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Archives in the Baltics and CIS Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania; Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldava, Russia, Tajikistan, Ukraine, Fmr. USSR, Uzbekistan |
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The Center for the Conservation of Historical and Documentary Collections is the former Sonderarchive.
Richard T Eger Administrator posted 18 July 2024 08:29 The following exchanges regarding this archive in Moscow come from H-German via Jaap Woortman: Sources on Nazi Germany in Eastern Europe/Osoby Archives (February 1996) Submitted by: David Grier (dgrier@sunbelt.net) A friend (who is at a college not yet on-line) is working on the Volkssturm, the "last reserves" of males between the ages of 16 and 60 the Germans mobilized in the final months of World War II. He is planning a research trip to Germany this summer and he has two questions I hope someone can help with: 1.Where are Nazi Party files, and records of related organizations (such as the Hitler Youth, SA, Reich Labor Service), from areas that were formerly part of the Reich but now in Poland or Russia (for example, Breslau, Stettin and Koenigsberg)? Would they be in city archives, district archives, national archives or elsewhere? 2.Does anyone know the whereabouts of documents of Wehrmacht units (only those which fought in former Reich territories) captured by Soviet forces and their allies? Any assistance would be greatly appreciated. Thank you. David Grier, Erskine College --------------------------------------------- Submitted by: Francis R. Nicosia (NICOSIA@SMCVAX.SMCVT.EDU) The Center for the Preservation of Historical Documentary Collections, also known as the "Osobyi" Archive, in Moscow is a logical place to look. Its collection of captured German records is enormous. There are published guides in German and English. A good place to start before going to Moscow is the United States Holocaust Research Institute (Archives) at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. The Institute filmed a good deal of the Moscow collection that pertains to the persecution of Jews, Gypsies, etc. and to the final solution. These are in RG 11. They also have the guides to the "Osobyi" Archive in Moscow. Good luck. Francis R. Nicosia Saint Michael's College, Vermont [editor's note: after H-German received the first item below requesting further information about the Osobyi archives, we contacted Francis Nicosia and Sybil Milton for further information. Their responses follow the query. d.r.] --------------------------------------------- 1) Submitted by: John Bingham (bclow@macc.wisc.edu) Would it be possible to post more exact bibliographical references for the English/German archival guides published by the Moscow Center for the Preservation of Historical Documentary Collections (Osobyi archive)? Thank you, John Bingham (bclow@macc.wisc.edu) History Department York University Toronto, Canada M3J 1P3 |
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