hermann Haufler: The lost treasure of Hochberg Castle. Relations between the Russian poet Michail Jurjewitsch Lermontow and Baroness Alexandra Maichailovna von Hügel. (Pp. 117–125)
  • Kurt A. Schupp: historical source attic. Discoveries in the old Ludwigsburg porcelain factory . (Pp. 127–157)
  • Rudolf Mikeler: On the history of the prison in Ludwigsburg 1933-1945. (Pp. 159–169)
  • Manfred Scheck: Supplementary to Gottlieb Mittelberger. (Pp. 185–186)

Issue 45 (1991)

  • Hermann Ehmer: The Wunnenstein and the Wunnensteiner. (Pp. 7–20)
  • Leopold Stierle: Nobility in Bietigheim . (Pp. 21–38)
  • Birgit Hlawatsch: Monrepos. 400 years of Württemberg history. (Pp. 39–69)
  • Norbert Stein: On the history of the festival and theater building at the Monrepos lake castle . (Pp. 71–86)
  • Wolfgang Läpple: Ludwigsburg in the first years after World War II - illustrated using sources from the Ludwigsburg City Archives. (Pp. 87–170)
  • Ulrich Müller: The internment camps in and around Ludwigsburg 1945–1949. (Pp. 171–195)

Issue 46 (1992)

  • Irmgard Knoll: The Counts of Asperg - a branch of the Count Palatine of Tübingen . (Pp. 11–35)
  • Karl Moersch: The example of Mélac . The proverbial villain. Facts and legends. (Pp. 36–47)
  • Wolfgang Läpple: Highlights from Ludwigsburg's military past. (Pp. 48–83)
  • Bernd Schmid-Kemmner: "... shine to my early death." War memorials in the Ludwigsburg district as historical sources . (Pp. 84–160)
  • Erich Viehöfer: »Spices and Iron«. On the history of the " Gebrüder Lotter " company in Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 161–188)
  • Erich Viehöfer: Again: Ludwigsburg prison 1933–1945. (Pp. 204–205)

Issue 47 (1993)

  • Ingo Stork : Alemanni and Franconia in the Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 7–48)
  • Leopold Stierle: Who was Bernger von Bietigheim? (Pp. 49–77)
  • Hermann Schick: Pietism and Separatism in the 18th Century. Highlights from the church history of the Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 79–85)
  • Hans Dieter Flach: historical source earth. Discoveries next to the old Ludwigsburg porcelain factory. (Pp. 87–100)
  • Karl Moersch: Heinrich Franck and his time. (Pp. 101–114)

Issue 48 (1994)

  • Friedrich Karl Azzola: On the secular iconography of a late medieval cross plate in Oberstenfeld . The wheel as a Wagner symbol. (Pp. 7-14)
  • Thomas Schulz: The Markgröninger Latin School in the late Middle Ages and in the early modern period. (Pp. 15–32)
  • Erich Viehöfer: From madhouse to museum. The history of the house at Schorndorfer Straße 38 and its residents. (Pp. 33–52)
  • Albrecht Gühring: 100 years of the Bottwartal Railway . (Pp. 53–83)
  • Theobald Nebel: Julius Marx. A Jewish-Swabian entrepreneur from Freudental. (Pp. 85–115)
  • Adolf Leibbrand: The aerial warfare in the Ludwigsburg district from 1939 to 1945. (pp. 117–155)

Issue 49 (1995)

  • Matthias Klein: Archeology in the Roman estate of Ludwigsburg-Hoheneck then and now. Results of the excavations of 1911, 1986/89 and 1991/92. (Pp. 7–35)
  • Irmgard and Rolf Knoll: On Asperg's beginnings: "Count" Gozbert or the end of a legend. (Pp. 37–43)
  • Hans Dieter Flach: On the procurement system of the early Ludwigsburg porcelain and faience manufacture. (Pp. 45–65)
  • Eberhard Fritz: From the »Seehaus« to the »Monrepos«. Studies on the function of the lake castle under King Friedrich von Württemberg. (Pp. 67–92)
  • Uwe Jens Wandel: John Christopher Hampp Esquire - from Marbach to Norwich. (Pp. 93–104)
  • Heinz Martin Murr: The barons of Savoy. From a Saxon diplomatic family to Oßweiler Castle. (Pp. 105–128)
  • Hermann Schick: The fates of women in Marbach around 1900 (pp. 129–146)
  • Wassili Kowalenko: "Our life was difficult and monotonous." Memories of a former forced laborer from the Ukraine . (Pp. 147–170)
  • Gerhard Würth: Student gunners from Ludwigsburg in the bombing war 1943–1945. (Pp. 171–199)
  • Heinz Georg Keppler: 160 years of the Marbach Schiller Association. (Pp. 201–208)
  • Hans Dietl: Again: The Aldinger baptismal font. (Pp. 223–227)

Issue 50 (1996)

  • Stephan Molitor: The contract of Bishop Balderich von Speyer with the deacon Wolvald from January 29, 972. (pp. 11-19)
  • Albrecht Gühring: The Alexander Church in Marbach am Neckar. (Pp. 21–60)
  • Erich Viehöfer: Palais Schütz and Red Ox. On the building history of the Ludwigsburg prison. (Pp. 61–94)
  • Wolfgang Klusemann: Hans Hermann (1875–1953), Württemberg artillery officer and Ludwigsburg citizen. (Pp. 95–118)
  • Marc-Wilhelm Kohfink: With own homes against alcohol abuse. Georg Kropps "Community of Friends" and social liberalism. (Pp. 119–153)
  • Christoph Randler: The white stork in the Ludwigsburg district - once a common breeding bird , today only migrants. (Pp. 155–163)

Issue 51 (1997)

  • Stephan Molitor: The Bietigheimer town elevation document of Emperor Charles IV of August 28, 1364. (pp. 11-14)
  • Remo Boccia: Italian artists at the Stuttgart and Ludwigsburg courts in the 17th and 18th centuries. (Pp. 15–61)
  • Johann Michael Bruhn and Andreas Kaiser: A German hero and general. Freudental and the imperial general Hans Carl von Thüngen . (Pp. 63–100)
  • Elfriede Krüger: Duchess Elisabeth Sophia Friederike von Württemberg and other women at the court of Duke Carl Eugen. (Pp. 101–118)
  • Gertrud Fiege: The Ludwigsburg artists. Ludovike Simanowiz and Regine Voßler - music and painting - a double portrait. (Pp. 119–129)
  • Hans Dieter Flach: Three black eagles on porcelain. On the activities of the Ludwigsburg porcelain painter and gilded artist Johann Anton Tronner. (Pp. 131–143)
  • Wolfgang Läpple: The goose of the 1st cavalry regiment. An "animal" episode from Ludwigsburg's military past. (Pp. 145–157)
  • Klaus Schönberger: "But an industry has also grown up ..." On the social history of industrialization in the Marbach Oberamt, 1880–1920. (Pp. 159–179)
  • Hermann Glaser: About the aesthetic education of people in industrial society. (Pp. 181–192)

Issue 52 (1998)

  • Stephan Molitor: A Bebenhausen private document from 1243 about acquisition of ownership in Geisnang, a predecessor settlement of Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 7–11)
  • Herbert Hoffmann: 1200 years of Heimerdingen. (Pp. 13–33)
  • Herbert Schempf: Württemberg as a legal case. The felony trial against Duke Ulrich from 1548 to 1553 as reflected in legal opinions. (Pp. 35–46)
  • Joachim Hahn : The formation of the Israelite community in Ludwigsburg in the first half of the 19th century. (Pp. 47–66)
  • Wolfgang Läpple: Ludwigsburg in the revolutionary years 1848/49 . (Pp. 67–141)
  • Irmgard Sedler: Left and right of the track. A supplement to the anniversary exhibition "150 Years of the Railway in Kornwestheim". (Pp. 143–173)
  • Klaus Schönberger: Social differentiation and beginnings of the labor movement in the Marbach Oberamt. (Pp. 175–201)

Issue 53 (1999)

  • Stephan Molitor: A " Count's Day " in Ingersheim (1105/1120). (Pp. 9–13)
  • Hermann Burkhardt: The Eglosheimer Katharinenkirche in the 15th century as a pilgrimage church of Our Lady. (Pp. 15–28)
  • Martin Burkhardt: Ketlin Klein and the secularization of church property in Häfnerhaslach under Duke Ulrich. (Pp. 29–36)
  • Volker Trugenberger : "The maid met with the servant". Servants in the Strohgäu in the early modern period. (Pp. 37–73)
  • Albrecht Gühring: The Marbach Gate Towers. (Pp. 75–93)
  • Petra Schad: From rags to culture carriers. Manufacture and history of paper taking into account the Markgröninger paper mill . (Pp. 95–108)
  • Wolfgang Klusemann: The battle near Erligheim on November 3, 1799. (pp. 109–131)
  • Hermann Schick: Becoming and decaying the Marbach Oberamt . (Pp. 133–152)
  • Günther Bergan: The Ratskeller in Ludwigsburg. History and stories. (Pp. 153–198)

Issue 54 (2000)

  • Stephan Molitor: The "founding document" of the Mariental monastery in Steinheim (around 1255). (Pp. 7–10)
  • Hermann Ehmer: The Oberstenfeld Abbey. From the Salian period to the 20th century. (Pp. 11–23)
  • Martin Burkhardt: Books, education and church singing in Eglosheim at the end of the Middle Ages. (Pp. 25–40)
  • Hans Dieter Flach: A previously unknown type of manufacturer's brand on Ludwigsburg porcelain. (Pp. 41–50)
  • Albrecht Gühring: " Put a wedge in your conscience". The theologian Ludwig Hofacker (1798–1828). (Pp. 51–68)
  • Joachim Baur: A revolutionary with two attempts. Georg David Hardegg from Eglosheim (1812–1879). (Pp. 69–94)
  • Gertrud Bolay: Friedrich Wilhelm von Schaal (1842–1909). An honorary citizen of Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 95–107)
  • Wolfgang Klusemann: From the greenhouses to the film academy. A contribution to the history of the Ludwigsburg barracks. (Pp. 109–124)
  • Wolfgang Läpple: The observation tower at the Salonwald. A bygone landmark of Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 125–150)
  • Eduard Theiner: When Ludwigsburg drove without a track. The overhead lines to Aldingen and Hoheneck 1910–1926. (Pp. 151–173)
  • Paul Kopf: The Ludwigsburg teacher family Müller and their social environment. (Pp. 175–182)

Issue 55 (2001)

  • Stephan Molitor: City and office of Marbach become a Palatinate fief . The feudal lapel of Count Ulrichs V of Württemberg from April 26, 1463. (pp. 7–11)
  • Thomas Schulz: On the history of the flour mills in the Ludwigsburg district. (Pp. 13–35)
  • Wolfgang Schöllkopf: "Between Duke and Lord God". Court preacher at the time of Duke Eberhard Ludwig. (Pp. 37–57)
  • Wolfgang Läpple: From the history of the Ludwigsburg Feuersee. (Pp. 59–88)
  • Günther Bergan: " To the golden French horn ". Stately inn and hostel, Ludwigsburg's oldest house. (Pp. 89–126)
  • Hermann Schick: Social cases in Marbach during the Biedermeier period . (Pp. 127–142)
  • Ernst Schedler: The collegiate church Oberstenfeld . Its condition shortly before the major renovation of 1888/1891 and its major changes. (Pp. 143–170)
  • Hermann Burkhardt: A village and a city. For the incorporation of Eglosheim 100 years ago. (Pp. 171–180)
  • Theobald Nebel: Simon Meisner (1912–1994). Life and fate of the last Jewish teacher in Freudental. (Pp. 181–209)
  • Werner Volke: Swabian poets and wine. (Pp. 211–228)

Issue 56 (2002)

  • Stephan Molitor: The Hartgenossenschaft in dispute with its neighbors. The comparison of July 20, 1478. (pp. 7-10)
  • Albrecht Gühring: From the original feud to the execution. Criminal cases in Marbach between 1500 and 1750. (pp. 11–35)
  • Günther Bergan: Historic avenues in Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 37–58)
  • Albert Sting: "The Church in the Middle of the City". On the history of the Ludwigsburg city church. (Pp. 59–83)
  • Eduard Theiner: Drill for Ludwigsburg soldiers. The large parade ground and the shooting valley. (Pp. 85–114)
  • Paul Sauer: August Lämmle (1876–1962). From Oßweiler farmer's son to Swabian local poet and folklorist. (Pp. 115–128)
  • Hermann Schick: The Marbacher Schiller Adoration through the Ages. (Pp. 129–152)
  • Thomas Schulz: The emergence of the "great circle" Ludwigsburg. Comments on the district reform of 1973 (pp. 153–167)

Issue 57 (2003)

  • Stephan Molitor: A real document from Emperor Ludwig the Pious for Murrhardt Monastery from the year 816. For the first mention of Oßweil and Erdmannhausen . (Pp. 7–10)
  • Paul Sauer: Siegelhausen in the Middle Ages and at the beginning of the modern era. (Pp. 11–25)
  • Albrecht Gühring: Siegelhausen from Duke Christoph's inauguration until joining Marbach am Neckar (1550–1828). (Pp. 27–72)
  • Wolfgang Klusemann: The Royal Military Hospital in Schorndorfer Strasse in Ludwigsburg (1806–1881). (Pp. 73–95)
  • Jürgen Mittag: Wilhelm Keil . Social democratic parliamentarian from Ludwigsburg at the turning point in German history. (Pp. 97–113)
  • Götz Arnold: The Neckar-Enz position . Military protective wall after the First World War . (Pp. 115–144)
  • Wolfgang Läpple: War events in Ludwigsburg's twin town Jevpatorija / Crimea during the Second World War. (Pp. 145–154)
  • Günther Bergan: The Baumgärtner family of builders and their collection of architectural drawings in the Ludwigsburg city archive. (Pp. 155–163)
  • Karl Halbauer: A saint under a false name. On the iconography of the alleged Petrus statue in Schwieberdingen. (Pp. 165–172)

Issue 58 (2004)

  • Wolfgang Läpple: From Erlachhof to »Ludwigsburg«. The first official mention of the name Ludwigsburg in 1705. (pp. 7–11)
  • Rolf Bidlingmaier: Italian artists and artisans at Ludwigsburg Castle. Origin, family relationships, works. (Pp. 13–44)
  • Daniel Schulz: Talking walls. Graffiti from the construction period of the Ludwigsburg Palace. (Pp. 45–70)
  • Bernd Wunder : Duke Eberhard Ludwig as general and field marshal. (Pp. 71–87)
  • Sybille Oßwald-Bargende: The controversial career of a "ruling mistress". Christina Wilhelmina von Grävenitz and the court society of the Duchy of Württemberg. (Pp. 89–97)
  • Eberhard Schauer: Music and dance at the court of Duke Eberhard Ludwig. (Pp. 99–110)
  • Albrecht Gühring: The construction of the castle and city of Ludwigsburg from the Marbach's point of view. (Pp. 111–134)
  • Petra Schad: The dissolution of the traditional Markgröningen office . (Pp. 135–157)
  • Annegret Kotzurek: Ludwigsburg Palace during the reign of Duke Carl Eugen von Württemberg . (Pp. 159–187)
  • Eberhard Fritz: Ludwigsburg Palace as a summer residence. King Friedrich von Württemberg and his court in the early 19th century. (Pp. 189–236)
  • Marieluise Kliegel: "At your service". Dressing and life of the servants at the Ludwigsburg court mainly in the 19th century. (Pp. 237–249)
  • Günther Bergan: »To support the war power, to protect the citizens ...«  Gatehouses , gates and city walls of Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 251–292)

Issue 59 (2005)

  • Stephan Molitor: An anti-royal gathering on the Neckar . The " Marbacher Bund " of September 14, 1405. (pp. 7–15)
  • Petra Schad: The Frauenkirche in Unterriexingen. Parish church, pilgrimage church, cemetery church. (Pp. 17–38)
  • Albrecht Gühring: Friedrich Schiller's Marbach ancestors. (Pp. 39–51)
  • Klaus Merten: The Ludwigsburg Castle Church. The prehistory of its creation 1707–1720. (Pp. 53–62)
  • Erich Viehöfer: Schellenwerker, Galioten, Schänzer. Labor deployment of convicts in and around Ludwigsburg. (Pp. 63–86)
  • Günther Bergan: Ludwigsburg town houses and craftsmen's houses after 1760. Subsidized, regulated, standardized. (Pp. 87–104)
  • Hans Dieter Flach: "Hera" and "Leda" by Johann Wilhelm Götz . A pair of figures from Ludwigsburg rediscovered after 245 years. (Pp. 105–111)
  • Hermann Schick: Friedrich Ferdinand Drück (1754–1807). (Pp. 113–130)
  • Eduard Theiner: Remseck Castle and its guests. (Pp. 131–150)
  • Daniel Schulz: Between the swastika and the Milky Way. On the history of Ludwigsburg Castle in the 20th century. (Pp. 151–172)

Issue 60 (2006)

  • Stephan Molitor: Early medieval property of the imperial monastery Lorsch im Murrgau .
  • Paul Sauer: The high aristocratic castle Wolfsölden in the light of historical sources.
  • Jaroslaw Piech: "... gradually miserably acquired at the high court on the Strand." Gallows locations in the Ludwigsburg district.
  • Albrecht Gühring: The ancestors of Tobias Mayer .
  • Petra Schad: Reflection of the baroque Ludwigsburg palace in ecclesiastical and secular buildings in Markgröningen and Löchgau .
  • Thomas Schulz: abuse of power and tyranny of a ducal official. The Besigheim Vogt Viktor Stephan Essich (1709–1775).
  • Paul Kopf: Catholic life in Ludwigsburg from the city's foundation to the beginning of the 19th century.
  • Daniel Schulz: "How to learn to talk, walk, write ..." Education for princes in Württemberg.
  • Paul Sauer: From the Duchy to the Kingdom of Württemberg. The creation of the modern Württemberg state by King Friedrich.
  • Friedrich Wilhelm Eigler: A "rediscovered" iron medallion with the portrait of King Friedrich I of Württemberg. First artistic large iron casting in Wasseralfingen .
  • Albrecht Bergold: Eduard Mörike - a Ludwigsburg at heart.
  • Daniel Kirn: »With bag and bag«. The emigration from Württemberg in the 19th century with special consideration of the city of Ludwigsburg.
  • Klaus Warthon: 125 years of the Murrtalbahn . (Pp. 185–199)

Issue 61 (2007)

  • Christian Burkhart: The "relentless feud" between the Speyer prince-bishop Siegfried von Wolfsölden and the Lorsch monastery bailiff, Count Berthold von Lindenfels (1128/30). (Pp. 7–29)
  • Hans Dieter Flach: "Copied". Use of templates by painters and modellers at the Ludwigsburg Porcelain Manufactory . (Pp. 31–42)
  • Eberhard Fritz: The Württemberg court in the early 19th century. On the world of court servants in the reign of King Friedrich. (Pp. 43–62)
  • Daniel Schulz: "At Königs under the floor". Finds from the early 19th century from the false and intermediate floors of Ludwigsburg Castle. (Pp. 63–84)
  • Günther Bergan: Curtain up and applause! - Theater life in Ludwigsburg. Of court actors and traveling theater groups. (Pp. 85–120)
  • Thomas Schulz: The Oberamt Ludwigsburg in the years of the Weimar Republic . (Pp. 121–153)
  • Albrecht Gühring: 50 years of the Hörnle district in Marbach . (Pp. 155–165)
  • Paul Kopf: Landmarks in the history of Ludwigsburg Catholics between 1798 and 2006. (pp. 167–179)
  • Reinhard Wolf : Vaulted shelters and stone houses. Typical small monuments of the historic vineyard landscape . (Pp. 181–196)

Issue 62 (2008)

  • Hermann Schick, Albrecht Gühring: The Marbach Town Musicians. (Pp. 7–22)
  • Gertrud Bolay: The Jewish community Hochberg 1772-1912. (Pp. 23–50)
  • Daniel Schulz: The supply of the court, kitchen, food and household items in the Ludwigsburg castle. (51-66)
  • Rolf Bindlingmaier: Classicism and Empire in Ludwigsburg Palace. The renovation of the summer residence under King Friedrich I of Württemberg and Queen Charlotte Mathilde. (Pp. 67–110)
  • Hanspeter Fischer: The landscape in the picture and in the map. The cartographic, geological and artistic works of the engineer-topographer Heinrich Bach (1812–1870). (Pp. 111–118)
  • Klaus Herrmann: On the development of agriculture in Ludwigsburg and the surrounding area from 1815 to today. (Pp. 119–142)
  • Alexander Brunotte: Life and death of the military man Jakob Hönes from Münchingen. World War I archeology and its aftermath. (Pp. 143–156)
  • Bettina Wild: Hanns Wolfgang Rath and the Ludwigsburg Society of Mörike Friends. (Pp. 157–174)
  • Michael Schirpf: Freudental 1933–1942. Anti-Semitism and Life in a Christian-Jewish Village. (Pp. 175–194)
  • Albrecht Gühring: 400 years of the Marbach pharmacy. (Pp. 195–200)

Issue 63 (2009)

  • Werner Spec: 300 years of Ludwigsburg (pp. 7-14)
  • Paul Sauer : Duke Eberhard Ludwig von Württemberg (1676–1733) (pp. 13–26)
  • Daniel Schulz: In the beginning there was a hunting lodge, an inn and a tie village. Italians, "Croats" and other migrants at the Ludwigsburg palace building (p. 27–54)
  • Rolf Bindlingmaier: merchants, craftsmen and artists. The social and geographical origins of the first Ludwigsburg residents. (Pp. 55–68)
  • Andrea Fix: Moving in - moving out - moving (p. 69–90)
  • Günther Bergan: The Ludwigsburg Horse Market (p. 91–124)
  • Wolfgang Schöllkopf: From the "Pomeranzenkirche" to the professor's pulpit. From the first hundred years of Ludwigsburg church history (s) (pp. 125–152)
  • Thomas Schulz: The Ludwigsburg Latin School from its foundation to the beginning of the 19th century (pp. 153–170)
  • Albrecht Gühring: Pflugfelden and Poppenweiler in the mirror of the first Ludwigsburg years (p. 171–178)
  • Brigitte v. Egloffstein: Of witches and saints. Schiller and his women (pp. 179–186)

Issue 64 (2010)

  • Elfriede Kröger: Paul Sauer in memory. (Pp. 7–8)
  • Kai Naumann: If it had stayed with the Jagdschloss. About the benefits and disadvantages of the founding of Ludwigsburg for the neighboring village communities. (Pp. 9–22)
  • Daniel Schulz: Mars, Venus, Bacchus & Co. The large baroque sculptures of Ludwigsburg Palace. (Pp. 23–60)
  • Julius Fekete: Philipp Jakob Ihle (1736-after 1790). Porcelain, theater and church painters in Ludwigsburg, court painter to Prince Friedrich Eugen von Württemberg in Mömpelgard. (Pp. 61–80)
  • Eberhard Fritz: Monrepos zoo - domain Seegut, hunting and cattle breeding under the kings Friedrich and Wilhelm I of Württemberg. (Pp. 81–112)
  • Wolfgang Klusemann: The broken career of a Württemberg Uhlan officer. (Pp. 113–124)
  • Günther Bergan: When the bicycle was still called a bicycle or velocipede. The beginnings of cycling in Ludwigsburg 1888–1918. (Pp. 125–150)
  • Thomas Schulz: From the history of the Oberamt Besigheim . (Pp. 151–180)
  • Herbert Hoffmann: Industrialization of a cultural landscape. The Strohgäu - granary and industrial model region of the country. (Pp. 181–200)
  • Helmuth Mojem: The house saint. Schiller tradition maintenance and Schiller holdings in the German Literature Archive Marbach . (Pp. 201–216)
  • Günther Bergan: 100 years of the David Friedrich Strauss memorial . (Pp. 217–224)

Issue 65 (2011)

  • Albrecht Gühring: Marbach Markets in the Last Thousand Years (pp. 7–18)
  • Petra Schad: The Markgröninger Schäferlauf and the shepherd's guild. Origin and development (pp. 19–66)
  • Manfred Scheck: Living and Dying in the Mirror of the Vaihinger Book of the Dead 1609–1788 (pp. 67–88)
  • Günther Bergan: About happy donors and embarrassed poor. Ludwigsburg charity in the first half of the 19th century (pp. 89–124)
  • Tobias Arand: "They fell for fatherland's unity and justice." The memorial for the German "warriors" who died and buried in Ludwigsburg from the "campaign" of 1870/71 (pp. 125–150)
  • Eberhard Fritz: Emil Fritz from Monrepos, businessman in New Mexico. The events surrounding the western legend Billy the Kid and their backgrounds in Württemberg. (Pp. 151–166)
  • Erich Viehöfer: The Hohenasperg as a branch prison of the Ludwigsburg penitentiary (1883-1945) . (Pp. 167–204)
  • Thomas Schulz: 111 years of Ludwigsburg history sheets (1900-2911) . (Pp. 205–215)

Issue 66 (2012)

  • Eduard Theiner: Hunger, War and Pestilence. A contribution to the history of today's Ludwigsburg district in the first half of the 17th century (pp. 7–32)
  • Joachim Brüser: Duke Karl Alexander von Württemberg in conflict with the estates. Absolutism or Old Law? (Pp. 33–47)
  • Wolfgang Klusemann: Duke Carl Eugen's army in the field camp near Oßweil (p. 49–63)
  • Eberhard Fritz: Duke Ludwig Eugen of Württemberg (1731–1795). Later son and regent of Württemberg in a transitional period (pp. 65–94)
  • Daniel Schulz: The reconstruction of “my rest”. The Monrepos lake palace in the 19th century (pp. 95–148)
  • Günther Bergan: "Running water is a question of life for Ludwigsburg". The beginnings of urban water supply 1858–1867 (pp. 149–166)
  • Tobias Arand: "But then the pain becomes so strong again that the patient becomes maddened". The dead "warriors" from the "campaign" of 1870/71 mentioned on the memorial of the medical association in Ludwigsburg (p. 167–190)
  • Albrecht Gühring: The History of the Marbacher Zeitung (pp. 191–215)

Issue 67 (2013)

  • Carsten Kottmann: The Aldinger Biblia latina (p. 7–13)
  • Albrecht Gühring: "Versicht his officium in the Kürchen and Schul with good Vleiß". The Rielingshausen school history up to 1945 (pp. 15–32)
  • Liselotte Geib: In the footsteps of the Franconian noble family Thüngen in the royal seat of Ludwigsburg and in the former state of Württemberg (p. 33–51)
  • Beate Hirt: The medical faculty of the Hohen Karlsschule in Stuttgart and Schiller's medical writings there (pp. 53–65)
  • Eberhard Fritz: " Condemned to the Hohen-Asperg fortress". Life and everyday life of prisoners in the reign of Friedrich von Württemberg (1797–1816) (pp. 67–92)
  • Günther Bergan: At the well in front of the gate. Historic fountains and Teuchellagen in Ludwigsburg. An inventory (pp. 93–141)
  • Brigitte Popper: The Besigheimer Lied. From action to morality. An example of popular tradition (pp. 143–150)
  • Wolfgang Bollacher: From the life of the artillery officer and hero tenor Anton Schott (p. 151–169)
  • Wolfram Berner : The history of the Marbacher Sitzmöbelfabrik Feil KG (p. 171–188)
  • Karl Moersch: 60 years of Baden-Württemberg. Comments on the founding of our federal state (pp. 189–200)
  • Thomas Schulz: "The Bottwartal the Bottwartälern". Comments on local aspects in the discussion about the district reform of 1973 (pp. 201–212)

Issue 68 (2014)

  • Herbert Hoffmann: "... very cautious about anything new". A contribution to the history of Schöckingen on the occasion of the 1200th anniversary (p. 7–28)
  • Petra Schad: Markgröningen at the time of the poor Konrad (p. 29–58)
  • Daniel Schulz: The very rich heir aunt. Countess Christina Wilhelmina von Würben in Berlin (pp. 59–84)
  • Wilfried Lieb: Carl Friderich Herbort. A merchant and his shop in Bietigheim (p. 85 90)
  • Wilfried Lagler: The Hohenasperg from a bird's eye view. A previously unknown view by Friedrich Carl Fulda (1724–1788) (pp. 91–98)
  • Eberhard Fritz: The castle in solitude. Duke Karl Eugen von Württemberg and his Solitude hunting lodge (pp. 99–134)
  • Günther Bergan: Ludwigsburg under power. The beginnings of the Ludwigsburg power supply (pp. 135–159)
  • Hermann Schick: Marbach in the summer of 1914. How the city experienced the outbreak of the First World War (pp. 161–178)
  • Jochen Faber: Bad times for humanity and tolerance in Ludwigsburg. How people in the city got into need from 1933 (pp. 179–191)
  • Wolfram Berner: Light railways in the Ludwigsburg district (p. 193–234)

Issue 69 (2015)

  • Albrecht Gühring: “Been the most demanding in all Ufruren”. The " Poor Konrad " peasant uprising in Marbach and the surrounding area (pp. 7–19)
  • Rolf Bidlingmaier: Niccolò Jommelli (1714–1774). Opera composer and conductor at the court of Duke Carl Eugen . (Pp. 21–31)
  • Dietholf Zerweck: Niccolò Jommelli as a music dramatist (pp. 33–39)
  • Eberhard Fritz: "Christ be their king, they have no lord and king in the world". Separatists in the Ludwigsburg area (pp. 41–64)
  • Andrea Fix: Georg Kerner . A little Swabian like a volcano (pp. 65–82)
  • Günther Bergan: More light for Ludwigsburg. The municipal gas works. A tribute to Louis Bührer (pp. 83–105)
  • Günther Bergan: Wilhelm Ludwig (Louis) Bührer . Silver worker and city council in Ludwigsburg (p. 107–115)
  • Wolfgang Läpple: Ludwigsburg in the First World War. Everyday life in the garrison town (pp. 117–136)
  • Ernst Schedler: The last abbess of the noble women's monastery in Oberstenfeld . From the life of Amalie (Lilly) von Pückler-Limpurg (1863–1942) (pp. 137–156)
  • Manfred Scheck: In the face of terror. The Vaihingen population as participants and as eyewitnesses 1933 to 1945 (pp. 157–182)
  • Thomas Schulz: forced marriage instead of love marriage. Eberdingen and the community reform of the 1970s (pp. 183–202)
  • Eduard Theiner: 40 years at Remseck am Neckar . Career of a Reform Church (pp. 203–231)

Issue 70 (2016)

  • Thomas Schulz: 1250 years Ottmarsheim . Aspects from local history (pp. 7–32)
  • Erich Sauer: The ducal Württemberg premier machinist Johann Christian Keim (1721–1787) (pp. 33–50)
  • Catharina Raible: Ludwigsburg Palace . Summer residence and widow's residence at the beginning of the 19th century (pp. 51–82)
  • Kurt Sartorius: Christoph Ulrich Hahn (1805–1881). Most important social reformer in Württemberg in the 19th century and pastor from Bönnigheim (pp. 83–99)
  • Christian Hofmann: "Relocated to an unknown institution". The State Welfare Institution of Markgröningen in the system of forced sterilization and the murder of the sick in the Third Reich (pp. 101–122)
  • Günther Bergan: “There is still a lot to do in the future”. The Ludwigsburg Train Station 1846-2016 (pp 123-164)
  • Ulrich Volkmer: The prehistory of the Strohgäubahn (p. 165–206)
  • Wolfram Berner and Hans-Joachim Knupfer: The last bloom of the Bottwartalbahn (p. 207–236)

Issue 71 (2017)

  • Hermann Ehmer: The Reformation in the Bottwartal (p. 7–49)
  • Joachim Brüser: From Mecklenburg to Württemberg. The ducal mistress Christina Wilhelmina von Grävenitz (p. 51–65)
  • Daniel Schulz: “What a porpoise”. Caricatures of Duke Eberhard Ludwig, Duke Carl Eugen and King Friedrich (pp. 87–122)
  • Albrecht Gühring: "The need for the poor local people is very great". The famine year 1817 in Marbach (p. 123–132)
  • Thomas Schulz: "The professional and employment conditions are not unfavorable". The former farming village of Aldingen in the second half of the 19th century (pp. 133–148)
  • Simon Karzel: Seimeny - a German colonist village in Bessarabia (p. 149–162)
  • Günther Bergan: About grave diggers and corpse hunters. 300 years of cemetery culture in Ludwigsburg (p. 163–199)

Issue 72 (2018)

  • Sigrid Hirbodian: 300 years of the royal seat of Ludwigsburg. On becoming a city (pp. 7-27)
  • Bas Böttcher: Let's celebrate this city (p. 28–30)
  • Annette Spellerberg: Becoming a City (p. 31–40)
  • Petra Schad: The parish of Markgröningen and the branch of the Holy Spirit Order. Two dissimilar sisters on the eve of the Reformation (pp. 41–74)
  • Daniel Schulz: Joy and Sorrow. Countess Wilhelmina von Würben (née von Grävenitz) and Freudental (p. 75–100)
  • Eberhard Fritz: The royal hunting lodge on Stromberg. King Friedrich of Württemberg in Freudental (pp. 101–122)
  • Arand: Ernst Leube. The tragic fate of a Ludwigsburg in the Franco-German War 1870/71 (p. 123–140)
  • Thomas Schulz: "They have retained the easy sense of half a city dweller". Neckarrems in the decades between the founding of the Empire and the First World War (pp. 141–162)
  • Hermann Schick: 1918. The revolutionary events in Marbach (p. 163–183)
  • Simon Karzel: Jewish life in Ludwigsburg. With special consideration of sources from the Ludwigsburg city archive (pp. 185–199)
  • Wolfgang Läpple: The Infantry Regiment Alt-Württemberg. Highlights from the history of the Ludwigsburg "House Regiment" (pp. 201–222)
  • Günther Bergan: Disappeared - Forgotten. Public toilets and kiosks in Ludwigsburg (p. 223–250)
  • Jens Rommel: history in court? On the criminal investigation of National Socialist crimes in the Federal Republic (pp. 251–260)

Issue 73 (2019)

  • Hermann Ehmer: The first mention of Asperg 1200 years ago (p. 7–16)
  • Wolfram Berner: From the history of viticulture in Asperg (p. 17–34)
  • Thomas Schulz: When Asperg became a town again (1875) (pp. 35–47)
  • Gerhard Fritz: Will the Reformation be reversed? The Thirty Years War in Southwest Germany (pp. 48–67)
  • Silke Knappenberger-Jans: 200 years of the Ludwigsburg district newspaper. Stations on the way from the intelligence paper to the modern daily newspaper (pp. 68–80)
  • Günther Bergan: The Franck Family Foundations and Donations (p. 81–106)
  • Florian Hoffmann: "Opening up the Strohgäu to world traffic". 150 years of Ditzingen railway station (p. 107–130)
  • Erich Viehöfer: teacher, poet, mass murderer. Ernst August Wagner from Eglosheim (pp. 131–154)
  • Helmut Arnold: Korntal becomes National Socialist (1930–1940). Highlights from a troubled time (pp. 155–189)
  • Frank Baasner: Fritz Schenk and the founding of the Franco-German Institute (pp. 190–207)

literature

  • Thomas Schulz: 111 years of Ludwigsburg history sheets (1900–2011). In: Ludwigsburger Geschichtsblätter 65 (2011) pp. 205–215.

Web links