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Deutsches Filmarchiv : ウィキペディア英語版 | Deutsches Filmarchiv The Deutsches Filmarchiv ("German Film Archive"), originally the Archiv für Filmwissenschaft ("Archive for Film Science"), formally established in 1947, was the first film archive set up in West Germany after World War II. ==Archiv für Filmwissenschaft (1947-52)==
By the end of the war in 1945, the two greatest existing German film collections, the Reichsfilmarchiv and the Ufa-Lehrschau ("UFA Educational Viewing"), had been in part destroyed and in part scattered to the four winds. The initiative for the setting up of a new film archive came from Hanns Wilhelm Lavies, who immediately after the war, on his own initiative and without any organisational backing, began intensively collecting films and film-related documentation in Berlin and the West German zone of occupation. From the beginning of the Cold War he had the support of the American occupying authorities. At first he tried to have his collection, formalised in 1947 as the ''Archiv für Filmwissenschaft'', attached to the photographic collection of Marburg University, but without success. However, with the support of Curt Oertel, Lavies' collection was accepted in 1948 for placement at Wiesbaden, and was moved the following year to Schloss Biebrich. On 13 April 1949 it was renamed the ''Deutsches Institut für Filmkunde'' (DIF) ("German Institute for Film Studies"). In 1952 the ''Archiv für Filmwissenschaft'' became a department within the expanded DIF and was renamed the Deutsches Filmarchiv ("German Film Archive").
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Deutsches Filmarchiv」の詳細全文を読む
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