Ludwigsburg history sheets
Ludwigsburg history sheets
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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) | 0179-1842 |
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 |
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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)
- Hermann Römer : Markgröningen in the context of regional history 1550–1750. (Pp. 1–133)
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)
- Manfred Scheck: Takeover and conformity . The Oberamtsstadt Vaihingen an der Enz 1932/33. (Pp. 11–70)
- Markus Otto: The disc foundations for the Großbottwar town hall. (Pp. 71–93)
- Theobald Nebel: The History of the Freudental Jews (Part 2). (Pp. 94–135)
- Elisabeth Zipperlen: The barefoot monastery on the Frauenberg near Bönnigheim . (Pp. 136–141)
- Otto Schäfer: The history of the Bausparkasse Wüstenrot - at the same time the history of the German building society. (Pp. 142–157)
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
- Ludwigsburg history sheets on the website of the Historical Association for the City and District of Ludwigsburg e. V.