Benecke Family members worldwide

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Benecke Family Members Worldwide / Benecke family history

Benecke Family members worldwide

As of Febr 25, 2009; next update as soon as new info comes in.

You are a Benecke? Welcome! Search for other Benecke's here...and mail back to them if you want. (Genealogy not available.) Brought to you by Dr. Mark Benecke, Forensic Biologist, http://www.benecke.com/. If you know something beneckesk, let me know, and I ll gladly include it here. Also, please check all info below first. Thanks a lot and enjoy, wherever you live now!

--> I REALLY REALLY R E A L L Y HAVE NO OTHER INFO ON THE BENECKE FAMILY APART FROM THE ONE GIVEN HERE. PLEASE SEND WHAT YOU HAVE! Thank you. <--

One sure thing ist that the name "Benecke" originates from Prussian (i.e, North-Eastern German) aristocracy since the following entries can be found in aristorcrat research resources: "Benecke in Preußen" (Benecke in Prussia), "Beneckendorf in Pommern" (Beneckendorf in Pomerania), "Beneckendorf in Brandenburg (erloschen)" (Beneckendorf in Brandenburg, family does not exist any more), "Bene(c)kendorff (B.v.Hindenburg) in Preußen" (Benekendorff in Prussia; relating to Paul von Beneckendorff und von Hindenburg = Paul von Hindenburg, born on Oct 2, 1847, (yes, the Zeppelin LZ-129, the largest passenger airship that ever flew was named after him), born as child of Prussian military officer and lord of the manor Robert von Beneckendorff and von Hindenburg, and of the daughter of a medical doctor, Luise, her maiden name: Schwickart. Hindenburg becomes Reichspräsident; he dies on August 2, 1934 -- then Hitler is next.)

Benecke Family Papers, 1816-1989, n.d. (C3825) (Source: http://whmc.umsystem.edu/invent/3825.html)
90.8 linear feet, 62 volumes, 3 audio tapes, 3 records, 413 glass plate negatives INTRODUCTION
Correspondence, business and law firm records, civic, political, legislative, and personal papers of a German American family of Brunswick, Missouri.

DONOR INFORMATION
The Benecke Papers were donated to the University of Missouri over the years from 1955 to 1992 by Joanna B. Townsend, R.W. Benecke, L.W. Benecke, and William Townsend and Blake Sasse. Complete accession information can be found in the collection's information folder.

BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES
LOUIS BENECKE (1843-1919). Louis Benecke was born May 1, 1843, in Stiege, Germany to Heinrich Ludwig Theodore Benecke and Johanna Auguste Bock. His grandfather was a Lutheran minister, and served in the German Legion. His father was a teacher and Supervisor of the Forrest district of Stiege, Hartzmountain, who resigned because of his democratic views and emigrated to Brunswick, Missouri with his family in 1856.

In Germany Louis was on the Boy's Freischussen at the age of eleven. He and his brother, Robert, were admitted to Blankenburg College and Robert was a graduate. In Brunswick Louis attended High School for three months in 1857. In 1858 he was Liederkranz at the Brunswick and Turner Association. From 1857 to 1860 he clerked for F.C. Sasse, the Hotel Harry House, the Dry Goods Store of William Ladd and Company and its successor Mr. Dickey.

In 1861 at age 18, he joined a Union Militia Company, but he withdrew when the company became secessionist. On September 11, he was mustered into Company H, 18th Missouri Volunteers. In 1862 he was promoted to sergeant, taken prisoner at the Battle of Shiloh with General Prentiss, and paroled October 19, 1862. In 1863 he received an honorable discharge on account of a disability contracted in a rebel prison. On June 8, 1864 he was commissioned Lieutenant, Company E, 35th Enrolled Missouri Militia; placed on special duty in Company B (independent Company); recruited a company for U.S. Volunteers, which was assigned as Company I, 49th Missouri Volunteers, on November 17, and placed in command of the District of Chariton County under General Fisk. He went south with his regiment to New Orleans; was detailed as Assistant Inspector General under General Carr, 16th Army Corps at Montgomery, Alabama; and on August 2, 1865, he was mustered out with his regiment.

Louis married Josephine Amerlan of Schwedt, Prussia, June 23, 1868, at the Prescott House, New York, Reverend Foersch officiating. They had seven children (two dying in infancy--a daughter in 1873, a son in 1884)--Dora, Lucia (Lucy), Louis A., Otto K., and Waldo Theodore (Ruby W.).

The Civil War was to continue to exert an influence on Benecke's life. Upon his discharge in 1866, he was naturalized, admitted to the bar of Chariton County, elected Justice of the Peace, and was a claims agent for adjusting and collecting war claims against the government and the Missouri war debt. In 1887 he organized the first G.A.R. post at Brunswick, and subsequently served as post commander, Judge Advocate, Senior Vice Department Commander, and was a delegate to national encampments. He was Department Commander, G.A.R., Department of Missouri, March 1895-April 1896. In 1894 he was commander of the Loyal Legion. Instrumental in the organization of the Federal Soldiers' Home, St. James, he served as President of the Board of Trustees.

In 1876 charges were brought against Benecke and others for withholding claim and pension funds from black claimants. Court cases resulted in his suspension as an attorney, but the U.S. Supreme Court reversed the lower court's decision and he was exonerated. Benecke also attempted to exonerate himself from charges that he participated in the drowning of a confederate sympathizer. His Historical Sketch of the Sixties in Chariton County, “Chariton County Episode of 1864,” addressed these charges as well as describing diversions practiced by him and his men in Keytesville and surrounding areas.

Benecke kept subject files on pension policies, and maintained a lifelong correspondence with John Cox, fellow pension claim agent; members of his militia company; G.A.R. officials; and other veterans. He sought reimbursement for Spencer rifles furnished his company of volunteers at his own expense, and until his death, he continued to be concerned with pension legislation and the needs of veterans and their families.

Immediately after his return home from the war, Benecke took an active part in politics and civic activities. He was the first Chariton County Republican chairman. He attended every State Convention from 1866-1908, except two; was a delegate to all congressional, senatorial, and judicial conventions of his district, and was a member of the state Republican committee in 1868. In 1868 he applied to Governor Fletcher for a position as his attaché. He was an alternate delegate to the national Republican convention in 1888, 1892, and 1896. A delegate in 1908, he served on the committee to notify Vice President Sherman.

Benecke served as a state senator for the 5th congressional district, 1869-1875. An avid anti-prohibitionist, he was the author of the Chariton County local option bill, which served as a model for similar legislation throughout the state. He introduced legislation against religious and temperance fanatics, and wrote numerous articles and speeches. He introduced several other senate bills and two senate resolutions including an act to prevent drunkenness, and introduced the first bill that removed all restrictions on ex-confederate soldiers. He was chairman of the state senate committee on banks and corporations. Joseph Pulitzer served as Benecke's clerk in 1872.

Benecke's respect for his German heritage is evident. He served on the Chariton County Board of Immigration, 1867-1876. Through his position on the board, and being an agent for, 1859 for various steamship lines, he was able to secure homes and employment for German and other immigrants, as well as arranging their passage from Europe to America, and their transportation westward to Brunswick and Chariton County. In his position as director of the public schools, he placed many German teachers in positions throughout the United States, often continuing a correspondence with them and their families. As an attorney he secured inheritances from Europe for many immigrants. As director of the First National Bank, he was given their foreign exchange business, handling exchanges through Knauth, Nachod and Kuhne Foreign Bankers, New York, for whom he was a correspondent. German veterans appealed to him for aid in securing their pensions and war claims. He was a columnist in the German press, and a local correspondent for the Westliche Post corresponding frequently with E. Pretorious.

In 1880 Benecke was the only practicing Republican attorney in Chariton County. He had been admitted to the Chariton County Bar in 1866, and became Brunswick City Counsellor in 1875. His office was located in the 1st National Bank Building on the corner of Broadway and Jackson Street in Brunswick. Use of the firm name “Benecke and Benecke” was first made in 1906 at which time his son, Ruby W. Benecke, was admitted to the bar and joined his father as a partner. Louis retired in 1914, and when he died in 1919, the name was not changed.

Benecke's business interests were extensive. He served on the board and was also legal council for the Brunswick and Chillicothe Railroad, and helped bring the first railroad to Brunswick. He donated grounds for the Brunswick Brick and Tile Company and served in various official capacities with other members of his family.

He also owned the Brunswick Manufacturing Company, the Brunswick Mineral Bath Company, and the Missouri Manufacturing and Trading Company. He sold wood from his extensive timberlands, and rented farms, buildings, dwellings and other properties from his vast real estate holdings.

He was instrumental in bringing the first telephone to Brunswick and was president of the Chariton County Telephone Company. He maintained several dealerships selling telephones as an agent for J.H. Holcomb and Company; gas and gasoline engines for Weber Engine Company, Kansas City; school and opera chairs for the Racine Furniture Company; calligraphic writing machines for the Parker, Ritter, Nichols Stationery Company, St. Louis; interest tables for the U.S. Central Publishing Company, Hartland, Wisconsin; and farm machinery.

He served as president and manager of the Brunswick Water Works Company, and general manager of the Brunswick gas and mineral well. He and his son Ruby W. were insurance agents representing numerous companies and serving as company attorneys.

Apparently satisfied with his role in state politics, his various business endeavors, and his law practice, Benecke declined the nomination for lieutenant governor in 1872, a nomination for Congress, and an offer to go to Europe in the Consular Service.

Benecke's civic activities mirrored his political and business interests. He organized and became a trustee of the German Lutheran Church in 1867. He was seven times mayor of Brunswick, served on the city council and was city attorney.

He served as director of the public schools, board of education member, township clerk, and was a member of the board of directors of the High School for 38 years, resigning in March 1908. He was considered a prominent German writer on the subject of education. The first colored school in Brunswick received support and funds through his efforts.

A notary public, he kept a notarial record for 1875-1887. He was a county bridge commissioner and was instrumental in obtaining funding for the Grand River Bridge while encountering opposition from the Carroll County Court and F.H. Warner, a local ferryboat man. He served as director of the Elliott Grove Cemetery Association.

Benecke was a member of several secret organizations, holding administrative offices in each. The Brunswick Turn Verein, incorporated in 1867, had Benecke as its recording secretary. He was Deputy Gross Barden, German Order of Harugari [D.O.H.], 1881; Grand Dictator, Knights of Honor, 1886, and a charter member of Chariton Lodge No. 2112.

His anti-clerical stance arose from various churches' positions on secret societies and prohibition, and he withdrew his membership from the German Lutheran Church. He sent his children to the Presbyterian Sunday school.

The first meeting of the Brunswick Literary and Social Club was held in Benecke's office, May 25, 1888. He was vice president of the Brunswick Library Association and attempted to convert the old Sol Smith Russell home into a public library. He was secretary of the Brunswick Commercial Club in 1910, and a delegate to the Trans-Mississippi Commercial Congress.

Benecke's interests were impressive in scope. He subscribed to twenty-seven magazines and twenty-one newspapers. He wrote historical sketches of the Civil War; spoke before numerous organizations including the Teachers Institute, Brunswick, on education, temperance and prohibition, politics, the German issue and foreign policy.

An avid duck hunter and sportsman, he was president of the Cut-Off Fishing and Hunting Club, owning land on both sides of the west branch of the Cut-Off lake, a lake about three miles long and from 1/8 to 1/2 miles wide, having been formed by the Missouri River leaving its old bed. The lake became a famous resort for fishing parties from St. Louis, Alton, St. Joseph, and Kansas City. Benecke formed the club to regulate use by outsiders.

He supported state game laws and was a delegate to the Conservation Congress. A mounted eagle graced a wall of his law office. He was president and spokesman for a local group of the Missouri River Navigation Congress, and was a delegate to waterway conventions in New Orleans and Washington.

An inventor, Benecke obtained patents on brackets, a chuck, calendars, and a water motor. As an attorney he handled patents for clients, often acquiring a financial interest and later assignment of their patents. He was a weather observer for the U.S. Weather Bureau and invented weather instruments.

On a personal note, Benecke was a lover of good tobacco, beer, music, and had a taste for sweets, ordering through merchants in St. Louis. He exhibited a fine tuned sense of humor and his charity was evident in his actions as well as his remarks. In response to a veteran complaining of delay in processing of his pension increase, Benecke accuses the current administration of delaying actions and writes the pensioner, “I ask you not to die till after the next election.” In a letter to the Protective League of American Showmen, Benecke describes Congress as the “grandest show we have had for years.”

Benecke kept exhaustive business records and records of his correspondence, even copyrighting his system of letter register in 1873. He filled over fifty volumes of letterbooks alone. In December of 1895, he prided himself on his voluminous output saying, “I...receive and mail more letters than any one person in this town!”

His clothes were tailor made and he corresponded frequently with his tailors in Jefferson City and St. Louis. At the age of 69, he was 5 feet 10 inches tall, weighed 204 pounds, and was still sporting a beard and mustache.

He and his wife, Josephine, traveled to Germany in the fall of 1907 and Josephine died in November of the following year. Confined to his home by ill health for most of 1918 and 1919, he prepared several lawsuits and worked on numerous title abstracts. He died the summer of 1919.

LOUIS A. BENECKE (1873- ). Louis A. Benecke was born December 25, 1873, the eldest son of Louis and Josephine Benecke. He was a graduate of Washington University, 1896, and Benton Law School, 1901. His first employment was with Stupp Brothers Bridge and Iron Company, St. Louis, 1896. He was an instructor at the Manual Training School, Washington University; worked for his uncle Robert at the Cramer Dry Plate Works, testing plates; and became vice president of the Cupples Woodenware Company, St. Louis. He married Juliet Sharp in 1920.

Louis was a prolific writer. His letters to his parents while a student at Washington University and Benton Law School are in the correspondence section of his father Louis's papers. His letters to his brother, Ruby Waldo, are in the section containing Ruby's papers. He kept on top of the Benecke family finances, also corresponding with his sister, Lucia, in Chicago, her husband and sons, and his niece Alma, daughter of his sister, Dora. These letters are also in Ruby W. Benecke's papers as his sister and niece mailed them to Ruby after receiving and reading them.

OTTO K. BENECKE (1875-1957). Otto K. Benecke was born October 16, 1875, second son of Louis and Josephine Benecke. As a youth, he was on the Brunswick baseball team. He was a registered pharmacist in Brunswick, a Justice of the Peace, and served as assistant postmaster and postmaster for eight years. In 1900 he was commissioned as a deputy game and fish warden. He served as a librarian for the Brunswick Library Association, and also wrote weather reports for the Brunswicker. Music was an interest, and he played in the Brunswick Band and was a musical instrument dealer. He also helped with his father's insurance business. He died in 1957.

His papers include his commission as game and fish warden, personal and political correspondence, a deed and land abstract, Justice of the Peace case files and papers, 1936-1940, and his postmaster papers. His papers are in the Chariton County and City of Brunswick series of the collection.

RUBY W. BENECKE (1884-1973). Waldo Theodore (Ruby W.) Benecke was born in Brunswick, Missouri, September 22, 1884, to Louis and Josephine Benecke. He was educated in the public schools of Brunswick, was a graduate of Smith Academy, St. Louis; Washington University; and St. Louis Law School. Admitted to the bar in 1906, he joined his father in partnership in the firm of Benecke and Benecke. The firm retained the name after his father's death in 1919.

Benecke also joined his father in the insurance and real estate business. Their insurance agency had three employees. After his father's death, Benecke continued to operate the agencies as well as various dealerships including Maxwell cars and trucks, Metz cars, Moline tractors, and Goodrich Tires, 1909-1924; Grebe and Silver Marshall radios, 1924-1932; and Williams Oil-O-Matic Heating in partnership with R.V. Bartow, 1925-[1929].

A Republican, he was a candidate for prosecuting attorney in 1912; a candidate for state representative in 1940, 1944, and 1946; and served as a member of a statewide committee for a one-house legislature. He served as Chairman, Chariton County Central Committee, 12 years; 2nd Congressional District Committee, six years; and the 6th Senatorial District Committee, six years. Benecke made the motion to admit women to membership in the State Republican Committee. His niece Alma Benecke Sasse was state chairman of the Women's Republican Committee.

In 1943 he was a 6th Senatorial District delegate to the Constitutional Convention. He served as secretary-treasurer of the Constitutional Convention Association, 1947-1963, and was chairman of the special planning committee for the first annual meeting.

Benecke was Brunswick City Attorney, 1910-1914; U.S. Commissioner, Northern Division, Eastern District, Missouri. 1913-1934; Conciliation Commissioner, Chariton County, 1934-1943; Prosecuting Attorney, Chariton County, 1942-1943; member and treasurer of the 12th Judicial Circuit Bar Association; member and secretary-treasurer of the Chariton County Bar Association; and served as a member of the Missouri Bar Association's Committee on State and Local Taxation and chaired the committee in 1948-1949.

He was chairman of numerous charity drives, and vice chairman of the Chariton County Local Welfare Council, 1922. He was assistant postmaster, 1911-1915, and postmaster, 1921-1934, U.S. Post Office, Brunswick. He and his brother, Otto were meteorological reporters for the U.S. Department of Commerce, Weather Bureau.

As a child he was baptized “Waldo Theodore Benecke” in the Lutheran Church, but he joined the Episcopal Church when he married Eleanor Floy Magruder, daughter of W. Magruder, Sr., October 25, 1911. They had one son, Louis Waldo “Wally”, and one daughter, Joanna Josephine. Benecke died in 1973.

LOUIS WALDO BENECKE (1913- ). Louis Waldo Benecke was born December 28, 1913, son of Ruby Waldo and Eleanor Magruder Benecke. A 1932 graduate of Junior College, New Mexico Military Institute, Roswell, New Mexico, he attended the University of Wisconsin, earned an A.B. degree and a law degree from the University of Missouri, passing the bar in October 1938. He was a 1st lieutenant in the Army Reserves. He worked with his father in the firm of Benecke and Benecke.

Louis's papers include his Army extension course materials and maps; law school notes; 1939 yearbook; case files and papers as a Chariton County Justice of the Peace, 1940-1946; correspondence; and miscellaneous items.

ROBERT BENECKE (1835-1903). Robert Benecke, older brother of Louis, was born in the town of Braunschweig, Stiege, Duchy of Brunswick, 1835. A graduate of Blankenburg College, he wished to be a civil engineer. He was a volunteer in the German Brunswick Army. After immigrating with his family in 1856, he opened a photo gallery in Brunswick and, later, one in St. Louis at 4th and Market. As a pioneer photographer, he contributed many articles to photo journals and publications, editing a column “Echoes from Europe” in the St. Louis Photographer. He was the first photographer west of the Mississippi who made artotypes. His picture of Governor Sterling Price adorned many publications. Several of Robert's artotypes are in the collection.

During the Civil War he served in the 18th Regiment, Missouri Volunteers. He married Mary Koenig of St. Louis. They had four children: Olga (Mrs. A.L. Schuster), Anna (Mrs. H. Poss), Josephine (Mrs. F. Usher) and Theodore. At the time of his death in 1903 he was superintendent of the G. Cramer Dry Plate Company, St. Louis. An obituary appears in V. 57.

Robert and his brother, Louis, corresponded extensively, and their letters, written in German, are in Louis Benecke's correspondence and letterbooks. Robert's son, Theo, also wrote occasionally to his uncle Louis.

JOSEPHINE AMERLAN BENECKE (1845-1908). Josephine Amerlan was born in 1845 in Prussia. On June 23, 1868 she married Louis Benecke in New York at the Prescott House, the Reverend Foersch officiating. She and Louis had seven children, two dying in infancy. She is mentioned frequently in family correspondence, and the collection includes her letters, written in German, to her husband and her daughter, Lucia. There are letters, also written in German, to Josephine from her sisters, Frieda and Auguste, and other relatives still living in Germany, 1858-1909. Her brothers Otto, a watchmaker, jeweler, and optician; and Hugo, lived in the U.S., and corresponded frequently with her husband, Louis.

DORA BENECKE SASSE (1869-1928). Dora Benecke was born December 3, 1869, the daughter of Louis and Josephine Benecke. She married Frederick Sasse, a Brunswick attorney, and they had a daughter, Alma. Dora attended Pritchett Institute, Glasgow, and wrote children's books. Letters to her family, photographs, and school items are in the collection. She died September 6, 1928.

LUCIA (LUCY) BENECKE ZILLMAN. Lucia Benecke was the daughter of Louis and Josephine Benecke. She married Christian C.H. Zillman, a Chicago attorney. They had four sons: Theodore, Dean of Men, University of Wisconsin; Christian; Bill; and Louis, a chiropractor. Lucia attended the Pritchett Institute, Glasgow, studied medicine under German scientists and boarded with a German family in St. Louis. Her poetry was published in the Midland Poetry Review during the 1940s. Photographs, newspaper clippings, letters to her family, and letters written to her in German from her mother, and from her Aunt Freida in Germany are in the collection.

ALMA SASSE. Alma Sasse was the daughter of Dora and Frederick Sasse, and the granddaughter of Louis and Josephine Benecke. She attended Vassar, and was a suffragist, traveling to Texas, New York, and Washington, D.C. She was Chairman, Women's Division, Missouri Republican State Committee. At a Kansas City Lincoln Day Banquet in 1922, she was the only woman on the program. There are letters to her grandfather; her uncle, Ruby W. Benecke; and other family members; newspaper clippings, photographs and school items in the collection.

SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE
The Beneckes immigrated from Germany in 1856 and settled in Brunswick, Missouri. This collection of their family papers is invaluable for research in black history; business, ethnic, local, military, political, social, and women's history; and for genealogists. The collection chronicles the lives, careers, and family relationships of four generations of Beneckes. The bulk of the papers are those of Louis Benecke and his son, Ruby W. Benecke.

The collection is divided into ten series:
Business Records
Chariton County and City of Brunswick Records
Louis Benecke Papers
Military Papers
Law Firm Records
Ruby W. Benecke Papers
Family Papers
Maps and Plats
Photographs and Pictorial Items
Volumes
Descriptions of each series can be found in the folder list.

Additional subjects for research are agriculture, city and county government, colored schools, the depression, diplomacy, education, landlord and tenant relationships, the media, medicine and medical care, pension legislation, development of Missouri's Republican party, railroad expansion, religion, and the war years of the 1910s and 1940s.

There are plenty of other cool Benecke's, see below! Also, check http://www.familysearch.org/ and http://www.genealogienetz.de/ ENGLISH TEXT for a lot of historic Bene(c)ke's.

Go to Benecke in or or or or or or or Books written by Benecke's

------------------------------------- Benecke Emails -------------------------------------

Date: Fri, 24 Apr 2009 15:06:50 -0500
From: Blake Sasse
Subject: Benecke family
To: forensic at benecke dot com
Hello, I recently came across your page devoted to the Benecke family. I am Louis Benecke's great, great grandson (through his daughter Dora) and was mentioned on your page as well. Just thought I'd say hello in case you get any inquires regarding his Sasse descendents.
Blake Sasse
1 Oak Forest Lane
Maumelle, AR 72113 USA
bsasse@sbcglobal.net

On Jul 10, 2008, at 2:36 AM, bayernimmigrant at aol dot com wrote:
Dear Sir,
I am a a Special Education teacher at Alexander Hamilton High School in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. I have spent the past 20 years writing a 470 page, 2 volume history of the town of Brookfield, Wiscosnin, where the Ernest & Augusta (Meininger) von Benecke family, from Erfort, Germany, resided. Any Benecke descendent from this family might really enjoy this book. I am charging $32 for the 2 volume book paid through check addressed to:
Thomas Ramstack
30458 S. 38th ST.
Milwaukee, WI 53215
This book will not be profitable to me. I only want to pay for my production costs and hope people with family ties enjoy it. Would you please post this message on your site? Thank you, Tom Ramstack

On May 21st 2008, 17:46, Katja.Kuerschner at gmx dot de> wrote:
Hallo Herr Benecke,
ich war bei Ihrem Vortrag in Waltershausen und fand ihn sehr interessant. Danach habe ich ein wenig auf Ihrer Homepage gelesen und gesehen, daß Sie auch einen Part "Familie" haben. Vielleicht interessieren Sie die angehängten Bilder. Ich betreibe Familienforschung als Hobby und achte sehr auf Namen. Und was sehe ich, als ich über den Eisenacher Friedhof laufe? Im ältesten Teil des Friedhofs habe ich eine Benecke-Grabstelle mit Urne gefunden. Ich habe keine Ahnung, ob die hier Begrabenen etwas mit Ihnen zu tun haben. Vielleicht wissen Sie es.

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Mit freundlichen Grüßen
Katja Kürschner

On May 19th 2008, 01:11, Geojpben at aol dot com wrote:
Dr. Mark,
I, George Benecke of Brooklyn. NY am the nephew of the Walter Benecke in this post. I would like to contact Darius Paris Melisaratos, MD to see if he would like info, pictures etc. of his grandfather. I found that he is an assistant professor at BU but have no way of contacting him. The post is printed below. Thank you, George

Thanks to the wonders of google, i found your web page. My grandfather was Walter Benecke of Brooklyn, NY. I never knew or met him. He and my maternal grandmother (Virginia Zubell) had my mother--Lois Benecke (b. 8/23/1941). My mom was a world class beauty (in all respects) who modelled for Eileen Ford in the late 1950/early 1960s (along with Ali McGraw). She dated Joe DiMaggio and was briefly on "The Price Is Right" as one of the girls that stands besides things. Sadly, she died at the age of 45 from breast cancer (1987). I thought it was funny to see we are "royalty." Surely, my mom was on that international level of beauty and wit.
Good luck in all things Benecke
Darius Paris Melisaratos, MD

On April 29th 2008, 15:45, ljbenecke at hotmail dot co dot uk wrote:
Guten tag Mark, Lee Benecke, from the UK, here. Please excuse the token offering of German - I have decided to learn German but I am very much in the primitive beginnings of mastering the language.
I realise you've stated on the site EVERYTHING you know about the worldwide Benecke family has been placed there, I just wondered if you knew of a Benecke coat of arms or insignia in circulation?
I have been doing a little research (predominately net research at the moment) for Benecke and come up with a few finds. The social networking bastion Facebook has a couple of 'Benecke' groups and have spoken/seen a few people on there. I also found on Wikipedia references to a Pavel Benecke who was a Danzig privateer/pirate. Check the link - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pa%C3%BAel_Benecke - being a massive fan of pirates I was quite excited by this. Shows there are more roots to Europe for the Benecke clan! Although from the Facebook group I'm starting to realise there are a lot more Benecke's out there than I ever imagined - from England to Germany to the US and South Africa.
Amazing!
I hope this email finds you well. I have been reading a few articles on your work. Although science was never my strong point in school I find some of your work really interesting.
All the best, Lee Benecke

On 14. Mrz 2008, at 12:56, jacques.vonbenecke at bt.com wrote:
Hi, As you can see I am a von Benecke that originate from a German family who moved to South Africa around 1890s. I was born in South Africa but now live in England with my family. A member of my family Johan von Benecke did some research and created a family tree for the South African part of the family (Attached, click here). My dada is on line 114 and I am on line 118. IN summary the tree starts in Austria/Germany with 4 brothers who went to South Africa. I am from Gerhardus Ignasius von Benecke born around 1845 in Europe (great great granddad) he had a son Abraham Paulus Stefanus born 1875 in Pretoria South Africa (great granddad) who had a son Abraham Paul Stefanus born 1905 Bergville near Pretoria (granddad). He had several sons but my dad is Wilhelm Adriaan born in 1949 in Weenen South Africa and I was born 1971 in Ermelo South Africa. My son is born in England. I am interested in Ernst von Benecke to see if we are related. Do you have contact details for druid ozone (druidozone at yahoo.com), who made a post in 2004 relating to Ernst?
Attached (Page 8 of the PDS click here) is an extract where Gerhardus Ignasius von Benecke was imprisoned age 53 in 1900 (so probably born around 1847) for High Treason against the English Crown as South Africa was under English rule and he supported the Boers during the Boer war.
Regards -- Jacques von Benecke | Solutions Architect | Spine Wide Architecture, Leeds | BT Global Services | Tel:+44 (0)1133 065320 | Mob:+44 (0)7795 986042 | E: jacques.vonbenecke@bt.com | www.bt.com/globalservices

From: isibe at arcor dot de, Date: 9. Dezember 2007 19:46:18 MEZ, To: forensic at benecke dot com, Subject: Familienname Benecke
Guten Abend Herr Benecke , es ist interessant zu lesen wieviele Menschen diesen Namen tragen. Auch wir sind Beneckes ,(ich allerdings eingeheiratet) der Großvater meines Mannes Arno Wolfgang Benecke war der Schmiedemeister Wilhelm Karl Heinrich Benecke verh. mit Elisabeth Anna Friederike Benecke geb. Jürgens Eheschließung am 23 Oktober 1925 in Brohme damals Wohnhaft in Altendorf Kreis Gifhorn /Hannover es gab eine Tochter und drei Söhne einer davon war mein leider schon verstorbener Schwiegervater Wolfgang Dietrich Heinz Benecke geb am 19.01.1931 verh. mit Inge Benecke geb.Reichelt ein Sohn und zwei Töchter. Es wurde damals erzählt das der Großvater noch einen Bruder hatte leider bestand wenig oder kein Kontakt zu ihm. Soviel zu unserem unvollständigem Stammbaum .
Ich wünsche ihnen und ihre Familie frohe Feiertage
liebe Grüße
Iris Benecke

Click to enlarge From: Iris Kretzschmar (ikretzschmar at dplanet dot ch), Date: 1. Februar 2007 17:18:05 MEZ, To: forensic at benecke dot com, Subject: Suche W. Bennecke -- Guten Tag, Ich bin Kunsthistorikerin und suche einen Maler namens W. Bennecke, der im 19. Jh. gemalt und gelebt hat. Bisher habe noch nichts gefunden. Vielleicht können Sie mir weiterhelfen. Ich lege Ihnen ein Bild von ihm bei. Mit Dank und freundlichen Grüssen aus Basel -- I. Kretzschmar, lic. phil., Kunsthistorikerin

Click to enlarge From: Norbert Benecke Norbert dot Benecke at gmx dot de, De: 12. Dezember 2006 20:56:10 MEZ, To: forensic at benecke dot com, Subject: Familie Benecke Hallo Herr Dr. Benecke, wir haben uns einmal vor ca. 3 Jahren bei einer Ihrer Leseabende in Gladbeck kennen gelernt. Vielleicht erinnern Sie sich noch, dass ich Ihnen von einem 3D-Laserscanner berichtet habe, mit dem neben anderen Anwendungen (wir setzen ihn im Bergbau und tunnelbau ein) auch Tatortaufnahmen erfolgen können. Mittlerweile hat die Technik sich ja durchgesetzt und morgen (am 13.12.2006) werden ja wohl auch Leute vom LKA NRW mit so einem Scanner bei Johannes B. Kerner im ZDF zu sehen sein. Aber eigentlich wollte ich Ihnen heute etwas ganz anderes berichten. Im Nachlass meiner jetzt verstorbenen Mutter habe ich das Hochzeitsfoto meiner Großeltern väterlicherseits (also Benecke) gefunden. Und da ich finde, dieses Foto ist ein wirklich schönes Stück Zeitgeschichte um 1925, übersende ich Ihnen hiermit eine digitale Kopie zur Veröffentlichung auf Ihrer Clan-Seite.
Mit freundlichen Grüßen
Norbert Benecke, Dipl.-Ing., Assessor des Markscheidefachs
Vielleicht wollen Sie einen Link in Ihre Seite hinzufügen.

From: Jeffrey Ratcliffe jeffrey dot ratcliffe at gmail dot com, Date: 10. November 2006 22:14:10 MEZ, To: forensic at benecke dot com, Subject: Benecke Ahnenforschung
Hallo Herr Benecke, ich habe gerade Ihre Homepage samt Family-Seite gefunden und dachte, Sie wären daran interessiert, dass meine Frau mit Mädchennamen Benecke heisst, und dass ich relativ viel über die Familie dokumentiert habe: http://uk.geocities.com/jeffreyratcliffe/snb.htm#BENECKE -- Vielleicht wollen Sie einen Link in Ihre Seite hinzufügen. As a complete coincidence, my sister's South African brother-in-law is called Beneke (no c). A small world... -- Regards -- Jeff Ratcliffe

From: Ann Sadler sadler.a at virgin dot net, Date: 8. November 2005 18:52:43 MEZ, To: Mark Benecke, Subject: Re: BENEKENDORFF, On 8. Nov 2005, at 12:46, Ann Sadler wrote:
Hi,
I have found some BENEKENDORFFs marrying into one of the trees I am researching.
William Oscar BENEKENDORFF born Prussia in about 1842 and in a census he gives his profession as West India Merchant, he married a Fanny (Frances) C. UNKNOWN and had a daughter and son.
Helen Lilian BENEKENDORFF the daughter of William, married Frank Hovil.
Frederick Oscar BENEKENDORFF married and I think had a daughter Dorothea (Dorothy) Frida.
I would be interested in finding out who ere the parents of William. His naturalisation papers are at The National Archives at Kew and next time I go I will look at these.
Reference below:
Piece details: HO 45/9415/57142: quick reference Nationality and Naturalisation: Benekendorff, Wilhelm Oscar, from Prussia. Certificate A1970 issued 8 August 1876.
Regards,
Ann

Click to enlarge From: cindykrista -- cindykrista at hotmail dot com, Date: 19. Oktober 2005 00:04:36 MESZ, To: "Mark Benecke" -- forensic@benecke.com, Subject: Re: Emailing: 2002858-5844.jpg
You look so much like and act so much like family.
Elton nor Deitrick Benecke never left Germany. I have a photo of Deitrick in a Hussar looking uniform. Trail ends there. I am sure we still have relatives in Germany. Just never found anyone. So we are all stuck with the legacy of "The blue-blood aritocrats of the Germans"...whatever the ancestors meant by that. Hessen Kassel is all I ever heard. Great Grandparents were married in Hannover. People did not say where they were from so much as they said what town they were in when they left. (passenger ship manifests) So I am clueless.
This is Dietrick* in all his glory. My nephew could put on a mustache and the costume today and pass as Dietrick
Good luck in all your endeavors. I will try to stop bugging you every few years.
Hugs to a cousin of some kind, Cynthia Benecke Thornburg
(*German spelling: "Dietrich")

From: Harriet Imrey (himrey at ntelos dot net), Sent: Friday, October 14, 2005 8:16 AM, Subject: Re: Orangeburgh SC at www.benecke.com
On 14. Okt 2005, at 02:55, Harriet Imrey wrote:
While searching for something quite unrelated, I ran across the correspondence posted at www.benecke.com/theclan.html. The highlighted term Orangeburg SC was included in a note from Johnie B. Caraway-Matthews of Oklahoma City OK. Before clicking back, I realized that I recognized the names of the set of 2g grandparents about whom she was inquiring. (The history of the German-speaking immigrants to colonial backcountry South Carolina is a highly-specialized hobby of mine, and the ministers there were especially interesting.) The email from Mrs. Caraway-Matthews, dated 9 Jul 2004, did not include her email address. Naturally, you should not send me that type of personal information without her permission, but please feel free to forward my email address to her.
The father of Maria Kathrina Barbara (4 Aug 1778 - 21 Aug 1822) was the Rev. M. Carl Binnicker, A.M. He signed his name on numerous wills, deeds, and church documents as Charles Binnicker, so it is not likely that his immediate family in Germany had used the Benecke spelling. He was a widower with three daughters (including Mary Catherine Barbara) when he married Charity, the widow Ritter, prior to 1790. They had five children prior to his death before Jun 1800. The youngest child, George Simeon Binnicker, was born 1 Jan 1800. Mary Catherine Barbara Binnicker married John Baughman/Bachman on 26 Aug 1800. Binnicker was a Reformed minister who lived in Lexington Co SC after 1780, although his two congregations were both located in Richland Co SC.
The Bachmanns were not Palatines. A large number of immigrants from southwestern Germany were among the earliest residents of backcountry South Carolina, and a very few of those were from the Palatine States. All new German residents were then called "Palatines", but the Swiss immigrants never were--they were called "Swissers" or "Switzers". Hans Ulrich Bachmann (grandfather of John Baughman) arrived in Charleston in Jan 1735 on the ship William, along with my 6g grandfather--who wrote a very colorful letter about the trip, and about what the brand-new wilderness settlement of Saxegotha looked like when they got there. Nearly all of this first group of frontier settlers had left Zürich together in Sep 1734. The historian at Staatsarchiv Zürich did not locate an emigration record for Hans Ulrich Bachmann, but found one for Barbara Bachmann of Altikon, Zürich, who arrived on that ship with her husband Jacob Hagenbuch. Then the Bachmanns and Hagenbuchs selected adjacent properties, and had them surveyed on the same day. Bachmann was undoubtedly from Zürich, so would not have been considered as "Palatine" by the English officials.
Your correspondent may have acquired the Benecke spelling in her family tree via an accident of 19th-century spelling, rather than via mid-18th-century heritage. Those things could happen. Reformed minister Johann Friedrich Dubbert, who preceded the Rev. Charles Binnicker as minister to Appii Forum Church, died in Charleston (as a refugee) in 1781. By 1840, his descendants had forgotten 1) his name, 2) his religious affiliation, and 3) his political preference of Loyalist/Tory. They are certain that they are descended from a Lutheran minister named Charles Dubard, who must have been a Huguenot! The spelling of German surnames got very scrambled once the residents of German-speaking central South Carolina began moving west. If you can put me in touch with Mrs. Caraway-Matthews, I think she'd be happy to hear about the family references I could send her.
Harriet Imrey

From: "MBeneke" mbeneke at swfla.rr.com, Date: 13. Juli 2005 03:33:44 MESZ, To: forensic at benecke dot com, Subject: Re: A Beneke in 1471 Gdansk
Hi Mark,
I thought it was cool too. I found other references to our illustrious Nautical Ancestor noting him as a "Pirate"....I think that takes "cool" to a new level! I like the thought of a dashing, swashbuckling Pirate in the family line up. It adds a little balance to all the intellectuals (yes, that would be you too!) in the family gene pool! After all, some one has to come from the shallow end of the pool!!! :)
Moe

----- Original Message -----From: "Mark Benecke" forensic at benecke.com To: mbeneke at swfla.rr.com, Sent: Monday, July 11, 2005 3:11 PM, Subject: Re: A Beneke in 1471 Gdansk
very cool, thank you! will add asap!
love and peace
maggot man


MBeneke said:
Clear Day -- Leader of Royal Prussia (1454/66-1793)
In 1440, Gdansk joined the nearby Hanseatic cities of Elblag and Torun to form the Prussian Confederation, which was supported by Casimir IV of Poland in its rebellion (February 1454) against the Teutonic Order's rule. The resulting ""War of the Cities" or Thirteen Years' War ended with the Order's defeat and its surrender to the Polish crown (Second Treaty of Thorn, October 1466) of its rights in Gdansk Pomerania and the rest of the area subsequently known as Polish or Royal Prussia.
The 15th and 16th centuries brought changes to the city's cultural heritage. We can see these changes in the arts, language, and in Gdansk contributions to the world of science. In 1471, a refurbished sailing ship under Gdansk captain Paul Beneke the famous altar painting titled: Latest Judgement (J? Gericht) by artist Hans Memling to Gdansk
Maureen "Moe" Beneke, Busey Bank Florida

From: "MBeneke" mbeneke at swfla dot rr dot com, Date: 28. Juni 2005 04:15:28 MESZ, To: forensic at benecke dot com, Subject: My name is Beneke too...
Hello, I have been searching for a long time for information on my family.My father Reinhold Karl Heinz Beneke was born on Sept. 21, 1912 in Hildesheim and passed away in 2001 in Brantford, Ontario, Canada.His parents were Heinrich Friedrich Karl Beneke, born August 1, 1887 in Rössing. He died on June 6th 1973. My grandmother's was DorotheaMartha Anna Beneke (Maiden Name: Berger) born May 10, 1888 In Forst an der Lausitz.My grandfather's occupation as listed on my parents Marriage Certificate as "Kellner" (note of webmaster: this means "waiter", or, on a ship, "steward").My parents were married in Wiener Neustadt on April 1, 1939.
I have copy of a "page from the Parish Book for the Rössing Kirchen (Auszüge aus den Kirchenbüchern der ev.=luth. Parochie Rössing).The entries are hand written and somewhat difficult to read but it lists the following, with my grandfather listed at the top.It looks like the Beneke's were in the area of Rösing back at least as far as 1858. Before that time I can't read the handwriting but there is information back to 1814. The paperwork was filled out July 16, 1935.It notes the church as Ev.-luth. which I think is Evangelical Lutheran.
I also have what appears to be a Baptismal Page for my Grandfather which is dated August 14, 1887 from the city of Rösing.
While in Germany my father worked for Daimler-Benz and, my sister says he also worked at Porsche, but I only remember him mentioning Daimler-Benz. He worked on the design and manufacture of airplane engines for the Luftwaffe.He didn't enter the military during the war until near the end when Hitler starting drafting everyone. My grandfather was drafted at the age of 50 +/- to act as a guard of American Prisoners so as to free up the younger guards to fight.
After the war they moved to Toronto, Canada where my father's name was written down as Carl Heinz Beneke.My father went first to get a job then - after he raised enough money he sent for my mother. She came over with my brother, Ingo - from a previous marriage with a Band Leader, Rudy Becker, and my sister Cora who was about 1 year old.Nine months after my mother arrived in Toronto, I was born....a reunion baby. Then my other two sisters, Maya and Elke who were about 11 and 13 years old at the time stayed behind in Germany with friends until my parents could afford to bring them over.When the came to Canada, the newspapers ran a story about their crossing the Atlantic alone to re-unite with their family.
In 1965 my family moved to Utica, Michigan.In 1974 they moved to the Cleveland Ohio area.
It was in Florida (I had moved down in 1973) that I found my first "Beneke" in a phone book.There is was a printer in Clearwater named Beneke.Until that time no matter where we lived, Toronto, Detroit area, and even a little while in Cleveland, Ohio....we found no "Beneke's".
I remember my father telling me stories about "Benekedorf" and that at one time the family name had been "von Benekedorf".He always said Beneke was not that common a name in Germany.Both my parents were only children so I know of no aunts or uncles.
Other than family stories of the war times etc. this is what I have.I would love to learn more.
Thanks,
Maureen "Moe" Beneke
Busey Bank Florida

From: "MBeneke" mbeneke at swfla dot rr dot com, Date: 28. Juni 2005 04:55:53 MESZ, To: forensic at benecke.com, Subject: More Successful Beneke's
Dear Mark:
Here is something I copied from an Internet Website www.axtiv.com
Ron Beneke, 59, is currently President of Beneke Companies, Inc., of Dallas, which is the general partner of Beneke/Krieg Company, a national real estate partnership whose primary business is the acquisition of apartment projects financed with tax-exempt housing bonds. Mr. Beneke's 27 years of experience in the real estate industry include ten years in legal practice. He spent six years as managing partner of a forty-lawyer firm of which he was a founding member. Mr. Beneke is a member of the Management Committee of Demand Aggregation Solutions, LLC and a member of the Board of Directors of NetLink Transaction Services, LLC.
PS:
I found this when I was looking for information on the Beneke Toilet Seat company. I remember those toilet seats...it was the only time I saw my name in "print".Their most famous brand was "Tuffy Toilet Seats by Beneke" . The company that bought them out was Sanderson. I'll forward a like to some information on them with another email.
Moe
Maureen "Moe" Beneke

dear moe -- thanks a lot! this all makes a lot of sense. for some unknown reason, a) some bene(c)kes left the country a while ago to go exclusively to immigrant countries like the U.S., Brazil, Southern Africa, Australia, etc., and b) many if not most of them are engineers, technicians or natural scientists, or they write books that deal with german language science. it s so weird, i start to believe it s genetic, all the travelling and the science ;) -- love and peace from germany! marky mark

From: "Fred Benecke" fbenecke at ozemail.com.au, Date: 27. Oktober 2004 08:41:30 MESZ, To: , Subject: benecke/Australia
Hello Mark - I have only just found your great Benecke Family World Wide. Do you have a little Australian flag that you can add to your collection?
In Sydney Australia there three separate and unrelated families of Benecke that I know of. My great grandfather Christian Benecke was born in Hanover c August 1836 and married in Sydney in 1862. Another Benecke family is descended from one Henry (or Hewrick) Benecke, born Germany c 1854 and married in Sydney in 1885 and the third family is descended from Max Bernard Benecke who was born in Berlin c 1869 and subsequently married in Australia.
And that is just for Sydney. There is also a large group of Beneckes in southern Queensland as well as a scattering of Beneckes in other States. Oh, and there are also some in New Zealand.
Best wishes
Frederick Benecke

From: Johnie Matthews , Date: 9. Juli 2004 05:03:31 MESZ, To: forensic@benecke.com, Subject: Family tree -- While I was researching my family tree I came across the Benecke name of my great-great great grandmother on my father's side. My grandfather's mother was Mary Elizabeth Amelia Riley Caraway - daughter of Elizabeth Catharine Baughman who was the daughter of John B. Baughman and Mary Catharine Barbara (Benecke) both born in Orangeburg, S.C. and Mary C.B. Benecke was born Aug 4, 1778 and died in Aug. 21, 1822 which leads me to believe she may have been buried in Orangeburg District, S.C. as John Baughman married again in 1829 in Pickens, Alabama before going on to Texas. They had 11 children one was named John Benecke Baughman.
I became curious about the German names in my lineage, which I am a Caraway from the first John Caraway from Yorkshire England in 1674, the great-great-great granddaughter of John & Mary C.B. (Benecke) Baughman. I came across your website seeking more about the Beneckes. I don't know how the Beneckes ended up in Orangeburg, S.C. John B. Baughman was born Oct 24, 1774 in Orangeburg Dist. was the son of Hans Ulrick Baukman from Palinitate Germany born before 1720. Do you know of a German settlement in the Orangeburg District, S.C. Were there Beneckes in that area? Were some of the Beneckes Palatines as well? What I have found in my research some of the Palitines were shipped to America and some were in Ireland. I came to the conclusion that Orangeburg was named after some royality named William of Orange in Palitinate German.
I have found this so very interesting, historically. I had no idea how my ancestors ever made it to America and am amazed how much information there is on the Internet about my lineage. I always thought I was pure Brit until I came across these people from Germany. I somehow‚Äö√†√∂‚à ö¬ßfelt all my life that I had some German in my blood, and didn't realize‚Äö√†√∂‚à ö¬ßwho they were. I would love to learn more about how Mary Catharine Barbara Benecke ended up in S.C. and who were her people as I find in my research no evidence of her background except her surname. Surely she didn't drop out of nowhere. All I know is that I come from a long line of protestants - Baptist, I thought. But there is a lot more to the story than I realized.
I hope you might be able to find some leads in your quest as well. I will be glad to hear from you. Yours truly, Johnie B. Caraway-Matthews - Oklahoma City, OK -- Love and Peace, JBM

Mark Benecke wrote: (...) one more thing that crosses my mind:
-- since the Prussians (where Beneckes come from) are protestant, your statement about the long lineage of protestants makes a lot of sense
-- also, the Beneckes went to typical countries for immigrants like South Africa, Netherlands, and the US
all the best! marky mark


From: Johnie Matthews , Date: 11. Juli 2004 04:43:15 MESZ, To: Mark Benecke , Subject: Re: Family tree II -- Thanks for your reply. It makes sense now how I came from a long line of Baptist and even some of the things my grandfather left me with some impressions but I really didn't pay that much attention when he would tell me the stories. I am wondering if my great grandmother Mary Ann Elizabeth Amelia Riley was of the Irish Palatines as her father's name was Hiram Riley and her mother a Baughman. I think Hiram may be a German name? I am really intrigued by all this, I had no idea about this until recently. About time for me to do research on my roots. However, the gene pool stops with me as I have no children to pass this information on to. I guess we are distant cousins?

dear johnie -- yeah, it s quite likely that all beneckes are closely related...
nope, Hiram is not a german name that i knew of but it could be an anglo-american version of Hermann or something like that...
best wishes for the weekend! marky mark


From: pcorman@eps-etampes.fr, Subject: Re: Cereus beneckei?, Date: 18. Mai 2004 09:14:23 MESZ, To: forensic@benecke.com --Dear Mark, I am searching information on a Benecke. -- In 1844, a german botanist, Ehrenberg gave to a cacti the name of Cereus beneckei. -- This Benecke can't be Wilhelm born only in 1868 (Wilhelm Benecke (1912): ...und nochmal eine Kaktee: Mammillaria beneckei var. multiceps Reppenhegen) or Franz born only in 1857. -- Have you any information of a Benecke scientist born before these two men? -- Unfortunately, I have no more information, only this: Cereus beneckei published by Ehrenberg in Bot. Zeitung 2: 835 (1844).
By the way, there is a mistake in your site. A message said: "Wilhelm Benecke (1912): ...und nochmal eine Kaktee: Mammillaria beneckei var. multiceps Reppenhegen"
But Mammillaria beneckei was also published by Ehrenberg in Bot. Zeit. 2: 833 (1844). So It can't be honouring Wilhelm Benecke 1868-1946, or may be another Wilhelm? His father?
The Benecke I am searching for is probably a botanist (as were Wilhelm Benecke 1868-1946 and Franz Benecke 1857-1903). -- Best regards, Philippe Corman

On 7. Jun 2004, at 14:21, pcorman wrote: I have find another information in an american book (Britton & Rose, The Cactaceae, 4 vol. (1919-1923)): "It (Cereus beneckei) was named for A. Benecke, a dealer in succulents, at Birkenwerder near Berlin." I am, of course, interested with all information you will be able to find about this man. Best regards, Philippe Corman

From: druid ozone (druidozone at yahoo.com), Date: 30. April 2004 10:35:48 MESZ, To: forensic@benecke.com, Subject: Ernst Von Benecke -- Hi. I am one of the few descendants of Ernst von Benecke and his wife Augusta Meininger. I saw you have some info on your website about them. My grandpa took me to the family cemetary, and it is still there despite the school parking lot coming to the edge of it and the plainly visible small rectangular cement boxes being empty and exposed. Only 3 of their 11 children made it to adulthood, and of those 3 girls, only one, Harriet married. Augusta had such a hard life that she warned her daughters NEVER to marry, and my grandpa told me that Augusta did not speak one word to harriet for 20 years after she got married. One thing not mentioned on your website was that Ernst Von Benecke shot himself in the head with one of the dueling pistols he had brought from the castle in Germany. Augusta threw the pistols in the outhouse after that. My grandpa was very close to his grandparents and told me all the details and even passed down to us Ernst and Augusta's bible and prayer book. I have always been very curious about who is the Baron Benecke and where was the castle. I do believe the royal orchestra story is correct.

Hi Mark , Bin ein wenig traurig das du meine " ABOUT STEVE " & " MIXED EMOTIONS " SITES noch nicht in den Clan aufgenommen hast . Ich denke mal das das aus Zeitmangel noch nicht geschehen ist . Vielleicht ist aber meine Person auch nicht so interessant für den Clan , da ist meine zweite Hälfte meiner Person ( Seydewitz ) wohl interessanter , ( Ministerpräsident - Sachsen 1954 - ? ---- Schriftsteller ---- Parteigründer ---- Stadtnamensgeber ---- Verlagsgründer ---- u.s.w. ) . Aber mein Geburtsname ist halt Benecke und in meiner Eigenschaft als Koch habe ich auch schon eine Menge berühmter Menschen bekocht , ( königl. Familie --- Windsor --- , Schauspieler und Musiker national wie international , Politiker , den reichsten Mann der Erde u.v.m. -- Gruss Steve Benecke --- Hi Mark -- Ersteinmal "Respect" für deine Arbeit . Ich hatte das Vergnügen, eine Reportage über dich auf RP zu sehen und finde das es mehr Wissenschaftler deines Schlages geben sollte . Da macht das lernen bestimmt doppelt soviel Spass , wenn nicht alles so steif und nach Protokoll läuft . Meine Adresse ist : www.stevebenecke.ch.vu ---- die jeweiligen " Benecke - Sites "‚Äö√Ñ√∂‚à ö√묨¬¢ befinden sich unter den Links --- Mixed Emotions‚Äö√Ñ√∂‚à ö√묨¬¢und About Steve --- Viel Erfolg weiterhin --- Ich werde Ende des Monats wieder in der Schweiz angestellt sein --- Was mich , ob der Lage hier in Deutschland , sehr glücklich stimmt . -- C. U. LATER SKATER -- Steve Benecke

Go to the pages of Steve Benecke: click

Subject: Benecke; Date: Tue, 16 Dec 2003 15:23:40 +0100; From: Ursula Perkow; <Perkow@ub.uni-heidelberg.de>; Reply-To: Perkow@ub.uni-heidelberg.de; Organization: Universitaetsbibliothek Heidelberg; To: forensic@benecke.com -- Sehr geehrter Herr Benecke, Wilhelm Benecke's System des See-Assekuranz- und Bodmerei-Wesens / Vollst. u. zeitgemäß umgearb. von Vincent Nolte. Hamburg   Band 1 - 1851. Band 2 - 1852.Der Verfasser (1776-1837), Theologe und Versicherungswissenschaftler, verbrachte die letzte Zeit seines Lebens in Heidelberg. Seine Witwe, Luise, geb. Falcke, stand jahrzehntelang in brieflichem und persönlichem Kontakt mit Henry Crabb Robinson. Das stark aus dem Briefwechsel schöpfende Werk: H. Marquardt, Henry Crabb Robinson und seine deutschen Freunde. Brücke zwischen England und Deutschland im Zeitalter der Romantik. 2 Bde. Göttingen 1964.1967. dürfte auch unter familiengeschichtlichem Gesichtspunkt für Sie von Interesse sein. Sollten Sie irgendwann einmal einen süddeutschen Zweig der Familie Benecke auf Ihrer Internetseite ausführlicher darstellen, lassen Sie es mich bitte wissen; ich würde die Arbeit dann gerne unter http://www.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/helios/fachinfo/www/gesch/tipfam2.htm aufnehmen. -- Mit freundlichem Gruß, -- Dr. Ursula Perkow,Fachreferentin für Geschichte und Musikwissenschaft, Universitaetsbibliothek Heidelberg, Postfach 105749, 69047 Heidelberg, Tel.: (06221)542383, http://VFBGeschichte.uni-hd.de/, http://VFBMusik.uni-hd.de/, http://www.kurpfalz-geschichte.de/

Subject: Friedrich benecke; Date: Fri, 28 Nov 2003 17:37:38 +0100; From: petermorgen@t-online.de (petermorgen); Reply-To: petermorgen@t-online.de; To: forensic@benecke.com -- hallo hr benecke, ein freund aus england sucht infos über einen deutschen namens friedrich benecke, der ca. 1825 in der nähe von swansea. mit einer zink-schmelze/giesserei zu tun hatte. die im sog ENGLISH PROCESS gebaut war bzw. arbeitete, während die übliche methode belgischer oder schlesischer prozess hie‚àö‚à´. -- Mein freund kann absolut nicht über diesen friedrich benecke finden und hat mich um hilfe gebeten. da sie um diese zeit einen vorfahren gleichen namens hatten frage ich an, ob dieser vielleicht der gesuchte ist. wenn ja. würde ich mich über weitere infos sehr freuen. -- mfg -- peter morgen

Subject: Beneckes; Date: Sun, 12 Oct 2003 13:36:19 EDT; From: DirkBenecke1@aol.com; To: forensic@benecke.com Hallo ich bin Dirk Benecke wohne in Köln und bin Gynäkologe. Ich werde oft auf Sie angesprochen, unter anderem von Ihrer "Doktormutter" im gemeinsamen Geburtsvorbereitungskurs vor 6 Jahren, weil viele glauben wir wären Brüder da ich auch in Käln wohne. Ich habe 2 Brüder : Dr.iur. Lars Benecke, Dr. med. Ulf Benecke Meine Mutter Lilly Benecke und meine Frau Uta Benecke sind Journalistinnen und arbeiten für die ARD und NTV. Mein Vater Günter Benecke war lange Zeit bei der Bundeswehr und beim VDI.

Subject: Benecke Familiengeschichte; Date: Fri, 11 Apr 2003 12:30:59 +0200; From: "rae-benecke" ; To: forensic@benecke.com
Hallo, berühmtester derzeit lebender Benecke-Namensträger,
Ich heiße auch so und ich habe einiges an Familiengeschichte, die vielleicht den einen oder anderen interessiert.
Mein Name ist Hubertus Benecke. Ich habe neun Kinder, davon sechs potentielle Namensträger, ob es so kommen wird, wird man sehen.
Mein Vater ist Walter Benecke, geb.1928. Mein Großvater war Dr. Friedrich Benecke, geb. 1896, verstorben 1968, verheiratet mit Else, geb. Schlenzig.
Er war der jüngste von 4 Brüdern, Ernst Benecke,geb. 1890, verst.? in den USA, möglicherweise in Milwaukee. Arthur Benecke, geb. 1893, verst. 1933; Albert Benecke, Korvettenkapitän zur See, geb. 1894, verst. 1943.
Von diesen 4 Benecke- Männern ist nur ein Benecke gezeugt worde, mein Vater Walter Benecke.
Vater dieser 4 Männer war Walter E.T. Benecke, geb. 1858 in Manchester, England. Er verstarb 1928 in Oberfranken. Er war verheiratet mit Emma geb. Keyl aus einem Weingroßhändlerhaus in Frankfurt a.M. und Bordeaux, (geb. 1860). Vater meines Urgroßvaters, der nur zwei Schwestern, aber keinen Bruder hatte, war John Hermann Benecke, geb. in Deptford, England, 8.9.1817, verst. Oktober 1880 in Oberfranken. John Hermann Benecke war verheiratet mit Katharina, geb Eichhoff, geb.1828, verst. am 29.03.1868 in Oberfranken.
Die Eheleute John Hermann und Katharina Benecke sind im Hauptfriedhof in Frankfurt a.M. beigesetzt.
John Hermann hatte zwei Brüder, Ernst Benecke(* 1814, gest. 1894 in Bievres (nahe Paris) und Alfred Benecke *1819, verst 1900 in Cannes, verheiratet mit Ady Souchay aus der Frankfurter Patrizierfamilie Souchay.(sog. Denmarkhiller Linie). Mit der Familie Souchay gab es eine Vielzahl von Verbindungen, auch zu bekannten Personen. Der Senator der Frankfurter Bürgerschaft und Abgeordenter der Pauls- Kirchen-Versammlung, Eduard Souchay war Stiefvater von Katharina Benecke, geb Eichhoff. Ebenfalls über Souchay kommt Verwandtschaft zu Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy, dessen Tochter Charles Victor Benecke geheiratet hat, einen Vetter I.Grades von John Hermann Benecke.Ebenfalls aus einer Verbindung des Hauses Benecke /Souchay stammt Helene Weber, geb. Fallenstein, die Mutter des Ökonomen Max Weber. Zu Ernst Benecke ist noch zu sagen, daß er heute dadurch recht berühmt geworden ist, daß er im Jahre 1852 eine große Reise nach Ägypten unternahm und dort als einer der ersten überhaupt Fotos schoß. Ein bekannter amerikanischer Galerist, der sich auf alte Fotos spezialisiert hat, hat bereits Ausstellungen in New York und in Paris organisiert.
Vater der drei genanten Brüder war Friedrich Benecke, geb.am 29.6.1774 in Hannover, gestorben am 20.02.1841 in Goslar. Verheiratet in erster Ehe von 1810 bis 1813 mit Nanette Lüdert( verst.1813), in zweiter Ehe mit Wilhelmine Funck aus Bückeburg, der Mutter der drei Beneckesöhne.
Friedrich Benecke hatte wiederum zwei Brüder, nämlich Lewin Anton Wilhelm Benecke und Johann Heinrich Benecke. Letztgenannter ist der "Stammvater" der auch heute noch bekannten und wirkungsreichen "Otto Benecke Stiftung".
Erstgenannter Lewin Anton Wilhelm ist "Stammvater" des Heidelberger Paläontologie Professors Friedrich Wilhelm Benecke (Enkel des o.g.) und selbst Wissenschaftler und Theologe gewesen.
Vater dieser drei Beneckes war Ernst Phillip Benecke, Besitzer einer Wachstuchfabrik in Hannover. Von diesem Herrn besitze ich ein sehr würdiges Ölbild mit Allongeperücke.Von fast allen weiteren Beneckes habe ich ebenfalls Ölbilder oder Fotos. Auch besitze ich einen sehr weit verzweigten Stammbaum.
Für heute soll es einmal genug sein. Wer Interesse hat oder Beziehungen bzw. Verwandtschaft erkennt, möge sich bitte rühren.
Mit freundlichen Grüßen
Hubertus Benecke

Subject: Barry Wayne Benecke April 2, 2001, Date: Mon, 02 Apr 2001 01:19:35 +0200, From: Dick Perfors , To: mark@benecke.com -- Hello, My name is Dirk Perfors from the Netherlands, I'm looking for Barry Wayne Benecke, he is married to Kim Perfors. Do you know him ? Is he a relative of you? I hope you can give me an answer and hear from you soon. With friendly greetings, Dirk Perfors, vlhuiskk@worldonline.nl

Subject: Benecke Stammbaum -- Date: Thu, 31 Oct 2002 14:28:35 +0100 -- From: Nadine Friebel <nini-el-dorado@web.de>-- Organization: http://freemail.web.de/ -- To: forensic@benecke.com: Habe Ihre Seite gesehen, und wollte Sie nur kurz informieren das es noch weitere Beneckes gibt, in Köln ist Verena Benecke ansässig und in Mek-Po gibt es noch den Neurologen R. Benecke incl. Familie. Ich hoffe ich konnte Ihnen helfen. Mfg nini-el

From: "cindykrista" -- To: "Mark Benecke" -- Subject: Re: Benecke -- Date: Fri, 22 Mar 2002 01:59:32 -0600 -- X-OriginalArrivalTime: 22 Mar 2002 08:03:58.0108 (UTC) -- Sorry, I didn't really expect an answer! -- Thank you for your timely attention. -- My grandfather always said he was born in Hessen Kassel period. His dob 2/14/1879 I never knew what that meant. I just recently found out that there was such a place on a map in Prussia. -- I am really trying to place HIS father somewhere. All I have is his name Emil Benecke dob 2/14 1853 and a father's name listed as Deitrich. He married a woman named Annie Mary Day (Dach) in Hannover, Germany September 1879 and then came to the US in 1883. That is almost everything I know about my great grandfather. -- I did see a picture of Ernst William Benecke geb 1838 in Berlin, PRofessor of geology at the University of Heidelberg recently that looks remarkably like my great grandfather Emil. -- After the the research I did in the 1980s, I realize that Benecke is such a common name when you get out farther than your home town here; that it is almost impossible to get anywhere. -- Cindy

Subject: Another Benecke, Date: Mon, 4 Jun 2001 21:58:51 -0500, From: "Burmeister" burmeist@hutchtel.net, To: forensic@benecke.com --- Hi, I was looking for geneology information and found your site. My mother was a Beneke. What I know of the family history is that Johann Heinrich came to America around 1880 and settled near New Albin Iowa. He was born 9.1.1840 at Eddelstorg which belongs to the parish of Altenmedingen, the son of Jurgen Christoph Benecke, Hauswirt at Eddelstrof, Eddelstrof 11.1.1799 son of Heinrich Christoph Benecke and Maria Margaretha Geffert; Altemedingen 20.11.1829 Catharine Sophie Riest, Bostelwiebeck 6.9.1805, daughter of Jurgen Heinrich R. and Catharine Elisabeth Geffert. There were at least 2 other children, Catharina Dorothea was born 23.7.1830, died 19.9.1830, and Jurgen Heinrich Christoph born 18.4.1932, died 9.4.1851. If any of that sounds like something you may know anything about, I'd love hearing from you. Lila Burmeister, daughter of Howard and Marie (Beneke) Solberg June 8, 2001

Subject: I am tracing the Beneke family tree..., Date: Tue, 28 Aug 2001 16:35:19 EDT, From: Bbeneke@aol.com, To: beneke@bmup.de, beneke@nibis.ni.schule.de, elke.beneke@ifa-kaernten.at, beneke@diakonie.de, bernhard.beneke@gt-net.de, heimo.beneke@medizin.uni-ulm.de, t.beneke@t-online.de, rbeneke@ames.net, wbeneke@mail.coin.missouri.edu, beneke@yager.de, sbeneke@mail.ix.net.au, ernesto.beneke@t-online.de, SusanaBeneke@aol.com, beneke@trebbau.de, robert.beneke@mail.ihs.gov, cbeneke@uwyo.edu, Beneke@aol.com, JLB1128@aol.com, bene@duesseldorf-today.de, martin.beneke@cern.ch, ibeneke@t-online.de, hein.beneke@treasury.gov.za, mark@benecke.com, daphne.von.beneke@pgen.com, forensic@benecke.com, mikkky@gmx.net, lane.beneke@squareonedesigns.com, briti@flossmann.de, r.beneke@tu-bs.de, abeneke@dcsi.net, larry_beneke@kmcnetwork.org, beneke@acsu.buffalo.edu, beneke@libronet.de, elke.beneke@ifakaernten.at, mbeneke@physik.rwth-aachen.de, info@beneke-co.de, mail@ltbeneke.com.au, beneke@rz.uni.hildesheim.de, shellil@springisd.org, bwc@benekewire.com, mail@jbeneke.de, beneke@em.uni.frankfurt.de, abeneke@alexandrabeneke.com --- Hello all! My name is Bishop Beneke and I am in the U.S. tracing the Beneke family tree! I got most of your e-mail addresses off of Google.com - I have researched 53 pages that have references to the word "Beneke" and there are more than 100 pages for me to go...but anyway...that's how I got your e-mail addresses. Basically what I am doing is trying to get as many of your direct lines as possible...I have gotten lots of lines from families here in the states and I have actually been able to match a few of the families up to where their great great grandfathers were brothers and I have been real good about keeping in touch with the people I correspond with - passing the information I find onto them. Just to give you a little of my history so that you know I'm for real...I'm 28 years old, I have been working on this family tree since 1996 - I started it one day out of boredom and now I don't even begin to have the time to work on it, but I have to say...the Beneke family is so facinating I can't seem to let it go. My father and my grandfather both share the name Edward Beneke and my great grandfather and great great grandfather both share the name Henry Beneke with no middle name. My direct line came over from Germany with my Great Grandfather and the part of Germany that I have been able to trace back to is Wertheim. Every single Beneke family that I have corresponded with here in the states has come from Germany...I find that very facinating...I recently received an e-mail from a Beneke there in Germany who old me that as stories have it....there was a village there named Benekendorf and that in former times it was common that people got their family names from the place they lived. He thinks that Benekendorf was somewhere in Northern Germany. He also told me that Beneke comes from an old German word which means hard oak or oaktree. This is the kind of information hat makes it so much fun for me to trace our tree! So, if you wouldn't mind, please e-mail me and what I'm looking for is Mothers, fathers, siblings, Aunts, Uncles and cousins ...you name it. I'm looking for full names, birth and death dates and if you know where they came from, It would elp in my search as well. I will keep in touch will any and all of you who can help me out and let you know how I'm coming along with my searches! Thank you so much for your help and please let me know if you have any questions! my e-mail is bbeneke@aol.com - Thanks again - Bishop Beneke

Subject: Familienname Benecke, Date: Sat, 1 Sep 2001 18:25:43 +0200, From: "Thomas Benecke" thomas.benecke@pi-ex.de, To: forensic@benecke.com --- Guten Tag Herr Benecke, ihre Homepage ist sehr interessant! Ich habe aber einmal eine Frage und hoffe Sie können mir weiter helfen: Wie viele Menschen gibt es derzeit noch in Deutschland die Benecke heißen? Falls Sie mir diese Frage nicht beantworten können, ist es auch nicht schlimm. Vielen Dank und mit freundlichen Grüßen -- Thomas Benecke

Subject: Beneke family tree research, Date: Wed, 12 Sep 2001 11:54:54 -0500, From: Francisco Beneke fbeneke@fratel.net --- Hello all! I received a message form Bishop Beneke ('bbeneke@aol.com') and I am sending you the same information I had answered to him: I was born in 1957 and have lived all my life in El Salvador. My starting point for this investigation in El Salvador, is the birth certificate of my great grandfather (A very old document handwritten in German and very hard to understand).His name was Johann Heinrich Theodor Beneke, born in Germany (Cannot read the name of the city but probably is Bremen) on 18 Sept 1868, died 1954 in El Salvador. He came to Central America and as far as I know he had a brother whose name was possibly Julius (Julius did not came to Central America and went directly from Germany to U.S.A. on a date that I cannot confirm around 1890).Their parents were Christian Julius Heinrich Beneke, born 19 Apr 1841 in Celle-Blumlage ???? died 30 Jan 1903 in Bremen; on 30 Nov1867, in Bremen, he married Lucie Catharine Magdalene (or Margarethe) Kasten born 13 Dec 1844 died 6 March 1922 in Bremen. Is it possible for you to find a link between the Beneke family you know and my ancestors? I hope we could help each other in this research. Best regards, Francisco Beneke

Subject: Buch von Heinrich Bennecke, From: Jorgebeneke@aol.com, Date: Thu, 11 Oct 2001 04:13:18 EDT --- Hallo, beinaheNamensvetter, in Ihrer Homepage gibt es eine Liste von Büchern, die von Beneckes geschrieben wurden. Durch Zufal kaufte ich vor einiger Zeit im Flohmarkt das Buch: „Wirtschaftliche Depression und politischer Radikalismus 1918-1938“ von Heinrich Bennecke (wieder anders geschrieben), erschienen im Günter Olzog Verlag, München 1970. Wenn Sie Interesse daran haben schicken Sie mir Ihre Postadresse,damit ich das Buch senden kann. Übrigens, sind Sie der Biologe,der von einiger Zeit im Fernsehen gekommen ist und der den Zeitpunkt des Todesanhand der Entwicklung der Maden feststellen kann? Gruß Jorge Beneke

From: Bbeneke@aol.com, Date: Sun, 4 Nov 2001 09:22:54 EST, Subject: Hey!, To: forensic@benecke.com --- Hey Mark! I have been working on the tree, and I've come across a couple of fun factoids for your website... 1. there is a Beneke Creek Wildlife Management Area in Clatsop County, Oregon, USA; 2. NASA, as a public outreach effort, has collected and placed 1 million names on the STARDUST spacecraft, which will visit Comet Wild 2 in 2004. Of these 1 million names, the following were included: BENECKE, MARION BENECKE, THE FAMILY BENECKE, ELKE BENECKENSTEIN, BENEJAN, BENEK, BENEKE, ANGIE L BENEKE, JEREMY M BENEKE, MARK N BENEKE, NICK M BENEKE, COREEN BENEKER. I thought these were just a couple of fun facts that all your viewers might enjoy! I hope you are doing good and I will continue to keep you posted! Bishop

---------------------------------- Benecke Brazil ----------------------------------

Benecke Co. in Brazil -- A Benecke foi fundada em 10 de setembro de 1953 pelos irmãos Kurt Benecke e Heinrich Benecke, iniciando suas atividades em um prédio de 65 metros quadrados, localizado na rua Benjamin Constant, em Timbó . Os negócios se restringiam à manutenção de máquinas e bombas para água, desde manuais à motorizadas. Mas o passaporte para a modernização já reservava o ano de 1954 para o ingresso definitivo no setor madeireiro. Neste ano a empresa iniciava a fabricação da primeira estufa para madeira serrada, diversificando a produção em vários modelos e tamanhos. Solidificando sua imagem no ramo, em 1964 a Benecke lançava dois novos produtos, as Juntadeiras de Lâminas de madeira para cobertura e Batedeiras de Cola, mantendo a fabricação de estufas. Até 1975, a empresa inovou em modelos para estufa chegando a concepção da linha completamente metálica. A partir daquele ano a empresa optou por uma redefinição do processo produtivo. A palavra de ordem era combinar diversificação com qualidade. Seguindo esta nova mentalidade, a Benecke passou a fabricar também Secadores Contínuos para Lâminas de Madeira, Secadores Contínuos para Pasta Mecânica, Secadores Contínuos para Talos de Fumo e Caldeiras a Vapor, sendo este último com tecnologia alemã. Hoje proprietária de um parque fabril de 13.000 metros quadrados de área construída, em um terreno de 87.500 metros quadrados, localizado no distrito industrial do município de Timbó, a empresa com 45 anos de existência, ostenta uma marca forte e desejada pelo mercado madeireiro, cobrindo comercialmente 80% do mercado nacional e 90% do mercado sulamericano. April 2, 2001

---------------------------------- Benecke England ----------------------------------

  • Name: Daphne Von Benecke, E-mail address: daphne.von.beneke@pgen.com, Comments: WANTED: A 2 bedroom flat/house at around £450pm in the Harlow/Epping/Hoddesdon area for mature 26 yr old couple. Currently staying in a house-share but would like to have more privacy as work from home. Please contact myself on the above email address. Tuesday February 13th 2001 05:00:37 AM June 3, 2001

  • http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~ghawkins/imq/results3.html: MOST MOVING MOVIE MOMENT -- Trevor Howard grabbing Celia Johnson's shoulder in Brief Encounter Andrew Blau (aol.com) definately the crying scene or death scene thing in The Green Mile. Ste Anderton (Hotmail.com) When Jack dies - Titanic Michael Carruthers (hotmail.com) In Beautiful Thing (1996) when Ste gives Jamie a hat. Jamie (aol.com) When Scarlett O'Hara walks through the hundreds of wounded Confederate soldiers and the tattered and torn confederate flag is in the foreground (Gone with the Wind) Frankly me dear i don't give a damn by clark gable. Laurie Plagmann (hotmail.com) Andy's Funeral in Man on the Moon. Shawn Perry (ffonline.zzn.com) When forrest gump had a son Ronald macdonald (port.ac.uk) when Russel crowe dies in Gladaitor, it is very epic Lee J. Benecke (madferit.co.uk) The end of "Life is Beautiful" Kenneth Capuano (classic.msn.com) Sanderson gets a call from his ma in "A Guy Named Joe". Alexis (hotmail.com) the ending to the garden of the finzi continis Dave Kennedy (aol.com) end of private ryan Jennifer (eznet.net) When Ritchie Valens dies in "La Bamba" Lisieux (hotmail.com) June 3, 2001


---------------------------------- Benecke Germany ----------------------------------

Try the German phone book first (it's free): Teleauskunft (click)

  • Hallo Herr Benecke,
    für Ihre Familienforschung, aber wahrscheinlich kennen Sie diese Website bereits.

    absolute Zahl der Telefonbucheinträge
    Enlarge
    absolute Zahl der Telefonbucheinträge
    relative Zahl zu einer standardisierten Menge pro Kreis
    Enlarge
    relative Zahl zu einer standardisierten Menge pro Kreis
    Stand 2008
    Enlarge
    Stand 2008

    Die Grafik 1 zeigt die absolute Zahl der Telefonbucheinträge an, die Grafik 2 die relative Zahl zu einer standardisierten Menge pro Kreis oder kreisfreie Stadt.

    http://www.verwandt.de/karten/relativ/benecke.html

    Der Name läßt sich natürlich frei variieren.

    Die Mentalität von Namensträgern läßt sich gegebenenfalls besser verstehen.

    Beste Grüße
    Klaus Rimpler

  • First Benecke Family Meeting at Mark Benecke in May 2004 -- thanks for coming! We had a fotographer (Manuela Benecke), an expert for print preparation (Oliver Benecke) and a gynaecologist (Ulf Benecke) plus a forensic biologist (Mark Benecke) -- hey, is this a cool family or what?
  • Informal Note f/ webmaster: "Otto Hermann Benecke, born June 21, 1910 in Karow (Jericho region) in Markt Brandenburg, had two brothers: Willy & Gustav; his son: Volker Benecke"
  • Benecke Forensic Biology, International Forensic Research & Consulting, http://www.benecke.com/ April 2, 2001

  • Prof Jochen Benecke, European Database of Suppliers of Energy Efficient and Sustainable Building Products and Services from James & James. Research and planning of solar applications for buildings and heating systems. CONTACT: Sollner Institut, Waldmüllerstraße 22, 81479 München, Germany, Telephone +49 89 79 2057, Fax +49 89 79 16110. April 2, 2001

  • Otto Benecke Foundation ("Im Bereich Migrations- und Integrationsprojekte führt die Otto Benecke Stiftung e.V. Maßnahmen zur Fortbildung von Fachkräften der Jugendarbeit in mittel- und osteuropäischen , sowie mittel- und zentralasiatischen Ländern durch, und initiiert und begleitet Projekte der interkulturellen Begegnung in Deutschland. Des weiteren entwickelt die Otto Benecke Stiftung e.V. im Auftrag des Bundesministeriums des Innern Konzepte zum Aufbau und zur Pflege der Jugend- und Sozialarbeit für deutsche Minderheiten und ihr Umfeld in den Staaten Russische Föderation, Kasachstan Polen, Ungarn sowie Estland, Lettland, Litauen, Belarus. Außerdem führt die Otto Benecke Stiftung e.V durch das Bundesministerium für Familie, Senioren, Frauen und Jugend geförderte Jugendaustauschprogramme mit den Ländern Palästina, Russische Föderation, Estland, Finnland und der Mongolei durch. Das Akademikerprogramm (AKP) der Otto Benecke Stiftung e.V. fördert akademische Spätaussiedlerinnen und Spätaussiedler sowie Kontingentflüchtlinge, die älter als 30 und jünger als 50 Jahre alt sind. Das AKP arbeitet im Auftrag und mit Mitteln des Bundesministeriums für Bildung und Forschung.") April 2, 2001

  • Willy Benecke Co. ("Leading traders and processors of natural gums and raw materials. Founded in 1954 by Willy Benecke. Centrally located in the Hanseatic city of Hamburg, the hub of international trade. Today, the company is managed by Dietmar Hauser and his sons, and stands for quality, continuity, and reliability.")

  • Carsten Benecke ("Herr Benecke hat sein Studium der Informatik an der Universität Hamburg im März 1996 abgeschlossen. Die Studienschwerpunkte waren Hochgeschwindigkeitsnetze (HSN) und Parallelverarbeitung. Im Nebenfach hat Herr Benecke Linguistik studiert. Herr Benecke ist einer von zwei Mitarbeitern bei dem am Fachbereich Informatik der Universität Hamburg seit dem 01.01.1997 begonnenen Drittmittelprojekt Firewall-Labor für Hochgeschwindigkeitsnetze. Neben und nach seinem Studium arbeitete er im Rechenzentrum des Fachbereiches Informatik der Universität Hamburg, wo er die Aufgaben von Administration und Operating von UNIX, MS-DOS, Mac und VMS Systemen übernahm. ähnliche Tätigkeiten führte Herr Benecke während seines Studiums im BMBF-Verbundvorhaben Verbmobildurch.") April 2, 2001

  • Benecke-Kaliko-Gruppe ("Auf die Oberflächen-Technologie kommt es an. Als weltweit führender Hersteller von technischen und dekorativen Flächenmaterialien verfügen wir über die Entwicklungs- und Materialkompetenz, die uns zu Partnern in vielen Industrien gemacht hat. Unsere "Leder-echt"-Technologie hat uns weltweit an die Spitze gesetzt. Sie ermöglicht es, Material in Aussehen, Farbe und Haptik natürlich wirken zu lassen. Unser Know-how in der Material- und Oberflächengestaltung sowie in der Farbgebung erlaubt es, jede Kundenanforderung zu realisieren.") April 2, 2001

  • Steffen Benecke ("Direktversicherung durch Gehaltsumwandlung nun strenger gehandhabt. Bisher konnte man sich z.B. im Dezember dazu entscheiden, sein 13. Gehalt in eine Direktversicherung umzuwandeln. Dabei war der gesamte Jahresbeitrag für die Versicherung nur pauschal zu versteuern. Diese Regelung ist insofern verschärft worden, daß es nun Voraussetzung ist, daß die Beiträge aufgrund einer Vereinbarung über die Herabsetzung künftigen Arbeitslohns erbracht werden. Der Anspruch auf das 13. Monatsgehalt entsteht aber zeitanteilig nach den vollen Monaten der Beschäftigung im Kalenderjahr. Wird also im Dezember die Zahlung des 13. Gehaltes in eine Direktversicherung umgewandelt, erkennt das Finanzamt von diesem Beitrag nur ein Zwölftel für die Pauschalversteuerung an. Es gilt also, Direktversicherungen durch Gehaltsumwandlung möglichst frühzeitig zu beantragen.") April 2, 2001

  • Bölkow-Entwicklungen KG Stuttgart, Ottobrunn: Die Panzerabwehrrakete BÖ 810 COBRA. "1953 besuchte mich Erich Heimann, der Herausgeber der in Genf erscheinenden Luftfahrtzeitschrift »Interavia« mehrmals in Stuttgart. Bald kam er auf sein eigentliches Anliegen zu sprechen. Die europäische Luftfahrt brauche in Zukunft wieder deutsche Beteiligung. Schließlich gebe es ja auch Verhandlungen über eine Beteiligung der Deutschen an der EVG (Europäische Verteidigungsgemeinschaft). Seiner Ansicht nach müsse in einem solchen Falle die deutsche Industrie an Rüstungsentwicklungen beteiligt werden. Zwischen den Großmächten werde sich bald ein Gleichgewicht des Schreckens einstellen, was die Atomwaffen betreffe. In der konventionellen Rüstung hingegen würden die Russen dann eine katastrophale Überlegenheit auf dem Gebiet der gepanzerten Fahrzeuge aurweisen. Man müsse, so Heimann, sich auf dem Gebiet der Panzerabwehr engagieren. Auch von anderer Seite wurde ich bedrängt. Theodor Benecke, damals Mitarbeiter der späteren »Dienststelle Blank«, lud mich nach Bad Liebenzell ein, wo wir uns zusammen mit Günther Schöner, der im deutsch-französischen Institut St. Louis arbeitete, trafen. Beide waren auch der Meinung, daß man auf dem Gebiet der Panzerabwehr etwas tun müsse. Ich schlug vor, eine möglichst billige Panzerabwehrwaffe aus Kunststoffteilen zu entwickeln, die preiswert und leicht sein könnte. Heimann brachte mich mit dem Präsidenten der Firma Oerlikon-Bührle zusammen. Das Schweizer Unternehmen erklärte sich bereit, die Antriebe für unsere Panzerabwehrrakete zu bauen, auch die Gefechtsköpfe. Unsere Mannschaft sollte die Flugkörper sowie die gesamte Steuerung und Fernsteuerung entwickeln. Staatlicherseits gab es damals noch kein Geld für solche Pläne. Da nahm es sich wie ein Glücksfall aus, daß ich 1954 den Hamburger Finanzier Wolfgang Essen kennenlernte, der meine wehrtechnischen Vorschläge wichtig nahm. Mit Essens Zusage wagten wir uns an die Aufgabe heran, eine leichte Panzerabwehrrakete zu entwickeln, die von Infanteristen im Gelände getragen werden konnte. Wirtschaftliche Basis war ein Konsortialvertrag. Aus den Anfangsbuchstaben entstand dann auch der Name des Waffensystemes: COBRA = Contraves, Oerlikon, Bölkow und Rakete. 1956 begann die Erprobung in der Schweiz. Ende des Jahres 1956 gelang es, mit dem Bundesministerium der Verteidigung einen Vertrag über die Lieferung der ersten 2000 COBRA abzuschließen. Nun brauchten wir dringend eine Fertigungsstätte, doch kein Betrieb interessierte sich für eine Rakete aus gewickelten Papprohren mit angeklebten Flügeln, ein wenig Elektronik und aufgewickelten Steuerdrähten. So haben wir dann selbst die Produktion in Nabern aufgezogen." (Aus: Ludwig Bölkow: Die Panzerabwehrrakete BO 810 COBRA, in: Katalog Forschung und Technik in Deutschland nach 1945, Deutsches Museum Bonn, Deutscher Kunstverlag (München), 1995 (S. 352)) April 16, 2001 (Note: Theodor Benecke died after publication of the "Lenk-Raketen" book.) May 6, 2001

  • (6. Mai 2001) Novum bei Olympia: Dreifach-Triumph für Rumäniens Turnerinnen -- Von Rainer Benecke, dpa -- Sydney - Drei Grazien aus der Turn-Hochburg Rumänien und ein russisches Playboy-Model schrieben am Donnerstag im Vierkampf- Finale von Sydney Geschichte. Das Trio mit Boden-Weltmeisterin Andrea Raducan (38,893), Sprung-Olympiasiegerin Simona Amanar (38,642) und Mehrkampf-Weltmeisterin Maria Olaru (38,581) sorgte für den ersten Dreifach-Triumph bei Olympischen Spielen. Swetlana Schorkina (Russland), mit einer Vornote von 39,005 Favoritin auf ihr erstes olympisches Mehrkampf-Gold, patzte gleich zwei Mal und landete schließlich nur auf dem elften Platz (37,929).

  • Riding a train from Cologne to Hamburg, the chief train operator sent me his card after I sent him mine. His name: Reinhard Benecke from the German Train Co., Deutsche Bahn, Niederlassung Dortmund, c/o Personenverkehr Deutsche Bahn, Regionaler Kundendialog, Goldgasse 2, 50668 Cologne, Germany. May 6, 2001

  • In Bavaria, the chief cableway operator for over 25 years is Volker Benecke at the Hochries mountain. May 6, 2001

  • EXPRESS Köln, May 14, 2001 (elektronisch): Ergebnis gegenüber Atlanta verbessert -- Deutsche Volleyball-Frauen Olympia-Sechste -- Sydney -- Sydney war für das deutsche Volleyball die weite Reise wert. Mit Rang sechs und damit ihrem besten Resultat seit sechs Jahren schloss die Frauen-Nationalmannschaft am Donnerstag das olympische Turnier ab und verschaffte sich international wieder Respekt. Trotz der 1:3 (19:25, 19:25, 25:22, 18:25)-Niederlage im letzten Platzierungsspiel gegen China war Werner Graf von Moltke in Champagnerlaune. "Für den Volleyball in Deutschland ist das ein hervorragendes Ergebnis. Dieses Abschneiden bestätigt die Vergabe der Weltmeisterschaft 2002 an uns. In zwei Jahren können wir noch weiter vorstoßen als hier", sagte der Präsident des Deutschen Volleyball-Verbandes (DVV) beinahe übermütig, nachdem das Resultat von Atlanta 1996 um zwei Plätze verbessert war. Den ersten Lohn darf der DVV bereits im kommenden Jahr einstreichen. Der Weltverband FIVB gab den deutschen Frauen grünes Licht für die Teilnahme am World-Grand-Prix. (...) Geheimnis des Erfolges ist für Tanja Hart das gute Betriebsklima in der Truppe. "Bei der WM 1998 in Japan waren wir eine reine Zweckgemeinschaft. Jetzt haben wir uns alle viel besser kennen gelernt", sagte die Zuspielerin vom DJK Karbach. Auch ohne die angeschlagenen Christina Schultz und Angelina Grün, für die Judith Sylvester und Christina Benecke in die Stamm-Sechs rückten, gab das Team zum Abschluss noch einmal alles. Doch nach dem gewonnenen dritten Satz war im achten Turnierspiel innerhalb von zwölf Tagen die Luft raus. May 14, 2001

  • Express Köln, 14. Mai 2001 (Papier) -- Pokemon-Mörder -- Sein perversenes Tagebuch. Von Michael Kerst. Duisburg - Der irre Kindermörder von Homberg -- immer neue grauenhafte Details kommen ans Licht. Jetzt berichtete Kripo-Beamte Hermann M. von dem geheimen Tagebuch, das die Ermittler im Kleiderschrank des Pokemon-Mörders Oliver S. gefunden haben. Dem EXPRESS liegen die Aufzeichnungen vor, in denen der Mörder des neunjährigen Sedat A (er wurde mit Pokemon-Münzen gelockt) über die Morde an Prominenten und Menschen aus seinem bekanntenkreis fantasiert. 15 ekelhafte Morder hat sich der 24-jährige gelernte Koch in einem sogenannten "Roman" ausgedacht, den er im November 2000 (ganz kurz vor dem Mord an Sedat) aufeschrieben hat. Opfer sind Mädchen oder weiblich wirkende Jungen -- mit fast allen hat die "Romanfigur" Oliver vor der Ermordung brutalen Sex. Jeden der fiktiven Morde belbildert er mit Ausschintte aus Jugendzeitschriften, aber auch mit Schnappschüssen aus seinem Bekanntenkreis. Für jedes Opfer denkt er sich eine neue Methode aus: Teenie-Star Taylor Hansen auf der Toilette erdrosselt, Zac Hanson per Fleischermesser erdolcht, Tal Ofraim erwürgt, Aaron Carter auf der Bühne erschossen. Im Kapitel 9 lässt Oliver sich als Baysitter anstellen, erschießt das eine Mädchen, vergewaltigt und erwürgt das andere. (...) "Mein Mandant ist total krank", sagt Rechtsanwalt Siegmund Benecke, der Oliver S. vor dem Landgericht Duisburg vertritt. Der Täter selbst schreibt am Schluss seiner grauenvollen Aufzeichnungen: "Nach etwa zwei Wochen stellte sich Oliver der Polizei und gestand alles. Oliver war und ist ein hoffnungsloser Fall für die Klapse." May 14, 2001

  • Number of Benecke entries in German phone books (residential) (in brackets: very rough location inside of Germany): Hamburg: 140 (North), Berlin: 95 (North-East), Hannover (Central-North-East): 32, Lübeck: 26, Bremen (North): 21, Cologne (West): 20, Munich (South): 20, Braunschweig (North-West): 14, Kiel (North): 13, Göttingen (Central): 13, Bonn (West): 7, Mannheim (South-West): 7, Stuttgart (South): 8, Franfurt/Main (Central-South): 9, Dresden (Central): 5, Aachen (very West): 4, Rostock (North-East): 3, Dortmund (West): 3, Leipzig (Central): 2, Saarbrücken: 2, Nürnberg (South): 2, Schwerin (North): 1, Trier (South-West): 1, Jena (Central): 0, Baden-Baden: 0, Magdeburg (Central-East): 0, Augsburg (South): 0, Frankfurt/Oder (East): 0, Rügen Island (North): 0, Kaiserslautern (West): 0, Regensburg (South-East): 0, Würzburg: 0, Eisenach (Central-East): 0, Chemnitz (Central-East): 2, Greifswald (North): 0, Stralsund (North): 0, Hoyerswerda (East): 0, Görlitz (East): 0, Freiburg i. Br. (South-West): 0 June 3, 2001

  • Neue Osnabrücker Zeitung (NOZ), 6. Dezember 2000: Stadt Osnabrück: Das "Knusperhäuschen" als Fall für das Landgericht. rll In Osnabrück spricht man vom „Knusperhäuschen“, in den Akten des Ordnungsamts wird der Betrieb als „Mädchenwohnheim“ geführt. Um das angeblich schon 112 Jahre alte Etablissement an der Rheiner Landstraße ging es gestern in einem Prozess vor dem Schöffengericht. Anlass war eine anonyme Anzeige. Der Vorwurf: Förderung der Prostitution. Das Ergebnis: Eine Geldbuße, die zwei Kinderheimen zugute kommen soll. Prostitution wird vom Staat geduldet, die Förderung der Prostitution steht dagegen unter Strafe. In Gerichtsurteilen und juristischen Kommentaren gibt es sehr unterschiedliche Auslegungen des betreffenden Paragraphen 180 a. Da wird zum Teil schon die Einrichtung eines Whirlpools oder das Aufhängen eines Kondomautomaten als Förderung der Prostitution angesehen, ebenso das Anbringen einer Leuchtreklame oder das Inserieren in einer Zeitung. Darauf wies Richter Klaus-Peter Benecke hin, ohne sich dieser Sicht der Dinge anzuschließen. Einen Whirlpool soll es auch im „Knusperhäuschen“ geben, wie Oberstaatsanwalt Norbert Mayer vermerkte. Doch die von ihm vertretene Anklage richtete sich vor allem auf den Vorwurf, die 61-jährige Inhaberin habe die Preise für die Dienstleistungen festgelegt und mit einem EC-Kartenlesegerät den elektronischen Zahlungsverkehr kontrolliert. Dafür lieferten drei als Zeugen geladene „Mädels“ jedoch keine Bestätigung. Im Gegenteil: Sie hätten die Preise untereinander festgelegt. Von 400 DM für eine Stunde und 250 DM für eine halbe Stunde war die Rede. Die Prostituierten berichteten, dass sie pro Tag 170 DM Miete für eines der sieben Zimmer entrichtet hätten, außerdem eine „Getränkepauschale“ von 60 bis 110 DM für ein halbes oder ganzes Freierstündchen. Die Miete sei nur fällig gewesen, wenn das Zimmer auch tatsächlich in Anspruch genommen wurde. Übereinstimmend hielten die Damen fest, in dem Lokal sei alles sauber und korrekt zugegangen, und die Inhaberin habe ihnen niemals Gäste zugewiesen. Zudem habe sie stets auf gültige Papiere und wöchentliche Untersuchungen beim Gesundheitsamt geachtet. Rechtsanwalt Jens Meggers, der die angeklagte Inhaberin verteidigte, sprach von einem Bordell, das „in jeder Beziehung anständig“ und überhaupt „vorbildlich“ sei. Ganz im Gegensatz zur illegalen Prostitution in manchen Wohnungen. Das öffentliche Bewusstsein habe sich gegenüber dem horizontalen Gewerbe verändert: „Wir alle wissen, dass ein solcher Betrieb gesellschaftlich wichtig ist.“ Das zeige auch ein Urteil des Berliner Verwaltungsgerichts vom vergangenen Freitag, nach dem die Prostitution nicht mehr als sittenwidrig anzusehen sei. Auch Oberstaatsanwalt Mayer äußerte Verständnis: Die Rechtsprechung hinke vielleicht der gesellschaftlichen Wahrnehmung hinterher. Er schlug vor, das Verfahren unter der Auflage einzustellen, dass die Angeklagte 40000 DM an eine gemeinnützige Einrichtung zahlt. Damit werde auf der einen Seite dem fraglichen Paragraphen Rechnung getragen, zum anderen einem Verstoß gegen das Ausländergesetz. Zwei Damen, die sich an der Rheiner Landstraße eingemietet hatten, waren ohne gültige Arbeits- bzw. Aufenthaltserlaubnis angetroffen worden. Die Höhe der Geldzahlung begründete Mayer mit den Einkommensverhältnissen der 61-jährigen Angeklagten. Da sie nicht die Absicht hatte, den Streit bis nach Karlsruhe zu tragen, willigte sie in den juristischen Deal ein. Die 40000 DM sollen nun an zwei Osnabrücker Kinderheime aufgeteilt werden. June 3, 2001

  • Subject: Benecke in Gattungsnamen, Date: Tue, 03 Jul 2001 11:36:36 +0200, From: Heike Kappes , To: mark@benecke.com, References: 1 -- Hi Mark, es gibt sogar eine Gattung namens Beneckeida, es handelt sich um einen Ceratiten, also einen Ammoniten, aus dem untersten Muschelkalk (Germanische Trias). Herzlichst, Heike July 3, 2001 [Click for a pic!]

  • Subject: beneckeid, Date: Thu, 02 Aug 2001 09:59:49 +0200, From: xxxxxx , To: forensic@benecke.com -- Hi Mark, habe den Ammoniten noch nicht weiter recherchiert, dafür aber einen Wilhelm Benecke (1912): Bau und Leben der Bakterien. B.G. Teubner, Leipzig & Berlin. 650 Seiten. Steht in der Zool.-Bib.. Zudem noch: Taeniaster beneckei (ein Seestern) (http://www.hunsnet.de/fh/suedkamp/artikel.htm: „Echinodermen aus dem Hunsrückschiefer. Teil 1: Flachtiere und Sterntiere". In: Fossilien, 11, 1994, S. 244-252. Sprache: deutsch. Stichwörter: Hunsrückschieferfossilien, Flachtiere, Sterntiere, Arthropoda, (Sammlung der) Humboldt-Universität, Holotypen, systematische Beschreibungen. Inhalt: Die im Geologisch-Paläontologischen Institut und Museum der Humboldt-Universität in Berlin aufbewahrten Echinodermen aus dem Hunsrückschiefer wurden katalogisiert. Es handelt sich um acht Exemplare der Flachtiere (die Arten Rhenocystis latipedunculata und Mitrocystites styloideus) und um ca. 670 Sterntiere, darunter 12 Holotypen und zahlreiche Originale bekannter Autoren, wie STUERTZ (1885-1886) und LEHMANN (1957). Mit Übersicht der ausgestellten Flach- und Sterntiere, eine Häufigkeitsdarstellung der Sterntiere und Beschreibungen der Arten Urasterella asperula, Taeniaster beneckei, der neue Schlangenstern "Eschenbachia pinusi" und der trilobitenähnliche Mimetaster hexagonalis) und nochmal eine Kaktee: Mammillaria beneckei var. multiceps Reppenhegen: http://www.deutschekakteengesellschaft.de/kuas986.html (In Kultur beobachtet : Axel Ansø: Kleine Kugel auf langer Reise: Mammillaria beneckei var. multiceps Reppenhegen, Deutsche Kakteen- Gesellschaft e.V., Schweizerische Kakteen-Gesellschaft Deutsche Kakteen- Gesellschaft e.V./Schweizerische Kakteen-Gesellschaft/ Gesellschaft Österreichischer Kakteenfreunde: Kakteen und andere Sukkulenten, Heft 6, Juni 1998, 49 Jahrgang, Seite 141 - 142) und ein Bakterium: Beneckea parahaemolytica = Vibrio parahaemolyticus (http://www.bba.de/gentech/orglist.htm: Liste risikobewerteter Spender- und Empfängerorganismen für gentechnische Arbeiten, Bekanntmachung nach § 5 Absatz 6 Gentechnik-Sicherheitsverordnung in der Fassung der Bekanntmachung vom 14. März 1995 – BGBl. I S. 297 *). Übrigens: in der UB ist eine "Tod in der Literatur"-Ausstellung. Viele aparte tanzende Skelette ....Grüsse, Heike Aug 2, 2001

  • Subject: Fundsache, schon bekannt?, Date: Sun, 19 Aug 2001 22:30:15 +0200, From: Peter Zillig, To: Mark Benecke; George Friedrich Benecke, geb. 10. Juni 1762 zu Mönchsroth im Öttingenschen, studierte in Göttingen unter Heyne Philologie (seit 1780), ging 1789 an die dortige Bibliothek, wurde 1805 außerordentlicher, 1814 ordentlicher Professor, 1829 Bibliothekar, 1836 Oberbibliothekar, starb zu Göttingen den 21. August 1814. ­ Er war der erste, welcher germanistische Vorlesungen an einer deutschen Universität hielt. Bei seinen Ausgaben mittelhochdeutscher Schriftsteller suchte er zuerst die bei der kritischen Behandlung der Texte altklassischer Schriftsteller angewendeten Grundsätze einzuführen; er verfaßte die ersten brauchbaren mittelhochdeutschen Wörterbücher, welche die Geschichte und Bedeutung eines Wortes wissenschaftlich feststellen wollen. Quelle: Bilderatlas zur Geschichte der deutschen Nationallitteratur. Eine Ergänzung zu jeder deutschen Litteraturgeschichte. Nach den Quellen bearbeitet von Dr. Gustav Könnecke. Zweite verbesserte und vermehrte Auflage, Marburg, 1895. Deutsche Sprachforscher und Litterarhistoriker. --- Also der wuerde sich doch hervorragend auf Ihrer site machen, oder? Ich finde, er sieht Ihnen aehnlich. Schoenen Gruss zur guten Sonntagnacht! Peter Zillig Aug 27, 2001

  • Bernhard Benecke Coffee operates as importer and dealer of unroasted , raw, green coffee which it supplies from the countries of production to the roasting industry in the consuming countries. The company was founded in 1995 by Mr. Bernhard J. Benecke who was joined beginning of 1996 by Mr. Clemens von Storch . Both are today the managing directors. Benecke Coffee is located in the traditional "Speicherstadt" in the freeport zone of Hamburg in Germany. The main objective of Benecke Coffee is to provide the European coffee roasting industry with reliable good qualities mainly sourced in Central- and Southamerica. In this part of the world the company has most of it´s experience, contacts and knowledge besides the fact that both directors have lived some years in that region. Benecke Coffee provides a wide spectrum of services linked to the coffee business, from shipping, insuring, warehousing, inventory control, blending, transport to specific places and total quality control directly from origin to the final destination. The company is solidly financed by major German banks and supplies yearly audited financial statements and reports. It is legally registered in Hamburg and is a member of the German Coffee Association ( DKV ) . BBC is trading raw coffee with all different Incoterms and with the conditions of the European Coffee Contract (ECC), at outright or differential prices, in combination with future contracts. These contracts are executed and controlled by a renowned and reliable commision house. The team of the company consists of experienced and skilled people in the trading, traffic and accounting department. The quality control is done separately in our own laboratory. Our goal is to satisfy our clients with reliable qualities and good service to their fulliest satisfaction. We are confronting ourselves every day with this goal to improve further. Benecke Coffee sells it´s good qualities directly to the medium and big size roasting industry in the countries of Germany, Scandinavia + Finland, Austria , Switzerland, Italy and Spain. (http://www.benecke-coffee.de/) Aug 27, 2001

  • Plan B Architect's Bureau: Email: plan-b@plan-b-benecke.de (Matthias Benecke, Dipl.-Ing., Architekt, Schützenstr. 14, 32545 Bad Oynhausen, Phone +49-5731-980370, FAX +49-5731-980-526) Aug 27, 2001

  • Lehrstuhl für Ur- und Frühgeschichte der Humboldt-Universiät Berlin, Hausvogteiplatz 5-7, 10117 Berlin, Telefon: 20246680, 20246670, Telefax: 20246688, http://www.geschichte.hu-berlin.de, 14.00-16.00 Pardey: Die Arbeitersiedlung von Deir-el-Medine. Agypt. HSem DOR 24, 111, 14.00-16.00 Wrede: Götter in klassischer Zeit. Kl. Arch PSem HG 2082, 14.00-16.00 Mansel: Eisenzeitliche Kulturen auf der Iberischen Halbinsel. UFG UE ALT 15, 14.00-16.00 Callmer: Einführung in die ur- und frühgeschichtliche Archäologie. UFG VL HVPL 5, 16.00-18.00 Endesfelder: Einführung in das ägyptische Pantheon. Ägypt. VL DOR 24, 111, 16.00-18.00 Borbein: Die Françoisvase: Einführung in die Ikonographie gr. Mythen Kl. Arch PSem OvS 7, 16.00-18.00 Stürmer: Bronzezeitliche Architektur in der Ägäis. Kl. Arch HSem HG, 16.00-18.00 Benecke: Archäozoologische Beiträge zur UFG Europas. UFG VL HVPL 5 (http://www.geschichte.hu-berlin.de/bereiche/ufg/wochentag2001.htm) Aug 27, 2001 http://www.verwaltung.uni-halle.de/VORLES/v982kual.htm: 1759 V Archäozoologie II: Benecke, N., Brandbergweg 23 / 206, Mi. 13-15 Uhr, Fachbereich Kunst- und Altertumswissenschaften, Univ. Halle Aug 27, 2001

  • Benecke, Norbert: Verarbeitung photogrammetrisch erzeugter Höhenmodelle im Geo-Informationssystem der Ruhrkohle AG. In: Das Markscheidewesen 103 (1996) S. 317-320 : Ill., graph. Darst. (http://www.hbz-nrw.de/literatur/nwbib/nwbib14/node1242.html)

  • WAZ (Westdeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung), 17. September 2001, Buer: Eine Kerze für die Opfer Meditations-Gottesdienst in Erle 200 Teilnehmer Terror hat unsere Welt erschüttert. Trauer empfinden wir. Angst geht um, mit diesen Worten begannen Pfarrer Christoph Funke und Stefan Benecke ihre Predigt Samstagabend in der Dreifaltigkeitskirche an der Cranger Stra‚àö‚à´e 327 in Erle. Rund 200 Gläubige waren in die Kirche gekommen, um in dem Meditationsgottesdienst gemeinsam der zahlreichen Opfer des Terroranschlags in den USA in stiller Trauer zu gedenken und für den Weltfrieden zu beten. Wir wollen gemeinsam versuchen, unsere Trauer, Wut und ängste zu verarbeiten, denn niemand wird die Bilder der vergangenen Tage vergessen können, sagte Benecke. Hinzu komme die allgegenwärtige Angst, dass der Vergeltungsschlag der USA eskaliert. In dieser Andacht wollen wir vor Gott klagen und ihn um seinen Frieden für die Opfer, die Angehörigen und die Welt bitten, erklärte der Pfarrer. Als Zeichen der Betroffenheit und Anteilnahme entzündete jeder, der in das Gotteshaus gekommen war, eine Kerze und stellte sie unter das Kreuz im Altarbereich: Wir wollen ein Licht in dieser Dunkelheit entzünden, forderten die beiden Pfarrer die Gemeinde-Mitglieder auf.

  • Quedlinburg (Postkarte, 1916), Ladenlokal "Robert Benecke" am Rathaus -- siehe Bild (zum Vergrößern & Detail-Vergrößerung drauf klicken)

---------------------------------- Benecke Netherlands ----------------------------------

  • http://www.infopress.nl/m_nascholing.asp: "Benecke N.I. hecht groot belang aan geaccrediteerde nascholing (CME). Accreditatie staat immers garant voor objectieve nascholing van hoge kwaliteit. Voorwaarden voor accreditatie zijn onder meer goede contacten met gerenommeerde inhoudsdeskundigen en voortdurend overleg met accrediterende instanties. Op de werkvloer van Benecke NI is aan beide voorwaarden voldaan. De nascholingen van Benecke NI zijn dan ook vrijwel altijd geaccrediteerd. Benecke N.I. beschikt over een intern visitatiesysteem ter bewaking en continue verbetering van de kwaliteit. Naast traditionele nascholing, zoals bijeenkomsten of individueel schriftelijke nascholing, ontwikkelen wij alternatieve nascholingsformats. Zo is Benecke N.I. de eerste organisatie die een door de LHV geaccrediteerde huisartsennascholing op het internet heeft ontwikkeld. Van oudsher staat Benecke Consultants bekend als hét nascholingsinstituut voor de Nederlandse huisarts. In de afgelopen jaren is het aanbod echter sterk uitgebreid, ook voor psychiaters, cardiologen, neurologen, apothekers, praktijk- en apothekersassistenten, bedrijfs- en verzekeringsartsen kunnen bij ons nascholen op verschillende manieren. Manieren van nascholen: Grootschalig landelijk plenair, Kleinschalig regionaal interactief, Meet the expert, Review, TeleReview, Online nascholing, Schriftelijke nascholing." April 2, 2001

  • "Benecke N.I. is een multimediaal medisch communicatiebedrijf. Wij ontwikkelen en organiseren nascholingen en maken vanuit onze uitgeverij tijdschriften, boeken en internetproducties. Onze activiteiten richten zich al meer dan vijftien jaar op professionals in de gezondheidszorg." Aug 27, 2001

---------------------------------- Benecke South Africa ----------------------------------

  • "These German Immigrants came to South Africa via East London in 1858, 1877 and 1878. Compiled from lists by Schnell, Pape and Spanuth. For more information contact Robin Griffiths (griffrob@telkomsa.net): ...Bauer Christine - Bauer Gotthardt - Bauer Heinrich - Bauer Therese - Bauer H - Baum Hermann - Baum Sebilla - Becker Johanne - Becker Theodor - Beckmann David - Beckmann Marie - Behm Christian Friedrich (died at sea) - Behm Wilhelmine Behnke or Benecke Dorothea - Behnke or Benecke Wilhelm Behrendt Caroline - Behrendt Michael - Beitz F - Bentz Hans - Bentz Marie - Berlin Christine... (http://www.genealogy.co.za/germans.html)" (added April 16, 2004)

  • SOUTH AFRICA Finchlover Directory: Andrew von Benecke, Witbank, Mpumalanga, South Africa, COMMENTS: Looking for South African birds: Voileteared Waxbill, Grey Waxbill, Common Waxbill, Blue Waxbill, Melba Finch, Quail Finch, Orangebreasted Waxbill, Swee Waxbill, Twinspots, Bluebilled, Jameson's, Redbilled Firefinches. Avairy already inspected and approved by Pmumalanga Parks Board (Permits will be issued) (June 25, 2000) April 2, 2001

  • New Zealand v South Africa Test Matches -- The selection of four women and seven men to play in the four test matches against the first South African team ever to tour New Zealand must have been rather difficult for selectors Greg Gloyn, Bruce Reynolds, John Cooper and Ann Swan. In recent years, there has been a lucrative overseas market for our best polocrosse ponies thus leaving some of our top players without the top horses necessary for consideration for selection. So, the selectors were faced with a slight shortage of internationally experienced players and horses. Whatever their dilemma might have been, they ended up with teams that looked well balanced and, while five of the players were new caps and two of those were under 21, they were all experienced in national competitions. The players selected were: Sue Hill, Megan Gilbert, Shane Hill and Wayne Hundley (Waikato), Pascale Gower and Dean Gower (King Country), Calley Mullany (Poverty Bay), Shaye Williams and Jamie Morice (Auckland Provincial), Tony Schrafft and Russell Tye (Central Plateau). The four tests were played over two weekends and the mixed game kicked off the competition on the first Saturday afternoon. The New Zealand women lined up with Sue Hill at one, Megan Gilbert, two, and Pascale Gower was the three, reserve Calley Mullany. The very experienced South African ladies were Julia Pilbeam, Anneli Cooper and Liesel Du Plessis with LeeAnn van Wyk reserve. South Africa took an early 2-0 lead but the New Zealand ladies came back at them to end the chukka 3-4 down.
    The line up for the men's chukka was, Dean Gower, Russell Tye and Shane Hill, Jamie Morice reserve. The South African's fielded Charl Du Plessis, Keith Mason, Sean O Sullivan and reserve, Brent von Benecke. The South African's scored first again, but then a serious infringement by a South African player, and the resulting successful penalty, seemed to give the New Zealand players confidence and New Zealand were ahead by 7-6 at the end of the second chukka. April 2, 2001

  • Purchasing Manager W. Benecke at H. Robertson (Div of Dorbyl Ltd), P.O.Box 49, Isando 1600 South Africa, Telephone +27 11 392 2220, Fax +27 11 392 2230; Nature of Business: Manufacturer of steel roofing and flooring products for the building and the construction industries. Has the largest range of products for the roofing industry in Southern Africa. Products carry the unique embossing feature which is the trademark of HH-Robertson. Has in-house continuous coil-coating facility that applies the internationally accepted Colomet and Versecor paint finishes. Has serviced the industry since 1967 and is now successful exporter as well as local supplier of high quality products. April 2, 2001

  • Benecke, Tiny, Phone: 373-737-3072, PostNet, FAX: 373-737-4490, Private Bag X843, Matatiele, Kwa Zulu Natal 4730, South Africa April 2, 2001

---------------------------------- Benecke U.S.A. ----------------------------------



  • Thanks to the wonders of google, i found your web page. My grandfather was Walter Benecke of Brooklyn, NY. I never knew or met him. He and my maternal grandmother (Virginia Zubell) had my mother--Lois Benecke (b. 8/23/1941). My mom was a world class beauty (in all respects) who modelled for Eileen Ford in the late 1950/early 1960s (along with Ali McGraw). She dated Joe DiMaggio and was briefly on "The Price Is Right" as one of the girls that stands besides things. Sadly, she died at the age of 45 from breast cancer (1987). I thought it was funny to see we are "royalty." Surely, my mom was on that international level of beauty and wit.
    Good luck in all things Benecke
    Darius Paris Melisaratos, MD

  • There was a toilet seat company (confirmed) in the US that existed most likely until the 1980s but was then obviously bought by another toilet seat manufacturer. (Any better information is welcome!) April 2, 2001

  • Osmond Leonard ROBERTS: Osmond ROBERTS - I1110, Frank: Descendants of - Frank Osmond ROBERTS: Born 19 MAY 1893, Key West Monroe Florida, married (1) Anna May BENECKE, 26 MAY 1914, New York New York; married(2) ANGRES Sadie E., 17 MAR 1930, New York New York; Pedigree: ROBERTS Frank Osmond, HICKS Lillian, HICKS Richard Thomas, SOLOMON Ada, SOLOMON William Shelton, CURRY Matilda S. SOURCE: Book Kinfolks, Ccurry Kemp, Vol 3, page 1625, Curry No. 301cbb1; ALIVE 1932, LIVING 25 SOUTH ST NY. NY. (Source: http://clester.simplenet.com/indv/i1110.htm) April 2, 2001

  • Bizarre Laws -MICHIGAN (reprinted from ShagMail.com) -- Michigan takes their rats seriously. You can collect a 10 cent bounty on every rat you bring into a town office. It is legal for a robber to file a law suit, if he or she is injured in your house. Any person over the age of 12 may have a license for a handgun as long as he/she has not been convicted of a felony. It is against the law to serenade your girlfriend in Kalamazoo. [I got a gaaaaal...in Kalamazoo... Tex Benecke, where are you?] In Pontiac, Michigan, it is illegal to drink soda in a bag of any kind. Michigan law prohibits chaining an alligator to a fire hydrant. June 3, 2001

  • Click to enlarge http://www.geocities.com/discoaz/zintroduction.html: An introduction to disco -- The Studio 54 was opened in April 1977, just off Broadway, at 254 W. 54th Street, Manhattan, New York. The club was owned by Steve Rubbel and Ian Schrager, who were previously active in the gastronomy field. Bouncer Mark Benecke made sure that the right people would be let in. This did not mean that you needed to be a VIP in order to make it through the doors of the Studio 54. The crowd was a concotion of actors, average people and personalities. Some examples? Michael Jackson, Truman Capote, Andy Warhol, Calvin Klein, Brooke Shields, Bianca Jagger, etc. Even former US president Jimmy Carter went to the Studio and confessed to have spent an unforgettable night. It was the admission procedure that made this club so famous. In fact, some people were willing to do anything in order to get in: but only a few managed it. Studio 54 was similar to a fairy tale, with a range of characters selected for each night's grand party. Celebrities posed for the paparazzi, often disappearing from sight into the famous basement of the club, where the best parties used to take place. The so called "gray people" were turned awy by Steve Rubbel. Gaining entry into Studio 54 became an almost spiritual quest for many, longing to be a part of the "beautiful crowd". Even her was turned away from the exclusive club one night! Celebrity status itself did not guarantee entry at all. The two original dj's at the club, hired before it openned, were Nicky Siano and Richie Kazcor, and stayed for the first two years. DJ Richie Kazcor played the opening night. The other DJ, Nicky Siano, couldn't play weekends since he owned his own popular club, The Gallery, where he played on weekends. Eventually, they were followed by other DJ legends like John Jellybean Benitez, Tony Carrasco and Tony Humphries. June 3, 2001

  • http://www.jbradshaw.com/04/ind9.htm: Jack Bradshaw Dog Show Superintendents -- Apple Valley Kennel Club -- Catalog -- RETRIEVERS (LABRADOR): Open Yellow Dogs. 1: 71: TORMENTIL WISCOY CHARLIE BOY , SN64454101 10/15/1998. Breeder: Jill Ickowski. By CH Wiscoys Noah -- CH Toplicht Fleur's Charlee My Girl. Jennifer Henderson. Dog. (...) 4: 75: SNOWBERRY'S SKIPPER ADRIFT , SN36456906 07/11/1996. Breeder: Lisa N. Benecke. By CH Tabatha's Drifte at Dickendall -- CH Snowberry's Elizabeth. Dale F. Barringer . Dog. Ellen Cottingham, Agent. 3: 79: STONECREEK'S SUPERNATURAL, SN68631501, 10/28/1999. Breeder: owner. By CH Langshott Gale Force From Kimvalley -- Stonecreek's Jubilee. Kimberly L. Flowers . Dog. //// SNOWBERRY'S PRIME THYME. SN 36456904. 07-11-96 By Tabatha's Drifter At Dickendall - Snowberry's Elizabeth. Owner: Lisa N Benecke & Linda A Ciancio., Berthoud, CO 805131797. Breeder: Lisa N Benecke. (http://www.infodog.com/RESULTS/2001016301/2001016301132.HTM -- Del Valle Dog Club Of Livermore - Sunday 03/11/2001) June 3, 2001

  • 2-C Date: Wed, 21 Jan 1998 09:59:45 -0800; From: Doug Case -- Subject: *QP*: CNN tackles "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" and sexual harassment. FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE. January 20, 1998. CONTACT: Rick Perera, CNN Impact (404) 827-2755. CNN "IMPACT" TO TACKLE "DON'T ASK, DON'T TELL" AND SEXUAL HARASSMENT. ATLANTA - With the recent case of a Navy seaman facing discharge over his America Online profile, the military's "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy on homosexuality is once again in the spotlight. But there's a twist to the story that has rarely been told. The policy on gays serves as a ready weapon against military women. Those who reject the advances of a male superior run the risk of being investigated as lesbians. "Impact," CNN's weekly news magazine, takes on the subject this Sunday, January 25. Correspondent Art Harris talks with women affected by the policy, and reveals internal military documents that show the Pentagon has long been aware of the threat. "Time and time again," said Michelle Benecke of Servicemembers Legal Defense Network, "when women report sexual abuse, they find that their commands respond, not by investigating the complaint of sexual abuse, but by investigating them, and their private lives." Ask former Navy seaman Amy Barnes, who was brought up on charges of lesbianism - two weeks after rebuffing a male superior at an on-shore bar. Unlike others in her position, she fought back with a lawsuit. But it was too late to save her career. Ask retired Air Force Captain Barbara Wilson, who served from 1949 to 1971. "When women first went in service," she said, "the adage was that only queers or prostitutes went in service. And I think that has just carried down from generation to generation." Correspondent Art Harris, himself a former Navy lieutenant, j.g., offers an unflinching portrayal of sex and power in the U.S. military. "Impact," hosted by Bernard Shaw and Stephen Frazier, is broadcast each Sunday at 10:00 p.m. Eastern time and again at 10:00 p.m. Pacific time, on CNN. (http://www.seflin.org/lcr/log.0298.html) June 3, 2001

  • Container List for Harold Clayton Urey Papers (http://orpheus.ucsd.edu/speccoll/testing/html/mss0044f.html); Part 1: SERIES 2 : CORRESPONDENCE: Box 2, Folder 1 Aagaard, Lenore, 1960 - 1981. Box 2, Folder 2 Abelard-Schuman, Limited, 1958. Box 2 Folder 3 Abell, George O., 1970. (...) Box 13 Folder 11 Benario, Frederick, 1953 - 1955. Box 13 Folder 12 Benecke, Th., 1973 - 1974. Box 13 Folder 13 Benedict, Manson, 1949 - 1964. Comments/questions, mail to: spcoll@ucsd.edu -- The Mandeville Special Collections Library houses rare books, manuscripts, maps, photographs, art works, sound recordings, archives, and other primary materials which support specialized UCSD instructional and research programs. Areas of exceptional strength include early voyages of exploration and discovery to the Pacific, experimental American poetry, the Spanish Civil War, Baja California, twentieth-century science and public policy, Melanesian anthropology, artists' books, the early history of southern California, Dr. Seuss, and the UCSD archives. These materials are cataloged on ROGER and MELVYL, the UCSD and UC online catalogs. Qualified researchers who furnish a photographic form of identification and who complete a Reader Registration form may use the collections. Materials do not circulate and are used under library supervision. Limited photocopying may be possible. University 0f California, San Diego -- Geisel Library -- Mandeville Special Collections Library -- Register of the Harold Clayton Urey Papers -- 1929 - 1981 -- MSS 0044 -- This file created: 01/29/1997 Inclusive dates: 1929 - 1981 -- 75.20 linear feet (156 archives boxes, 49 oversize folders and 5 art bin items) -- ABSTRACT: Papers of Harold Clayton Urey, Nobel Prize-winning chemist who contributed to significant advances in the fields of physical chemistry, geochemistry, lunar science, and astrochemistry. He received the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1934 for his discovery of deuterium, and made key scientific contributions to the development of the atomic bomb during World War II. He conducted fundamental work on the structure of atoms and molecules, the thermodynamic properties of gases, the separation of isotopes, and the chemical problems involved in the origin of the earth, the moon, and the solar system. He was also an advocate of nuclear arms control, working actively with other scientists to promote global cooperation and to prevent nuclear proliferation and conflict. Among Urey's teaching positions were posts at Montana State University, Johns Hopkins University, Columbia University, the University of Chicago, and the University of California, San Diego. The papers span the years 1929 to 1981 and are organized into ten series: 1) BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIALS, 2) GENERAL CORRESPONDENCE, 3) SUBJECT FILES, 4) WRITINGS, 5) WRITINGS OF OTHERS, 6) PERSONAL EPHEMERA, 7) PHOTOGRAPHS, 8) AWARDS, 9) LUNAR ORBITER PHOTOS AND CHARTS, and 10) ORIGINALS OF PRESERVATION PHOTOCOPIES. The collection contains significant correspondence with Urey's fellow scientists, including Albert Einstein, Enrico Fermi, J. Robert Oppenheimer, Leo Szilard, and Edward Teller. Absent from the collection are most materials relating to Urey's wartime work on the atomic bomb, records of his activities at Johns Hopkins and Columbia Universities, and documentation of his personal life.] June 3, 2001

  • Benecke, I. L. gm 164: http://libweb2.princeton.edu/rbsc2/parrish/General.condensed.pdf -- ExParrish 1-16-E, Rare Books: Morris L. Parrish Collection of Victorian Novelists: http://libweb.princeton.edu/about_the_library/booklocations.html June 3, 2001

  • Harvard Law Bulletin -- Volume 52, Number 2, Spring 2001 -- Class Notes -- Contact: bulletin@law.harvard.edu -- Year) 1992: Michelle Benecke, coexecutive director at Servicemembers Legal Defense Network in Washington, D.C., was featured on a panel at the conference Don't Ask, Don't Tell: Is the Gay Ban Based on Prejudice or Military Necessity? held in San Francisco in December. The conference, presented by the Commonwealth Club of California and the Center for the Study of Sexual Minorities in the Military, consisted of four panels and a public town hall meeting and focused on the relationship between the American gay ban and the experiences of foreign militaries in which gays and lesbians serve openly. (http://www.law.harvard.edu/alumni/bulletin/notes.html) June 3, 2001

  • http://www.fairpickings.com/a-elist.htm -- All shows run 30 minutes each unless otherwise noted -- Contact: Fair Pickings, 339 NASSAU STREET, ROME, NY 13440, Phone: (315) 337-2576, Fax: (315) 336-5449, cpierce@twcny.rr.com -- BERLE, MILTON: The Big Show (T. Bankhead) w/ J. Durante, E. Merman. NBC 4/29/51 (90 minutes) Fleischmann Hour (Rudy Vallee) w/ R. Armstrong, L. Lee. 8/9/34 (1 hr.) (fair-good quality) Let Yourself Go (M.B. is host) w/ Al Jolson. 6/6/45 Radio Hall of Fame w/ Burns & Allen. Blue Network 1/2/44 (1 hr.) Suspense “Rave Notice” CBS 10/12/50 Tribute to Glenn Miller (7th War Loan Drive) w/ C. Spivak, T. Benecke, J. Stafford, S. Fields, G. Krupa, L. Prima, The Modernaires, P. Como, Count Basie, C. Calloway, P. Bailey, X. Cugat, B. Goodman, M. Hutton, E. Sullivan, A. Jones, F. Waring, G. Lombardo, L. Nolan, E. Cantor, J. Besser, B. Robinson, K. Smith. WNEW, NY 6/5/45 (c. 3 hours) June 3, 2001

  • List of Diplomates of the American Board of Pain Medicine: http://members.tripod.com/Catnip100/Private1.html -- MICHIGAN: Baumgarten, Richard K., MD Henry Ford Hospital 2799 West Grand Blvd. Detroit, MI 48202, 313/876-3866 -- Benecke, Steven, MD 3815 Waldenwood Ann Arbor, MI 48105, 313/712-5898 -- Biondi, David Michael, DO, Michigan Head Pain & Neurological Inst, 3120 Professional Dr, Ann Arbor, MI 48104, 313/973-1155 June 3, 2001

  • Benecke, David M., ASA, CRP, Appraisal Resources Inc., 213 West Wesley St., Ste. 201, Wheaton, IL, Email 75120.2050@compuserve.com, Fax 630-665-6293. Source: Relocation Appraisers and Consultants Inc., 2000-2001, Membership directory, page 21: http://www.rac.net/2000Dir.pdf June 3, 2001

  • Robert L. Benecke, Director of Finance, City of Englewood, 2-10 Van Brunt Street, City Hall, Englewood, NJ 07631, Tel. (201) 567-1800 [Individual] [Municipal] -- Source: INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION: http://www.ipma-hr.org/pdf_indiv/indiv.pdf June 3, 2001

  • Swing! The Ultimate Collection. See for yourself just why swing has made a comeback! This is a fantastic collection of 49 popular and memorable songs that will make you want to dance! 160 pages, $19.95, Item number 1700832 (http://www.pianospot.com/1700832.htm). Including: Along The Santa Fe Trail - Performed by: Glenn Miller - Written by: Al Dubin, Edwina Coolidge and Will Grosz - © 1940, A Gal In Calico - Performed by: Tex Benecke and Glenn Miller Orchestra - Written by: Leo Robin and Arthur Schwartz - © 1946, Zing! Went The Strings Of My Heart - Performed by: Larry Elgart - Written by: James F. Hanley - © 1935 (http://www.pianospot.com/1700832.htm). /// Glenn Miller asked McKinley to join him in Smith Ballew's band in 1932, and Miller later placed McKinley and four others with the Dorsey Brothers' Orchestra. When the Dorseys split, McKinley stayed with Jimmy Dorsey, although he was heavily recruited by other band leaders, including Tommy Dorsey and Benny Goodman. He became known as a vocalist as well as drummer in Jimmy Dorsey's band, and had Bing Crosby name him "one of the ten best vocalists in the country" (All-American Band Leaders, July, 1942). In 1939, at the suggestion of booking agent Willard Alexander, McKinley joined forces with Will Bradley (formerly Wilber Schwitsenberg) to form the "Will Bradley Orchestra featuring Ray McKinley." With McKinley on vocals and drums, the band's several hits included Beat Me Daddy, Eight to the Bar, Down the Road Apiece and Celery Stalks at Midnight. McKinley left in 1942 to form his own group, The Ray McKinley Orchestra. The band was very well-recieved, but broke up after only 8 months due to external factors including the outbreak of the second World War. McKinley placed many of his players with the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra just before he was drafted. McKinley's old association with Glenn Miller paid off when Glenn took him on for his famous Army Air Force Band. McKinley says that Glenn Miller's band "was one of the two best musical organizations I had anything to do with as a player" (Modern Drummer). The Glenn Miller Band was sent to England in June, 1944. After Miller disappeared in 1944, McKinley fronted the band until its return to the United States in 1945. At this point, McKinley handed the reins to Tex Benecke and formed a new Ray McKinley Orchestra. (http://americanhistory.si.edu/archives/d5635b.htm) /// EST FLOWER SHOP FOR GUYS WHO DON’T HAVE A CLUE -- Daffodils 212 North Central, 257-1868 -- Valentine’s Day. We were confused, desperate for flowers -- but which flowers? We don’t know azaleas from zinnias, and how could we be sure our flowers would say “I love you,” and not “Deepest sympathy in your bereavement”? We were headed up Central Avenue pondering our options when we stopped right on Tex Benecke’s star amid the “Walk of Fame.” There, right beside Tex, at the foot of the San Carlos Hotel, we found our solution--Daffodils, the virtual support group for the florally challenged. Our leader, a kind and knowledgeable counter lady, made picking posies practically painless. Patiently walking us through the arrangement, stem by stem, she suggested gorgeous blooms far too exotic for us to name. We left with an armful of beauties, made our delivery and were proclaimed a hero. You might say we went into Daffodils, and came out smelling like a rose. (http://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/bop/1996/goods10.html) /// I was born in Kansas City, Missouri on December.19, 1929. My father liked music and brought home an old clarinet when I was 8. It became a trombone at 13 (against my wishes, preferring drums or trumpet), but that also led to an infatuation with blank music paper. So at 14, I became a professional arranger/copyist, writing for local dance bands. In 1941, I heard the original Basie Band at the Tower Theater in Kansas City with Lester, Jo Jones, all of the greats. (...) When I was 15, I heard Debussy and Stravinsky for the first time and decided that composing was also a necessary thing to do. So I went to KC Conservatory for 3 years, and came out to play piano with Orrin Tucker then 3 months in Chicago (playing with Tiny Kahn, Lou Levy, Frank Rosolino, etc.) and 3 months in San Francisco, where I mainly gained weight and heard Webern's Symphony, Op. 21, declaring it the only perfect music I had ever heard. After a short stint in the Army, (a 6 month mistake on both our parts), I joined Tex Benecke, courtesy of Mel Lewis, playing piano. I left Tex to work with folks that could help me get my union card; Ray Mckinley, Louis Prima, as a "house musician" at Stuyvesant Casino, playing with Coleman Hawkins, Buck Clayton, Ben Webster and one memorable night with George Wallington, Pops Foster and Zutty Singleton, a rhythm section to remember! (http://www.jazzcorner.com/brookmeyer/biography.html) /// 6/14/2000 2m Phone Net – W6ZE/IXN checks in ZH, LDC, LEX, WOX, VDP, BWH, WIU, and KFW. ZH enjoys his new Kenwood TS-50 and MFJ 901-B Ant. Tuner…Chris can fit them all in a suitcase! LDC has solid copy on all 10m OPs, but can’t copy WOX on 2m. BWH tells LDC he’ll throw the power cables in his truck and bring them to Meeting Fri. eve. And LDC and VDP will meet wid GG park officials to finalize FD site arrangements fer FD. IXN tells OPs abt a swarm of Eqs in the Brawley/El Centro area that’s been going on since noon! (...) And Bob airs Newsline #1191…We hear that Tex Benecke of Glen Miller band fame, dies here in Santa Ana at age 86!…And Kevin Mitnik’s amateur license filing is up fer review by FCC in light of his probation conditions. BWH says 4 sections of tower are located in his backyard. VDP relays WOX’s comments to LDC. WIU continues study fer the 5 wpm code test, and Cory plans to attend FD work permitting. KFW gives a FB report on the Club’s new generator…It’s up and running and ready fer FD! And KFW’s harmonic is getting soon, and Chris says he picked up `new wheels’! (http://www.w6ze.org/RF-NEWSLETTER/IXN-NET-NEWS/NETNEWS-2000-06.html) June 8, 2001

  • Benecke Family Cemetery & Hinze Family Cemetery & Brookfield Twp., Waukesha County Wisconsin. Web Page: http://www.linkstothepast.com/waukesha/1.html (accessed Nov 3, 2002) -- "I put these two cemeteries on the same page, since the listings for both are very short.  BENECKE FAMILY CEMETERY: The cemetery was established on the Benecke farm in 1851 for the Ernst and Augusta Meininger Benecke family.
    Last known burial was in 1929. There were 12 known burials in this cemetery. In 1960, the remains were moved to Prairie Home Cemetery in Waukesha Twp. Wisconsin Hills Junior High was built on the cemetary site. This school was later converted to Wisconsin Hills Elemetary School. In 1999, the school was converted to Wisconsin Hills Middle School. There were a number of tombstones left in the woods north of the school. From a newspaper clipping, Waukesha Freeman circa 1979 Ernst & Augusta (Meininger) Benecke established the cemetery around September 1851 to bury their 6 month old daughter Mary. Within 10 years, they had buried 4 other children there: Matilda, Age 5, March 1853 -- Herman, Age 4, March 1853 (5 days after Matilda) -- Amely, 5 Months old, April 1855 -- William, 4 Months old, one year later -- Ernest, Gustav, Emma, Albert & Sarah (none married) were also buried there. Harriet, was buried in Oakhill Cemetery next to her husband John. They were married 9 Jan 1880 in Milwaukee. John was born 16 Jan 1854 in Brookfield, son of Johann & Anna Elizabeth (Wallauer) Hoffman, both natives of Canton, Thurgau, Switzerland. Ernst Beneke was of a wealthy family in Germany. He was Click to enlarge educated at Gottingen University in Germany, studying philosophy and architechture. He spoke fluent English and French. He was an accomplished pianist and played in the King's Orchestra. His father was a Baron of the Brunswick & Hanover Line. Before Ernst was ready to inherit the castle and estate, he fell in love with Augusta Meininger, a waitress at the University. She was of Prussian decent, daughter of Valentine & Christina Meininger. They were married a full year before Baron Benecke found out. The Baron was very unhappy with the marriage and gave Ernst $10,000 and was told to move from the castle Click to enlarge and estate. The couple moved to America, traveling by boat from Buffalo to Milwaukee. They purchased land in the town of Brookfield on July 15, 1847 on which they had built a cabin. Augusta's brother and sister later settled in cabins nearby. Ernst died Aug. 8, 1857 and was buried in the family burial plot shortly before the birth of his daughter Sarah. Sarah never married. She became a teacher teaching at Goerke's Corners, Calhoun, & Cottage Schools. She died in 1929 a few weeks from her sister Emma. Augusta lived to be almost 79. Gustav was killed in a horseback riding accident. Ernest, the oldest child, preceded Augusta in death. Updated 30 December 2001." 

  • Benecke Family Puppets (see picture) -- sold by Watts, 9180 Hunt Club Road Zionsville, Indiana 46077-9398 USA, Phone 1-800-LGB-POLA / 1-800-542-7652. Web site http://www.wattstrainshop.com/watts/product.asp?dept%5Fid=1600&sku=1832P accessed Nov 3, 2002.

----------------------------------- Benecke Books --------------------------------------

Benecke Books (chronological order)
  • (1805-10) Benecke, (Lewin Anton) Wilhelm. System des Assekuranz= und Bodmereiwesens, aus den Gesetzen und Gebräuchen. Hamburgs und der vorzüglichsten handelnden Nationen Europas, so wie aus der Natur des Gegenstandes entwickelt. Für Versicherer, Kaufleute und Rechtsgelehrte. Bde. 1-4 (plus Supplementsband). Hamburg, Selbstverlag, antiquarisch am 11. Nov. 2001: DEM 750,-
  • (1850) Benecke, Wilhelm. Lebensskizze und Briefe. " Als Manuskript gedruckt. (Hrsg. von Louise Benecke.). 2 Bde. Dresden, Teubner. XII, 384; IX, 378 S. Am 18. Dez. 2003 antiquarisch: Preis: EUR 200
  • (1877) Hartmann von Aue, Iwein. Eine Erzählung. Mit Anmerkungen von G.F. Benecke und K. Lachmann. Bln., Reimer, 1877. 4. Auflage. X, 563 S. April 16, 2001
  • (1881) JENTZSCH, A./ SCHRÖDER, H./ MEYER, Georg/ BENECKE, Berthold; CASPARY, Dr./ NÖTLING, Dr./ CLEVE, P. T./ SCHRÖDER, H.; Schriften der physikalisch-ökonomischen Gesellschaft zu Königsberg. 22. Jahrgang 1881. Enth‚Äö√†√∂‚à ö¬®lt: JENTZSCH: Der Untergrund des norddeutschen Flachlandes (SS 45-53, 1 Tafel). SCHR‚àö‚â•DER: Beitr‚Äö√†√∂‚à ö¬®ge zur Kenntins der in ost- und westpreussischen Diluvialgeschieben gefundenen Silurcephalopoden (SS 54-96, 3 Tafeln). MEYER: Rugose Korallen als ost- und westpreussische Diluvialgeschiebe (SS 97-111, 1 Tafel). BENECKE: Die Schuppen unserer Fische (SS 112-117, 4 Tafeln). CLEVE/JENTZSCH: Ueber einige diluviale und alluviale Datomeenschichten Norddeutschlands (SS 129-170). Sitzungsberichte: Ueber Zeitbestimmungen und deren Anwendungen auf Zeitsignale, Uhrenbeobachtung, Normaluhren und Zeitbölle. Ueber das Grabfeld von Warnikam bei Ludwigsort. Ueber neue fossile Pflanzen der blauen Erde, d. h. des Bernsteins, des Schwarzharzes und des Braunharzes. Ueber die Mineral-Production Preussens. U.a. KÖnigsberg, Koch; EA; 2 Bde; 4S‚à ö√Ñ‚à ö¬∞; (9) 170, 61 S. mit 9 Tafeln; OBroschur, antiquarisch am 18. Dez. 2003: EUR 60
  • (1889) Beneke O. Von unehrlichen Leuten. Culturhistorische Studien und Geschichten aus vergangenen Tagen deutscher Gewerbe und Dienste. 2. Auflage, Berlin (1. Auflage: "Culturhistorische Studien und Geschichten aus vergangenen Tagen deutscher Gewerbe und Dienste mit besonderer Rücksicht auf Hamburg", Besser & Mauke, IV, 277 S., 1863). May 14, 2001
  • (1901) Benecke, G. F. Wörterbuch zu Hartmanns Iwein. 3. Ausgabe besorgt von C. Borchling. Leipzig 1901. Gr.-8°. X, 314 SS.
  • (1912) Bau und Leben der Bakterien, von Wilhelm Benecke, Teubner, Belin und Leizpig, 1912, gebunden, ca. 660 Seiten April 2, 2001
  • (1906) Benecke, Adelaide. Memoires of the Past. London, Printed for Private Circulation. Mit einer Fotografie der Autorin und einem Porträt von Alfred Benecke. Mit handschriftl. Widmung von Adelaide Benecke. Halbleinen, 152 Seiten. Am 18. Dez. 2003 antiquarisch: Preis: EUR 50,00
  • (1912) Doflein, F., Benecke, Wilhelm, Bau und Leben der Bakterien. Lpz., Teubner, . XII, 650 S. Mit 105 Abb. -- Antiquarisch am 18. Dez. 2003: Preis: EUR 29,00
  • (1914) Benecke, Otto / Theodor Benecke (Hrsg.): Lüneburger Heimatbuch. 2 Bde. Im Auftrage der Bezirkslehrervereine Lüneburg und Celle hrsg. Bremen, Carl Schünemann, 1914. (X), 836; (VIII), 986 S. Mit zahlr. Fotos, Grundrissen, Diagr., Skizzen, Tab. u. Illustr. im Text, tls. farb.Taf., mehreren Plänen u. tls. farb. gefalt. Ktn. sowie 1 mehrf. gefalt. Kte. als Beilage. Gr.-8vo. OLn. mit farb. Wappen a. VDeckel. Am 18. Dez. 2003 antiquarisch: Preis: EUR 135,00
  • (1924) Benecke, W. & L. Jost, Pflanzenphysiologie I & II. [2 vols.]. Fischer, Jena. 441+477 pp., 55+153 fig. April 2, 2001
  • (1926) Benecke, Otto. Die Prüfungen für Volkswirte an den Universitäten. Berlin, Weidmann, 1926. 58 S., (2) S. Anz., kl.okt., Kt.. Antiquarisch am 18. Dez. 2003: Preis: EUR 10,00
  • (1926) Benecke, Otto. Die Prüfungen für Kaufleute an den Universitäten u. Handelshochschulen in Preußen. Berlin. Weidmann. (=Weidmannsche Taschenausgaben... Heft 12). 1926. 114S./1Blatt. Original Kartonband. Kl. 8S. Einband u. Schnitt stockfleckig. Rücken bestoßen. 4. erweiterte Aufl.. Preis antiquarisch am 18. Dez. 2003: 8,00 EUR
  • (1957) Benecke, T. (ed), History of German Guided Missiles Development. Brunswick: Appelhans, 1957 Kisselburg, 4/97, $85
  • (1970) Wirtschaftliche Depresseion und politischer Radikalismus 1918-1938, von Heinrich Bennecke, G. Olzog Verlag, HC, 412 S., 1970 [kindly donated by Jorge Benecke, Schramberg, Germany]
  • (1972) Benece, D. W., Kooperation und Wachstum in Entwicklungsländern. Eine Analyse des Beitrags der Genossenschaften zur wirtschaftlichen Entwicklung. Tüb., 261 S., 14 Abb.; Schr. zur Kooperationsforsch. antiquarisch DEM 52,- am 11. Nov. 2001
  • (1973) Der gute Outlaw, von Ingrid Benecke, M. Niemeyer, Tbg. (1973), Taschenbuch, Preis: DM 72,00, EUR 36,81 April 2, 2001
  • (1974) Society and Politics in Germany, 1500-1750, Gerhard Benecke, Routledge eds., GBP 10.50
  • (1976) Rise of the European Economy. Hermann Kellenbenz, Gerhard Benecke (Editor), Weidenfeld eds., GBP 12.50
  • (1978) Germany in the Thirty Years War, Gerhard Benecke, E. Arnold Publishers, GBP 10.95 ENGLISH TEXT
  • (1979) Physiological Ecology of the Alpine Timberline: Tree Existence at High Altitudes With Special Reference to the European Alps. Translated by Udo Benecke; Author:Walter Tranquillini, Springer eds., Berlin, Heidelberg, Hardcover, GBP 30.95
  • (1982) Maximilian I, 1459-1519, Gerhard Benecke. Routledge eds., GBP 20
  • (1979) Scribner und J. Benecke (eds.): The German Peasant War 1525. New viewpoints 1. Edition, London,, 1979. 206 pages, Text English. 8S Orig.-Leinen, Orig.-Schutzumschlag, schöner Zust.. Price on Dec 18, 2003: 14,50 EUR
  • (1980) Benecke D. Integration in Lateinamerika, Muenchen, Fink, 1980. 419S. Kart. Beiträge zur Soziologie und Sozialkunde Lateinamerikas Band 17, antiquarisch am 18. Dez. 2003: EUR 23,00
  • Mittelhochdeutsches Wörterbuch, 4 Bde. u. Index von Georg Fr. Benecke, u. a., Hirzel, Stgt., Sondereinband, Preis: DM 748,00, EUR 382,45 April 16, 2001
  • Benecke, Dagmar (Hrsg.): Frankfurt am Main. 32 kleine Ansichten "Robinson-Drucke" III. Mühlheim, Verlag der "Robinson-Drucke". 1977. 12° quer. Postkartenbuch m. 32 histor. Postkarten. Antiquarisch DEM 24,00 am 11. Nov. 2001
  • (1989) Das Gefahrenpotential schwerer Unfälle in Druckwasserreaktoren. Kritik von Sicherheitsforschung und Risikoabschätzung für das Akw Fessenheim/Elsaß und andere. Mit Bewertung internationaler Studien. J. Benecke, M. Reimann, Hrsg. Sollner-Institut München, 64 S., DM 10,00 April 2, 2001
  • (1981) Benecke / Eberhard / Sch‚Äö√†√∂‚à ö‚â†ner (Hrsg.): Jahrbuch der Wehrtechnik, Folge 12, Wehr und Wissen, Koblenz, 1981. 176 S. mit zahlr. Abb., Ln.U. Quart, antiquarisch am 18. Nov. 2003: EUR 15
  • (1989) Spasticity: the Current Status of Research. M. Emre, R. Benecke, Parthenon eds., GBP 35
  • (1990) Mittelhochdeutsches Wörterbuch, Alphabetischer Index von Georg Fr. Benecke, u. a., Hirzel, Stgt. (1990), Sondereinband, Preis: DM 58,00, EUR 29,65 April 2, 2001
  • Der kleine Benecke. Von Georg Fr. Benecke, Albert Leitzmann. Hirzel, Stgt., Sondereinband, EUR 8,59 April 2, 2001
  • (1986) Benecke, Georg Friedrich / Müller, Wilhelm / Zarncke, Friedrich : Mittelhochdeutsches Wörterbuch. Mit Benutzung des Nachlasses von Georg Friedrich Benecke. 3 Bände in 4 Bänden. (Nachdruck d. Ausg. Leipzig, S. Hirzel 1854-1866.). Hildesheim, Olms. XXII, 1061 S.; VI, 825 S.; IV, 815 S.; VIII, 963 S. OLn.. Am 18. Dez. 2003 antiquarisch: Preis: EUR 320
  • (1988) Motor Disturbances 1. R. Benecke, et al., Academic Press, Hardcover, March, 1988, GBP 55.00
  • (1988) Benecke, T. Jahrbuch der Wehrtechnik Folge 18, Darmstadt, Wehr und Wissen, 1988. 272S Gebundenmit Schutzumschlag. Am 18. Dez. 2003 antiquarisch: Preis: EUR 20,00
  • (1990) Motor Disturbances II, Berardelli & Benecke, Academic Press, 1990, GBP 53.50
  • (1990) Mittelhochdeutsches Wörterbuch, 4 Bde. u. Index, Georg Fr. Benecke, Wilhelm Müller, Friedrich Zarncke, Preis: DM 748,00, EUR 382,45, Sondereinband Hirzel, Stgt.; ISBN: 3777604666 April 16, 2001
  • (1991) Bilanz einer Ver(w)irrung. Von Frederic Vester, Thomas Maurer (Mitarbeiter), Walter Renz (Mitarbeiter), Jochen Benecke (Mitarbeiter). Heyne, München.
  • (1992) Colour Atlas of Micro- Oto- Neurosurgical Procedures. By Vittorio Colletti, James E. Benecke, Springer eds., Heidelberg ENGLISH TEXT
  • Ich sag dir alles. Sonderausgabe. Von Gisela Benecke (Mitarbeiter), Volker Busch (Mitarbeiter), Dieter Christoph (Mitarbeiter). Orbis, München
  • (1993) Intrazelluläre Aktivität morphologisch identifizierter Neuronen in prosencephalen und medullären Hirnstrukturen der Erdkröte (Bufo bufo spinosus L.). Von Thomas Benecke. Shaker Verlag GmbH (25. Mai 1993), Taschenbuch, Preis: DM 89,00, EUR 45,50 April 2, 2001
  • (1993) Ieee Micro Electro Mechanical Systems. W. Benecke (Editor), H.C. Petzold (Editor), IEEE Press, GBP 69.00 ENGLISH TEXT
  • (1994) Archäozoologische Studien zur Entwicklung der Haustierhaltung in Mitteleuropa und Südskandinavien, von den Anfängen bis Z, von Norbert Benecke, Akademie-Verlag, Berlin (1994), Gebundene Ausgabe, Preis: DM 148,00, EUR 75,67 April 2, 2001
  • (1994) Diagnostische Entscheidungsprozesse mit dem EMG. Von Bastian Conrad, Reiner Benecke, Chapman & Hall, Weinheim
  • (1995) Christo and Jeanne Claude. Jorg Schellmann, Josephine Benecke. Schirmer/Mosel Verlag, GBP 44
  • Eine Buchhandlung in Berlin. Erinnerungen an eine schwere Zeit. Von Hans Benecke. Fischer Tb., Frankfurt
  • (1996) Deutsches Wörterbuch. Von Gerhard Wahrig, Gisela Benecke (Mitarbeiter), Ursula Hermann (Mitarbeiter), Klaus Laabs (Mitarbeiter), Renate Wahrig-Burfeind (Herausgeber). Wissen Media Verlag, München
  • (1997) Integration externer Bauelementmodelle in Schaltungssimulatoren, von Marcus Benecke, Sonderbestellung, Shaker Verlag GmbH (1. April 1997), Taschenbuch, Preis: DM 89,00, EUR 45,50 April 2, 2001
  • (1997) Neurologie. Von Reiner Benecke. Chapman a. Hall, Weinheim (1997), Taschenbuch, Preis: DM 40,00, EUR 20,45 April 2, 2001
  • (1997) Vergil in the Middle Ages. Domenico Comparetti, E.F.M. Benecke (Translator), Jan M. Ziolkowski (Introduction), Princeton University Press, GBP 17.95 Top of Form 1
  • (1998) Siedlungsmodelle. Ideen. Konzepte. Planungen. Von Herbert Kallmeyer, Jochen Benecke, Andreas Distler. Prestel, Mchn. (1998), Gebundene Ausgabe, EUR 44,99 April 2, 2001
  • (1998) Strukturierte Tabellen, von Klaus Benecke, Dt. Universitätsv., W. (1998), Taschenbuch, Preis: DM 98,00, EUR 50,11 April 2, 2001
  • Der Traum vom ewigen Leben. Die Biomedizin entschlüsselt das Geheimnis des Alterns. Von Mark Benecke, Kindler, Mchn. (1998), Gebundene Ausgabe, Preis: DM 44,90, EUR 22,96 April 2, 2001
  • (1998) Stundenblätter: Macbeth. (Lernmaterialien), von Ingrid Benecke, Ernst Klett Vlg., Stgt. (1998), Taschenbuch, Preis: DM 31,00, EUR 15,85 April 2, 2001
  • (1998) Mittelhochdeutsches Wörterbuch. Von Georg F. Benecke, Wilhelm Müller (Mitarbeiter), Friedrich Zarncke, Hirzel, Stuttgart, Preis: EUR 382,40
  • (1999) Die Ostgebiete der Zweiten Polnischen Republik, von Werner Benecke, Böhlau, Köln (1999), Gebundene Ausgabe, Preis: DM 88,00 April 16, 2001
  • (1999) Kriminalbiologie. Genetische Fingerabdrücke und Forensische Entomologie. Von Mark Benecke, Lübbe, Berg.-Gladb., 2nd ed.: 2001 , Taschenbuch, Preis: DM 12,90, EUR 6,60 April 2, 2001
  • (2000) Computerrecht. Von Abbo Junker, Martina Benecke, Nomos, Baden-B. (2000), Taschenbuch, Preis: DM 78,00, EUR 39,88 April 2, 2001
  • (2000) Internationale Rechnungslegung und Management Approach, von Birka Benecke, Dt. Universitätsv., W. (2000), Taschenbuch, Preis: DM 118,00, EUR 60,33 April 16, 2001
  • (2000) Flugkörper und Lenkraketen, von Theodor Benecke, u. a., Bernard u. Gr., Bonn, Gebundene Ausgabe April 2, 2001
  • (2000) Internationale Rechnungslegung und Management Approach. Birka Benecke, Preis: DM 118,00, EUR 60,33, Taschenbuch (2000) Dt. Universitätsv., W.; ISBN: 3824471809 April 16, 2001
  • (2000) Vom Stabbohlenhaus zum Haus der Wirtschaft. Landesdenkmalamt Berlin. Von Michael Hofmann und Frank Römer. Mit Beitr. von Franz Adrian Dreier und Norbert Benecke. [Red. Birgit Heide ; Felicitas Hofmann]. - Erstausg., 1. Aufl.. - Berlin: Kulturbuch-Verlag, 1999. - (Beiträge zur Denkmalpflege in Berlin ; 14) Aug 27, 2001
  • (2001) Original-Prüfungsfragen mit Kommentar GK 3 (2. Staatsexamen), Neurologie, von Reiner Benecke, Thieme Schwarze Reihe, Stgt., Sondereinband, Preis: DM 49,90, EUR 25,51 April 2, 2001
  • (2001) Kriminalbiologie. Genetische Fingerabdrücke und Forensische Entomologie. Von Mark Benecke, Lübbe, Berg.-Gladb., 2nd ed., Taschenbuch, Preis: DM 12,90, EUR 6,60.
  • (2001) Iwein. Urtext und Übersetzung. Von Hartmann von Aue, G. F. Benecke (Mitarbeiter), K. Lachmann (Mitarbeiter), Ludwig Wolff (Mitarbeiter). De Gruyter, Berlin, Preis: EUR 19,95.
  • (2001) Stundenblätter: Macbeth. (Lernmaterialien). Von Ingrid Benecke. Klett, Stuttgart, Preis: EUR 16,30.
  • (2002) Mordmethoden. Von Mark Benecke, Lübbe, Berg.-Gladb., HC, 22 EUR
  • (2002) Intelligente Haustechnik. Regelung, Information, Energieeffizienz. Von Jochen Benecke, Manfred Riedel. Huss-Medien, Bauwesen, B., Gebundene Ausgabe, Preis: DM 48,00, EUR 24,54 April 2, 2001
  • (2005) Murderous Methods. By Mark Benecke. Columbia University Press (CUP), New York, ISBN 0-231-13118-6 (out in autumn 2005)
  • (2005) Lachende Wissenschaft. Von Mark Benecke. Luebbe, Bergisch Gladbach, ISBN 3-404-60556-X
  • (2006) So arbeitet die moderne Kriminalbiologie. Von Mark Benecke. Luebbe, Bergisch Gladbach. ....and many, many, many, many more...


Mark Benecke, Ph.D., Certified & Sworn In Forensic Biologist, International Forensic Research & Consulting, Postfach 250411, 50520 Cologne, Germany; E-Mail: forensic@benecke.com, www.benecke.com, Text / SMS only +49-173-287-3136.