STÁTNÍ TAJEMNÍK U ŘÍŠSKÉHO PROTEKTORA V ČECHÁCH A NA MORAVĚ, PRAHA, inv. 298, sig. 109-4/40 Page 17 · 17 of 19
STATE SECRETARY FOR THE REAL PROTECTOR IN THING AND IN MORAVA, PRAGUE, inv. 298, sig. 109-4/40
English Translation
2/8 as % of total Ca 18.2 292 Groß=Meserich (Velké Meziřici) . . . 17.2 1.159 Moravian=Budwit (Moravské Budějovice) 21.0 741 Leipnik (Lipnik) 26.0 1.691 Holleschau (Holešov) . . . . . . 16.6 2.788 Wall.-Meseritsc (Vlašské Mezičiči) . 26,5 1,197 In addition to these findings, the adjacent map shows the totality of the early = r enumerations, thus conveying a picture of the present state of these searches. The result presented so far already shows the fact that German clansmen have been in the Czech people since about 16oo, the time of the established family names, which can only be seen in the figures shown in M in the first place, and in the large German-blooded influx of the 16th century. However, this does not solve the question of how this influx of peoples had a biological effect: were they hereditaryly indifferent, or particularly capable, or predominantly inferior blood streams, which at that time changed from the German bloodstream to the smallest Slavic Wolksbeet? The private-economically determined replenishment of the Bohemian (and Moravian) conscriptions after the end of the Thirty Years' War with domesticians, hearing peasants, village craftsmen and the like makes almost think of a kind of Saxony= walker in the outside picture; we know that not exactly the most valuable clans are planted=. Even the lowering of German-blooded depleted sol= data, or the use of workers of certain new branches of industry up to the 19th century, does not at first think of a highly qualified selection or even an elite population. After all, however, those families from the d e u t s s s , which, as can easily be seen, were quite different from the neighbouring Slavic peoples even in the lower performance= by higher average requirements and therefore greater severity of the selection standards. Just as the examples from the German=Polish performance gap became known in the Robott period — the zealous and exemplary research of Germanism in the Polish settlement area has provided rich evidence of this in this magazine) — are still in the 18th century. 18) Just as German princely blood — very in opposition to certain southeastern outward-like sippenbreeding circles - became apparent in the series of the Premysliden House=17) Cf. 17th century from very neutral or even Czech-friendly sources = ambiguous descriptions of the "minder industry" and of the technical low level, the laziness and the neglect in the "pur Bohemian" range in succession to the sudeten German peasant areas. In particular, the examples mostly taken from these works in my work: The Importance of German Blood in Southeast Europe; Z.: Südostdeutsche For= Jchungen, Munich 1938/39. 18) See my work "The Importance Of German Blood In Czechism" op. cit. (1939) 5. 386 et seq. 17