Metadata: City of Bad Iburg
Collection
- Country:
- Germany
- Holding institution:
- State Archives of Lower Saxony - Osnabrück Branch
- Holding institution (official language):
- Niedersächsisches Landesarchiv - Standort Osnabrück
- Postal address:
- Schlossstraße 29, 49074 Osnabrück
- Phone number:
- +49 531 33162 0
- Reference number:
- Dep. 13 b
- Title:
- City of Bad Iburg
- Title (official language):
- Stadt Bad Iburg
- Creator/accumulator:
- City of Bad Iburg
- Date(s):
- 1550/1993
- Language:
- German
- Extent:
- 750 files
- Type of material:
- Textual material
- Physical condition:
- good
- Scope and content:
- The collection comprises documents of the city of Bad Iburg, including some that are relevant to Jews, such as: I No. 202: Settlement requested by the Jews Falke from Telgte (Grand Duchy of Berg) and David Abraham from Ahausen in the hamlet (Flecken) of Iburg, 1809/1810; No. 177 peddling in the hamlet (Flecken) of Iburg, 1814/1826.
- Administrative/biographical history:
- Iburg, today Bad Iburg, was built in the style of the castle and monastery by the same name and was the seat of the Osnabrück bishops from about 1100 to 1672. In 1254 it appears as a hamlet (Flecken), in 1359 it receives municipal (Weichbild) privileges. In the following period, the place remained a small commercial residence settlement and reached 1000 inhabitants only in the 19th century. In 1959, it received its town charter. In 1967, Iburg was recognized by the state as a Kneipp spa and the place name changed to Bad Iburg. In 1970, the districts of Glane-Visbeck, Sentrup and Ostenfelde formed the municipality of Glane. In 1972, the town of Bad Iburg was united with the entire municipality of Glane, consisting of Glane-Visbeck, Ostenfelde and Sentrup, and the unified municipality of Bad Iburg was established.
- Access points: persons/families:
- Abraham, David
- Falke
- Subject terms:
- Jewish community
- Residency issues of Jews
- Trade and commerce
- System of arrangement:
- There is no system or arrangement. The material is kept in order of accession.
- Finding aids:
- A database is available.
- Links to finding aids:
- https://www.arcinsys.niedersachsen.de/arcinsys/start.action?oldNodeid=
- Yerusha Network member:
- Institute for the History of German Jews
- Author of the description:
- Meike Buck