Melle Klinkenborg

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Melle Goeman Klinkenborg (born January 23, 1872 in Grimersum , † March 29, 1930 in Berlin ) was a German archivist and historian .

Life

Klinkenborg studied history at the universities in Leipzig , Munich and Berlin . After completing his doctorate , he trained as an archivist in Marburg . As a research assistant at Paul Fridolin Kehr , he worked from 1897 for his Italia Pontificia and from 1899 to 1901 at the Prussian Historical Institute (later the German Historical Institute Rome ) in Rome for the Repertorium Germanicum. He then became an archivist at the Prussian Secret State Archives in Dahlem . Under Kehr as general director, Klinkenborg became the second director of the Prussian archive administration and thus head of the state archive.

Melle Klinkenborg was buried in the Dahlem cemetery. The grave has not been preserved.

Memberships

Fonts (selection)

Monographs

  • History of the Secret State Archives in Berlin (= communications from the Royal Prussian Archive Administration, Volume 18), Leipzig: Hirzel 1911, new ed. by Jürgen Kloosterhuis (= publications from the archives of Prussian cultural property. Work reports, volume 13), Berlin 2011.
  • The archive of the Brandenburg Provincial Administration: Issued on behalf of the Brandenburg Provincial Administration, Volume 1, Brandenburgische Provinzialdruckerei 1920.

Essays

  • Paul Bailleu . An obituary. In: Correspondence sheet of the Gesamtverein der Deutschen Geschichts- und Alterthumsvereine 19 (1871), 9/11/12, pp. 65–68.
  • Papal deeds in Nonantola, Modena and Verona, papal deeds in Bresia and Bergamo. In: News of the Royal. Society of Sciences at Göttingen. Phil.-hist. Class (1897), pp. 233-282.
  • Papal documents in the Principato, in the Basilicata and in Calabria. In: News of the Royal. Society of Sciences at Göttingen. Phil.-hist. Class (1898), pp. 335-348.
  • The capture of Greetsiel by the Brandenburgers. In: Yearbook of the Society for Fine Arts and Patriotic Antiquities in Emden 13 (1899), Issue 1/2, pp. 234–239.
  • East Frisian documents from the Vatican archive in Rome. In: Yearbook of the Society for Fine Art and Patriotic Antiquities in Emden, Vol. 14 (1902), pp. 147–176.
  • View of Frisian history in the Middle Ages. In: Historische Zeitschrift 102 (1909), pp. 499-524.
  • Council room and chancellery in Brandenburg in the 16th century. In: Research on Brandenburg and Prussian History 26 (1913), 2, pp. 61–76.
  • Reinhold Koser . An obituary. In: Research on Brandenburg and Prussian History 28 (1915), pp. 285-310.
  • The documents of the cathedral chapter of Brandenburg on his rights to the Havel. In: Albert Brackmann (Ed.): Papacy and Empire. Research on the political history and intellectual culture of the Middle Ages; Paul Fridolin Kehr presented on his 65th birthday, Munich: Verlag der Münchner Drucke 1926, pp. 561–570.
  • The plan of Frederick the Great , Emden to sell. In: Yearbook of the Society for Fine Arts and Patriotic Antiquities in Emden 58 (1978), pp. 80–92 (edited by Gustav Berthold Volz and Christel Wegeleben).

Editorships

  • Fehrbellin . Based on reports and letters from the leading men (= Voigtländer's source books, volume 50), Leipzig: Voigtländer 1913.
  • Family history of the Count Finck von Finckenstein family. Part 1: Presentation and biographical news, Berlin: Gyldendal 1920; Part 2: Documents and files, Berlin: Klasing 1921.
  • Paul Bailleu Prussian Will. Collected articles, Berlin: Hafen-Verlag 1924.
  • Acta Brandenburgica. Brandenburg government files since the founding of the Privy Council (= publications of the Historical Commission for the Province of Brandenburg and the Imperial Capital Berlin), Berlin: Gsellius 1927–1930 (4 volumes with partial volumes).

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Hans-Jürgen Mende: Lexicon of Berlin burial places . Pharus-Plan, Berlin 2018, ISBN 978-3-86514-206-1 , p. 570.