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TRANSCRIPTION
Luxembourg
L'Alzette et les Rochers du Bock - Alzette und Bockfelsen
Language(s) of Transcription
LOCATION
Luxemburg, Belgien, Nordfrankreich, Deutschland (49.6116, 6.13193)
Story Location
ABOUT THIS DOCUMENT
Document Date
Document Type
Document Description
Language of Description
Keywords
External Web Resources
People
Josef Baum
Maria Baum
STORY INFORMATION
Title
Jakob und Maria Baum aus Niederdollendorf
Source
UGC
Contributor
europeana19141918:agent/b2d07d1bf0c702a35f076cc111cb6b06
Type
Story
Language
deu
Deutsch
Country
Europe
DataProvider
Europeana 1914-1918
Provider
Europeana 1914-1918
Rights
http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/Year
1918
1914
DatasetName
2020601_Ag_ErsterWeltkrieg_EU
Begin
1914
Thu Jan 01 00:19:32 CET 1914
Tue Jan 01 00:19:32 CET 1918
Tue Jan 01 00:19:32 CET 1901
End
1918
Thu Dec 31 00:19:32 CET 1914
Tue Dec 31 00:19:32 CET 1918
Sun Dec 31 01:00:00 CET 2000
Sun Dec 31 00:19:32 CET 1933
Language
mul
Agent
Maria Baum | europeana19141918:agent/5a6759f59fb68502864e660fd3b73104
Evelyn Burkhart | europeana19141918:agent/b2d07d1bf0c702a35f076cc111cb6b06
Josef Baum | europeana19141918:agent/f5552889b0fd31022fc2e4685f608db1
Created
2019-09-11T08:51:08.863Z
2019-09-11T08:51:08.834Z
2013-11-25 18:04:14 UTC
Provenance
BN12
Story Description
Feldpostkarten, Urkunden des Vaterländischen Frauen-Vereins. Laufzeit der Postkarten: 1914-1916.Maria und Jakob lebten in Niederdollendorf am Rhein. Jakob besaß ein florierendes Bauunternehmen, seine Frau hatte eine Schneiderwerkstatt. Sie hatten insgesamt drei Kinder, das älteste Kind wurde 1900 geboren. Jakob zog früh in den Krieg und schrieb seiner ältesten Tochter Irmgard von 1914 bis 1916 zahlreiche Feldpostkarten. Er beschreibt seine Hoffnung auf eine baldige Rückkehr und ein Ende des Krieges. In dieser Zeit hat sich seine Frau insbesondere um Kranke, Witwen und Waisen in Niederdollendorf gekümmert. So nähte sie für Kinder und deren Familien, auch unterstützte sie sie mit Geld und Lebensmitteln. Jakob kehrte 1916 nach Niederdollendorf zurück, um das erfolgreiche Baugeschäft weiterzuführen. Seine Frau starb bereits wenige Jahre nach dem Krieg an einer Lungenentzündung. Am 10. Juni 1918 erhielt sie noch vom Vorstand des Vaterländischen Frauen-Vereins in Siegburg ein Gedenkzertifikat für ihre Mitarbeit während des Krieges. Im April 1920, kurz vor ihrem Tod, erhielt sie eine weitere Auszeichnung vom Frauen-Verein, da sie ihre Kräfte in selbstloser und aufopfernder Weise dem Dienste der Kriegsliebestätigkeit zur Verfügung gestellt habe. Jakob Baum führte sein erfolgreiches Unternehmen fort und heiratete später ein zweites Mal. Das Unternehmen wurde im Zweiten Weltkrieg aufgegeben.
TRANSCRIPTION
LOCATION
DESCRIPTION
PEOPLE
STORY INFO
TUTORIAL
Luxembourg
L'Alzette et les Rochers du Bock - Alzette und Bockfelsen
- Deutsch (German)
- Français (French)
Luxembourg
L'Alzette et les Rochers du Bock - Alzette und Bockfelsen
Language(s) of Transcription
English Translation
Transcription History
Luxembourg L'Alzette et les Rochers du Bock - Alzette und Bockfelsen
Luxembourg L'Alzette et les Rochers du Bock - Alzette und Bockfelsen
English Translation
Maria and Jakob lived in Niederdollendorf on the Rhine. Jakob owned a flourishing construction company and his wife had a tailor's workshop. They had three children in total; the oldest child was born in 1900. Jakob went to war early and wrote numerous field postcards to his eldest daughter Irmgard from 1914 to 1916. He describes his hope for a speedy return and an end to the war. During this time, his wife took care of the sick, widows and orphans in Niederdollendorf in particular. She sewed for children and their families, and supported them with money and food. Jakob returned to Niederdollendorf in 1916 to continue the successful construction business. His wife died of pneumonia just a few years after the war. On June 10, 1918, she received a commemorative certificate from the board of the Vaterländischer Frauen-Verein in Siegburg for her work during the war. In April 1920, shortly before her death, she received another award from the women's association, for having "made her energies available to the service of war charity in a selfless and self-sacrificing manner". Jakob Baum continued his successful company and later married a second time. The company was given up in World War II.
Automatically Identified Enrichments
Verify Automatically Identified Enrichments
Verify Automatically Identified Locations
Verify Automatically Identified Persons
Enrichment Mode
Edit your workspace view by using the top-right menu.
You can have the white Activity Panel docked to the right (default) , to the bottom , or as an independent overlay . If you just want to view the image, you can hide the panel using the minimise button , and then re-open it with the pen button. Adjust the size and position of your Activity Panel according to your preferences.
You enrich documents by following a step-by-step process.
Make sure you regularly save your enrichments in each step to avoid the risk of losing your work.
Step 1: Transcription
To start a transcription, select the transcription tab at the top menu of the Activity Panel. Click inside the box underneath the heading TRANSCRIPTION and start writing your transcription. When needed, use the toolbar to format your text and to add special characters and tables. A guide to the transcription toolbar is available in the Formatting section of this tutorial.
Identify the language(s) of the text using the dropdown list under the transcription box. You can select multiple languages at once.
If the item has no text to transcribe, tick the checkbox ‘No Text’.
Once you have finished your transcription, click SAVE.
Step 2: Description
You can add a description to the item underneath the Transcription section.
The first task is to identify what type of document the item is: a handwritten or printed document, a postcard, photo, drawing and/or part of a diary. Tick the category which best applies to the item. Multiple categories can be selected at once.
The second task is to write a description of the contents. Click inside the box underneath the heading DESCRIPTION. Here, you can write what the item is, what it is about, and specify the images and objects that appear in the item.
Identify the language of the description text that you wrote using the dropdown list underneath. You can only select one language.
Once you have finished your description, click SAVE.
Step 3: Location
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Below the Locations section is the Tagging section, where you can add the following annotations:
Document Date:
Here, you can add dates that correspond to the item. This could include the dates mentioned in the text (e.g. in diary pages), the date of a related historical event (e.g. the end of WWI), or when the item was created (e.g. from a dated signature on an illustration). You can either define this as a single date or as a longer time frame.
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People:
People mentioned as creators or subjects in the item can also be tagged. Depending on the information you might have, you can enter the person’s first and last names, as well as their dates of birth and death. There is also the option to write a short description of the person, explaining who they are or their relevance to the item, e.g. the person’s occupation or their relation to another tagged person.
Multiple people can be tagged to one item.
Once you have finished your person tag, click SAVE.
Keywords:
Here, you can freely add keywords related to the topic and content of the item. This could include particular themes (e.g. art, music, war), subjects (e.g. children, cooking, France), or particular historical affiliations (e.g. 20th century, Austro-Hungarian Empire, Fall of the Iron Curtain).
Multiple keywords can be added and they can be written in any language.
Write your keyword tag into the field and click SAVE.
Other Sources:
External websites with information about the item’s content can be linked here. This could include links to further data about a person mentioned, a particular historical event or links to digital versions of newspapers that appear in photos or clippings in a notebook.
To add a link, click the plus next to the heading ‘Other Sources’. Enter the URL into the Link field, and write a short description of this link in the Additional Description field.
Multiple links can be tagged to one item.
Once you have finished your tag, click SAVE.
Step 5: Mark for Review
Once you have saved your contribution, the task will automatically change to the Edit status. If you think the task is finished, you can mark it for review. Note that you have to be at Runner level or above to do this (see: Miles and Levels). Click on the yellow circle next to the section heading and select Review in the list that appears. The task now needs to go under Review by another volunteer.Formatting
Use the toolbar to format your Transcription text or to add extra details to it. You can format your text using the various styles and alignment tools: Use bold for headings, and italics, underline andReview
All enrichments need to be edited and reviewed by more than one volunteer to ensure that they are as accurate as possible. Only Sprinters and Champions can edit tasks in the Review stage and mark them as Complete. (see: Miles and Levels) You can review a task (Transcription, Description, Locations, or Tagging) when the circle next to the heading is coloured orange . During the review process, pay close attention to the following requirements:-
- Transcription: The complete text in the item has been properly transcribed and the transcription is formatted as accurately as possible. The correct language(s) are selected and the transcription contains no missing or unclear icons.
-
- Description: The description is accurate and detailed (especially items without text to transcribe, e.g. photos), and the appropriate categories have been ticked.
-
- Location(s): All locations have been correctly tagged. The location name is accurate and matches the coordinates and the pin on the map. The description is clear and concise, and the Wikidata reference (if any) is correct.
-
- Tagging: Document dates are completed and as precise as possible. All mentioned people are tagged and their data is correct. All added keywords are applicable to the item, and other sources have accurate information and functioning links.
Completion Statuses
GREY |
1. NOT STARTED |
Tasks have not been started. |
YELLOW |
2. EDIT MODE |
Tasks have been started, but not yet finished. Additions and edits can still be made. |
ORANGE |
3. REVIEW |
Tasks are finished, but need final review by Sprinter or Champion transcribers. |
GREEN |
4. COMPLETED |
Tasks have been fully completed and reviewed. No further changes need to be made. |
Miles and Levels
Transcribathon is a competitive marathon. You do not enrich documents alone, but compete and work with other volunteers to ensure the quality of your work. When you first create a Transcribathon account, you only have the ability to start and edit tasks. The more you enrich documents, the closer you become to advancing to a higher level, which can unlock abilities like reviewing and completing tasks.Level | Abilities |
---|---|
Trainee | Basic abilities: start and edit tasks |
Runner | Basic abilities, mark finished tasks for review |
Sprinter | All Runner abilities, mark reviewed annotations as completed |
Champion | All Sprinter abilities, mark reviewed transcriptions as completed |
Tasks | Miles Received |
---|---|
Transcription | 1 Mile for every 300 characters transcribed |
Description | 1 Mile for every 5 Descriptions added |
Location | 1 Mile for every 5 Locations added |
Tagging | 1 Mile for every 5 Tags added |
Reviewing | 1 Mile for every 10 items marked as complete |