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  1. Waldheim Castle first appeared in a 1271 deed, the surrounding settlement received town privileges in 1286. The castle was turned into an Augustinian monastery in 1404. The population turned Protestant in 1537. Waldheim Prison. In 1588 Waldheim Castle was again rebuilt as a hunting lodge by Elector Christian I of Saxony.

  2. FamilySearch. https://FamilySearch.org : 10 July 2023. Multiple city archives, Germany. Index of the Saxony (province) censuses and census lists from 1770-1934. Indexed fields include name, age, house number and event location.

  3. Leverage your professional network, and get hired. New Weißenborn, Saxony, Germany jobs added daily. Skip to main content LinkedIn. ... (1,850) Past Month (8,677) Any Time (16,902 ...

  4. The German Confederation (1815–1866) was a loose federation of thirty-nine sovereign and independent states. It was far from the unitary German nation-state envisioned by German nationalists: included within its borders were parts of the Habsburg Empire (Austria), enclaves of non-German-speaking populations, and some (but not all) of Prussia ...

  5. Lübeck, Germany, Census Records for various years between 1807 and 1880 Lübeck, Germany, Burials, 1832-1988 Lübeck, Germany, Personal Index Cards, 1300s-1850 Lübeck, Germany, Births, Marriage Banns, and Deaths, 1811-1875 Lübeck, Germany, Draft Registration Lists for Persons Born 1807-1902 Lübeck, Germany, Citizenship Register, 1591-1919

  6. 20 Mar–29 Apr 1850 Erfurt Union Parliament . In June–December 1849, in an effort to create a new German federation that excluded Austria, the Kingdom of Prussia extended its alliance to include twenty-eight German states, but was unable to gain the support of eight states, including the kingdoms of Bavaria and Württemberg, and soon lost the support of Saxony and Hanover.

  7. 9 de dic. de 2022 · Saxony (Sachsen. There is a list of 200 to 300 persons, a small portion of those who emigrated to the United States of America between 1838 and 1900, listed in the series Archiv für Sippenforschung 28. Jahrgang August 1962. Heft 7, page 394 by Harald Ulbrich, Dresden (availabe in the FamilySearch Library, call number 943 B2as yr. 27-28)