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Befehlshaber der Sicherheitspolizei und des SD in Riga (Fond 504)

Document | Digitized | Accession Number: 1993.A.0085.1.6 | RG Number: RG-11.001M.05

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    Overview

    Description
    The collection contains reports, German translations of documents, minutes, circulars, orders, reviews, secret publications, financial documents, correspondence, special bulletins, transcripts of testimonies, and various materials such as copies of documents and maps. Includes information on police activities against partisans and other resistance efforts in the Occupied Eastern Territories; the activities of Einsatzgruppe A; directives and instructions of Himmler and other senior police officials about the treatment of foreign workers; measures for their punishment; the treatment of Communist Party officials; documents created by resistance groups and CP organs that were captured by the Wehrmacht and SS; Schutzmannschaften activities; Jewish partisan activities; the slave labor of Jews, Soviet POWs, and others; the collaboration of Polish and other nationalist groups with Germans against the USSR; the transport and forced labor of Jews; the establishment and maintenance of camps and prisoners; the killing of Jews and others in forests; the Spanish Blue Division; Latvian and Dutch volunteers in German military units; and the general administration of occupied territories.
    Alternate Title
    Chief of the Security Police and SD in the Occupied Soviet Baltic Territories (Riga)
    Date
    inclusive:  1941-1944
    Credit Line
    Forms part of the Claims Conference International Holocaust Documentation Archive at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. This archive consists of documentation whose reproduction and/or acquisition was made possible with funding from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany.
    Collection Creator
    Befehlshaber der Sicherheitspolizei und des Sicherheitsdienstes
    Biography
    Commanders of the Security Police and Security Service or Commander of the SiPo and SD ,or BdS were heads of a kind of RSHA field office from the Reich Security Main Office (RSHA) in Nazi- occupied territories. Several "commanders of the security police and the SD" (KdS) were subordinated to a BdS. They had essentially the same tasks as the Einsatzkommandos. At the beginning of the Polish campaign in September 1939, first in the General Government for the occupied Polish territories , then in the other Rear Army Areas for "carrying out special security police duties outside the troops" Einsatzgruppen of the Security Police and SD (consisting of Einsatzkommandos or Sonderkommandos) corresponded to their structure to the Reich Security Main Office (RSHA), so that they were also referred to as "mobile RSHA" or as "RSHA in small."
    In the areas of the occupied territories, where fighting had no longer taken place and the occupation administration had already been consolidated, the units of the Einsatzgruppen were transformed into stationary institutions for specific areas in which they performed tasks similar to those of the Reich Security Police . They were also-as previously the Einsatzgruppen-in addition to intelligence activities with "special treatments" (e.g. the murder) of the Jews involved. For each occupied country a commander of the security police and the SD (BdS) was used. Exceptions were only Alsace, Lorraine, the Warthegau, the Generalgouvernement and the Reichskommissariate " Ostland " and Ukraine , for each of which a separate BdS was ordered. At lower regional level several "commanders of the security police and the SD" were subordinated to the BdS. In the East, two "Reich Commissariats" were formed after the front had frozen in the winter of 1941-42: The Reichskommissariat Ostland and the Reichskommissariat Ukraine. [Source: "Wikipedia"]
    Reference
    Fishman, D. E. and Kupovetsky, M, Kuzelenkov, V. (ed.), Nazi-Looted Jewish Archives in Moscow. A guide to Jewish Historical and Cultural Collections in the Russian State Military Archive. Scranton: University of Scranton Press 2010. Published in association with the United States Holocaust memorial Museum and The Jewish Theological Seminary.

    https://www.lootedart.com/MFEU4M60512_print;Y

    http://www.sonderarchiv.de/fondverzeichnis.htm

    http://www.ceelbas-cdt.ac.uk/archive-guide/structure-soviet-archives

    Browder, G. C. Captured German and other Nation's Documents in the Osobyi (Special) Archive, Moscow. Published by: Cambridge University Press on behalf of Conference Group for Central European History of the American Historical Association. Internet access: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4546224

    Physical Details

    Language
    German Russian
    Extent
    5 microfilm reels (partial) ; 16 mm.
    5,218 digital images : JPEG.
    System of Arrangement
    Fond 504 (1941-1944). Opis 1-2, Delo 1-46. It was copied as the whole collection. Arranged in eight series: 1. SIPO various reports; 2. Orders and instructions to the various police bodies in the occupied Baltic States; 3. Instructions and correspondence of the SIPO and SD on various matters; 4. Orders, regulations and directives from Himmler and other German police officials; 5. Orders, regulations, and correspondence of the RSHA with various security police units in Ostland about the formation and reorganization of concentration and labor camps in Pakrie, Slansi, Stutthof, Lublin, Warsaw, Nowogrodek, Riga, and other territories in the occupied countries; 6. Travel reports to Kaunas (Lithuania) and Minsk (Belarus) by a Nazi functionaries, 1943; 7. Personnel documents of German officials (resumes, forms, letters, excerpts from the "Who is Who in the Third Reich" ); 8. Lists of officials of the German civil administration in Riga; January 1942-June 1944.

    Note: Location of digital images; Partial microfilm reels: #74-75, 186, 204, 205;
    Reel 74: Image #1283-Reel end;
    Reel 75: Reel start-Image #1861;
    Reel186: Image #100-Reel end;
    Reel 204: Image #1907-Reel end;
    Reel 205: Reel start-image #478.

    Rights & Restrictions

    Conditions on Access
    There are no known restrictions on access to this material.
    Conditions on Use
    Reproduction and publication only with written permission of the Russian State Military Archives

    Keywords & Subjects

    Administrative Notes

    Provenance
    Source of acquisition is the Russian State Military Archive (Rossiĭskiĭ gosudarstvennyĭ voennyĭ arkhiv), Osobyi Archive, Fond 504. The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives received the filmed collection via the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum International Archival Programs Division in 1993.
    Record last modified:
    2023-08-25 08:12:49
    This page:
    https:​/​/collections.ushmm.org​/search​/catalog​/irn599262

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