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20th Century Press Archives

Coordinates: 53°33′26″N 9°59′33″E / 53.557102°N 9.9924345°E / 53.557102; 9.9924345
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Folders of press clippings in the persons archive (2015)

The 20th Century Press Archives (German: Pressearchiv 20. Jahrhundert) comprises about 19 million newspaper clippings, organized in folders about persons, companies, wares, events and topics.

It originates from the Hamburg Kolonialinstitut (colonial institute) founded in 1908. Within the Hamburg Institute of International Economics (HWWA) it turned into a unique public press archive. In 2007 it was absorbed by the German National Library of Economics (ZBW) and merged with the Wirtschaftsarchiv (economics archive) of the Kiel Institute for the World Economy (IfW), founded in 1914. Article collection was discontinued at the end of 2005, but the archive is still open to the public.[1]

History

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The archive has its origins in two institutions in the German cities of Hamburg and Kiel.

In Hamburg, after a few years, the "Zentralstelle" (central office) of the Kolonialinstitut was transformed from a free information center for colonial issues into a comprehensive archive of global political and economic topics, which primarily supported the city's merchants. After the breakdown of the German colonial empire in World War I, the renaming to "Hamburgisches Welt-Wirtschafts-Archiv" in 1919 sealed this reorientation.[2] The staff of HWWA reflected its importance and grew from 54 in 1919 to 183 permanent or temporary employees in 1958 – a number that seems to have remained largely stable until the late 1990s.[3]

Founded shortly before the outbreak of the First World War, the Kiel Economic Archive and its library were closely linked to the scientific work of the IfW, which focused on global economic contexts and their practical use.[4] In 1966, the library of the IfW was given the function of a central library for economics by the German Research Foundation (DFG) in the Federal Republic of Germany, and in 1993, the department was renamed accordingly.[5]

During the first and second world wars, both archives were intensively involved in the foreign and wartime planning of the empire and the Nazi state. Starting in 1936, "Confidential Reports from the Foreign Press" provided selected economic leaders and Nazi departments with "largely unfiltered information and comments on economic issues from foreign media and represented a unique feature in Nazi media policy".[6] Acting with the informal means of a foreign cultural and information policy supplementing the military expansion policy, HWWA and IfW dedicated their services to the Nazi regime.[7]

In 1996, a closer cooperation between HWWA and ZBW / Wirtschaftsarchiv began, with the aim of merging the two archives. From the beginning of 2001, the articles were indexed according to a new common classification system and made retrievable via a reference database, "EconPress".[8] Following a recommendation from an evaluation within the Leibniz Association in 2003, the current press documentation was finished at the end of 2005 and the materials were frozen at that point.[9] The separate existence of the HWWA ended in 2007 with the integration of its press documentation and library into the ZBW as a newly formed foundation under public law. Today, the press archive belongs to the (research) organisations of the Leibniz Association.[10]

Areas of collection and extent

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By 1919 at the latest, the Hamburg archive collected "press clippings on a global scale".[11] The archive was subdivided in four sections:

  • The Sacharchiv (topics archive) holds subject matter "from all countries, subcontinents and the whole world".[12] For the individual countries and regions, which constituted the primary order criterion, up to 1200 individual topics were recorded. Further special folders were created for individual events or questions "such as the Boer War, the issue of slavery or the Suez Canal".[13] Since the late 1990s, collecting had focused on "domestic and international economic issues (business, economics, economic policy, markets, industries, innovations)".[14]
  • The Warenarchiv (wares archive) covers national and international raw materials, semi-finished and finished products. The product names are subdivided into approximately 980 upper and 3400 sub-terms.[15] Here, countries and regions represent the secondary order criterion.
  • The Firmenarchiv (companies archive) holds business reports, annual publications and press clippings of c. 36,000[16] (according to other figures: c. 70,000 [17]) domestic and foreign companies. In addition, material on several hundred institutions and international organizations, universities and research institutes has been collected.[18]
  • The Personenarchiv (persons archive) has dossiers of about 16,000[19] people from business, politics, science, culture and society.

More than 1400 sources were monitored for the press archives.[20] Their broad international distribution provides access to the history of political thought and receptive history of the covered topics. Occasionally, the collected publications go back as far as 1826.[21] While the persons archive was only available in paper form until its partial digitization, the holdings of the topics, wares and companies archives were saved every ten years on roll film or microfiche since the 1960s and then the paper clippings were pulped.[22]

The holdings of the Kiel Wirtschaftsarchiv are less comprehensively documented. They are subdivided into a topics archive, which mainly served the research and teaching of the IfW and which is microfilmed up to 1945; a personnel archive, only in paper form, which also contains publications of these persons; and a home archive with publications about the IfW itself, also on paper.[23] The archive on corporate bodies –which in 1958 comprised 4800 companies and more than 5600 German and international scientific and cultural societies and institutions, political parties and trade associations,[24] and represented "one of the most complete collections for twentieth-century business history"[25] – is not mentioned any more in the archive's profile. The "war archive" of 1914–1918, which amounted to one million clippings, was destroyed by a bomb strike in 1942.[26] In 1958, when six scientific experts and more than 30 employees in total were collecting and organizing the material, the total extent of the archive was estimated as more than three million,[27] and in 1993 as more than ten million.[28]

Through the Pressemappe 20. Jahrhundert application, parts of the holdings of both archives are now accessible on the web.

Partial digitization and the Pressemappe 20. Jahrhundert application

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From 2004 to 2007, the German Research Foundation funded a project to digitize parts of the archives, namely the materials from the beginning up to 1949 (the formation of the Federal Republic of Germany).[29]

The paper clippings from the folders of the persons archive were scanned, and metadata (folder and document ID as well as page number, occasionally also source, publication date, author and title) were recorded by project staff. Optical character recognition could not be applied due to the partially used Fraktur scripts, the constantly changing fonts (as well as languages) in the sequence of the articles, and the sometimes poor quality of the clippings.[30] However, the approximately 5,500 person folders created before 1949 are fully accessible online.[19]

Digitized parts of the topics archive: Besides Germany (still incomplete) and particularly Hamburg (complete), the former German colonies, Western Europe as a whole, countries of the Middle East, Japan, Argentina, and the (Ant)Arctic.

The roll film parts of the archive (up to 1960) have also been digitized. As neither the folders nor the documents on these films were separated in a machine-readable fashion, such formal elements could not be automatically derived. Instead, the pages had to be "sliced" with specially developed "Slider" software, assembled into documents and folders, and given metadata.[31] Only a small part of this labor-intensive process was finished at the end of the project in 2007. It is continued today, so that new folders are continually made available via the web application "Pressemappe 20. Jahrhundert", which was created within the framework of the project.[32] Of the c. 11,000 company folders on digitized roll film,[16] by 2018 about 7,500 were accessible online.[33] For the topics and wares archives, the proportion of online folders seems to be significantly lower.[34] The persons are alphabetically indexed by name, while the companies are accessible by name, geographically by their headquarters and via industry lists. The topics can be accessed via the topics hierarchy and country system as well as through a search for subject and geographical GND keywords, and via a world map with geolocations.

The limitation to 1949 was made for capacity reasons, and due to intellectual property rights restrictions. Numerous individual articles within the dossiers are subject to blocking notices if the death of the author (or in the case of anonymous or pseudonymous works, the date of publication) is less than 70 years ago. With a moving wall more and more documents should be released over time.[35] How many of the about 5.7 million documents digitized in the context of the project[36] are accessible to the scientific and general public on the web is not known.

Collaboration with Wikidata

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In 2019, the German National Library of Economics (ZBW) placed all the metadata of the archives under a CC0 licence, and began a cooperation and "data donation" with Wikimedia Deutschland.[37] This led to the creation of many new Wikidata items and the enrichment of many existing items; by the end of 2022, every folder in the archive was connected to items in Wikidata.[38]

In 2024, changes to intellectual property rights in Europe made it possible to provide complete digitized images from the archive – some 3.8 million pages – for online viewing within the European Union.[38][39] A volunteer project is working on adding links to the archive's folders in Wikidata, so that Wikidata provides an index to the material.[40]

Notes

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  1. ^ Kultur bewahren, pp. 107–109
  2. ^ Leveknecht 1998, p. 13, 15, 21.
  3. ^ Leveknecht 1998, p. 19, 43, 63.
  4. ^ Buchholtz, p. 17.
  5. ^ "Geschichte der ZBW" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-07-10. Retrieved 2017-11-18.
  6. ^ Buchholtz, p. 24.
  7. ^ Buchholtz, p. 27.
  8. ^ Till the end of 2005, 120,000 individually recorded and tagged articles were added each year (Leveknecht 2006, p. 3). The "EconPress" database seems to have completely disappeared from the "ZBW website". Retrieved 2017-11-18.
  9. ^ Leveknecht, p. 5.
  10. ^ "Infrastructures » Archives » Press archive of the German National Library of Economics". Archived from the original on 2017-12-01. Retrieved 2017-11-18.
  11. ^ te Heesen, translated from the German edition, p. 21.
  12. ^ Leveknecht 2006, p. 4.
  13. ^ Research, Travel, Exploration, p. 130.
  14. ^ Leveknecht 2006, p. 5.
  15. ^ Research, Travel, Exploration, p. 94.
  16. ^ a b "Firmen- und Institutionenarchiv". Archived from the original on 2020-08-16. Retrieved 2022-08-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  17. ^ Hans-Eckart Scharrer (HWWA President), in: Leveknecht 1998, p. 63.
  18. ^ Leveknecht 2006, p. 6, as well as "Liste Bildung-Firmen". Archived from the original on 2022-01-16. Retrieved 2017-11-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  19. ^ a b "Personenarchiv". Archived from the original on 2020-08-16. Retrieved 2022-08-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  20. ^ "Newspaper and journal list". Retrieved 2022-08-01.
  21. ^ Huck/Wannags, p. 443.
  22. ^ Huck/Wannags, p. 433.
  23. ^ "Das Wirtschaftsarchiv des Instituts für Weltwirtschaft" (in German). Retrieved February 21, 2022.
  24. ^ Muziol, p. 172 and 176
  25. ^ Fischer, p. 419
  26. ^ "Thomas Hermann: 100 Jahre Institut für Weltwirtschaft - Teil 3: Die schlechten Jahre". March 15, 2014. Retrieved 2018-01-04.
  27. ^ Muziol, p. 170 and 172
  28. ^ Seusing, p. 186
  29. ^ "Homepage Pressemappe 20. Jahrhundert". Archived from the original on 2020-08-15. Retrieved 2017-11-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  30. ^ Buchholtz, p. 54.
  31. ^ Huck/Wannags, p. 436 ff.
  32. ^ Reports on the progress of the ongoing work are published on the "Homepage ..." Archived from the original on 2020-08-15. Retrieved 2017-11-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  33. ^ Joachim Neubert: 20th Century Press Archives JSON-LD dump for CdV 2018 Rhein-Main. Persons and companies, data set, 2018, http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1471430
  34. ^ Figures on this are missing on the project page. An indication is provided by the BEACON files published there, which refer to 1095 dossiers for the country / topic archive and 232 for the wares archive, as identified by their GND ID (as of 2017-11-18).
  35. ^ Huck/Wannags, p. 438, as well as Jeude, pp. 28-32, cf. also "In eigener Sache". Archived from the original on 2022-01-16. Retrieved 2017-11-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  36. ^ "Homepage ..." Archived from the original on 2020-08-15. Retrieved 2017-11-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  37. ^ Neubert, Joachim (24 October 2019). "20th Century Press Archives: Data donation to Wikidata". ZBW Labs. Retrieved 2024-06-24.
  38. ^ a b Nuebert, Joachim; Wannags, Max-Michael (20 June 2024). "20th Century Press Archives – history in newspaper clippings, made accessible by ZBW and Wikimedia". Wikimedia.org. Retrieved 24 June 2024.
  39. ^ Neubert, Joachim (30 January 2024). "Accessible material of 20th Century Press Archives largely extended | ZBW Labs". ZBW Labs. Retrieved 2024-06-24.
  40. ^ "WikiProject 20th Century Press Archives". Wikidata. Retrieved 2024-06-24.

References

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  • Research, Travel, Exploration: The Lifeworlds of the Leibniz Association Archives. Edited by Heinz Peter Brogiato and Klaus-Peter Kiedel, Halle 2014, ISBN 978-3-95462-191-0.
  • Anke te Heesen: The Newspaper Clipping. A modern paper object. Manchester University Press, Manchester 2014, ISBN 978-0-7190-8702-8.
  • Ekkehard Seusing: Basic facts on the library of the Kiel Institute of World Economics and its information services. International Journal of Special Libraries, Vol. 27 (1993), No. 3, pp. 179–188. (PDF).
  • Wolfram Fischer: Some recent developments of business history in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. In: Business History Review, Vol. 37, No. 4 (Winter 1963), pp. 416–436.

Sources in German

  • Kultur bewahren. Die Archive der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft. Edited by Arbeitskreis Archive der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft, München 2018, ISBN 978-3-940396-52-5
  • Helmut Leveknecht: 100 Jahre Pressedokumentation im HWWA. In: IIE aktuell. Mitteilungen aus der Abteilung Überregionale Bibliographische Dienste, Staatsbibliothek Berlin. Nr. 29, Januar 2006. (PDF)
  • Thomas S. Huck und Max-Michael Wannags: Die Pressearchive von HWWA und ZBW – Retrodigitalisierung der Altbestände von 1900 bis 1930. In: Geschichte im Netz: Praxis, Chancen, Visionen. Beiträge der Tagung .hist 2006. Berlin 2007. – (Historisches Forum ; Bd. 10,2007,Teilbd. I), ISBN 978-3-86004-205-2, S. 430–445 (PDF)
  • Rüdiger Buchholtz: Retrodigitalisierung von Pressedokumentationen am Beispiel des HWWA und der ZBW des Instituts für Weltwirtschaft. Konzepte und Probleme. Berliner Handreichungen zur Bibliotheks- und Informationswissenschaft, Heft 171, Berlin 2006. (PDF)
  • Kirsten Jeude: Besondere Herausforderungen bei der retrospektiven Digitalisierung historischen Pressematerials am Beispiel eines Projekts des Hamburgischen Welt-Wirtschafts-Archivs. Abschlussarbeit [der berufsbegleitenden Fortbildung zur „Wissenschaftliche/r Dokumentar/in“ des Institut für Information und Dokumentation (IID) an der FH Potsdam]. 2005 (PDF)
  • Helmut Leveknecht: 90 Jahre HWWA. Von der Zentralstelle des Hamburgischen Kolonialinstituts bis zur Stiftung HWWA. Eine Chronik. – Hamburg: HWWA-Inst. für Wirtschaftsforschung. 1998 (PDF)
  • Roman Muziol: Das Firmenmaterial des Kieler Instituts für Weltwirtschaft. Neue Quellen wirtschaftsgeschichtlicher Forschung. In: Tradition. Zeitschrift für Firmengeschichte und Unternehmensbiographie, Vol. 3, No. 3 (August 1958), pp. 165–178.
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53°33′26″N 9°59′33″E / 53.557102°N 9.9924345°E / 53.557102; 9.9924345