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Section
The ICRC Archives
The ICRC Archives manages both current records and historical archives.
©ICRC/v-p-hist-00577-17
First World War. Rath Museum, Geneva. International Prisoners-of-War Agency, tracing service.
The ICRC Archives collects, preserves and makes available for research ICRC documents dating from the organization's inception to the present day. The ICRC's historical archives comprise 6,700 linear metres of textual records and a collection of photographs, films and other audiovisual material.

See also History of the ICRC.

Requests for personnal data
Historical archives
    12-12-2006
    B, General services, 1917- ongoing, 3313 metres of shelf space
    The records produced by ICRC services, secretariats and departments in Geneva have an index number starting with the letter B. Particular attention should be drawn to the records of the period 1919-1950 pertaining to conflicts in the 1930s – the Sino-Japanese war, the Second Italo-Abyssinian war, the Spanish civil war, etc – and to the Second World War and its aftermath.
    (Info resources\ICRC information services\Archives)
    Includes PDF

    12-12-2006
    C, Tracing and protection, 1870 - ongoing, 2298 metres of shelf space
    The records of the tracing agencies set up by the ICRC between 1870 and the present day are grouped together in the section with an index number commencing with a C: Basle Agency (Franco-Prussian War), Trieste Agency (Russo-Turkish War), International Prisoners of War Agency (First World War), Spanish Service (Spanish Civil War), Central Prisoners of War Agency (Second World War) and the Central Tracing Agency (as from 1950).
    (Info resources\ICRC information services\Archives)
    Includes PDF

    12-12-2006
    D, Delegations, 1921-ongoing, 356 metres of shelf space
    The archives of ICRC delegations operating outside Switzerland are stored under index number D.
    (Info resources\ICRC information services\Archives)
    Includes PDF

    12-12-2006
    P, Private archives, 1859-1991, 20 metres of shelf space.
    The private archives, with index number P, comprise private archives deposited by a variety of sources, especially formally delegates, which pertain to ICRC activities.
    (Info resources\ICRC information services\Archives)
    Includes PDF

    12-12-2006
    V, Various, 1840-ongoing, 552 metres of shelf space
    Documentary collections stored in the ICRC archives are to be found under index number V. They are generally accessible to the public.
    (Info resources\ICRC information services\Archives)
    Includes PDF

    12-12-2006
    O, Humanitarian coordination bodies, 1921- ongoing, 127 metres of shelf space
    The archives of humanitarian coordination bodies set up jointly with the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (the former "League"), National Societies or other institutions, are stored under index number O.
    (Info resources\ICRC information services\Archives)
    Includes PDF

    12-12-2006
    A, Committee, 1854 - ongoing, 54 metres of shelf space.
    The Committee's archives, which bear an index number starting with the letter A, contain in particular the bound volumes of the minutes of meetings held by the Committee and the other decision-making bodies of the ICRC from 1863 to the present day (they are also accessible on microfilm), the 19th century archives and information bulletins.
    (Info resources\ICRC information services\Archives)
    Includes PDF

Useful information
Annual Report
    2-6-2008
    Archives : extract from ICRC Annual Report 2007
    Reports on all ICRC activities, registers of official decisions and legal and operational correspondence have been stored since 1863 in the ICRC’s Archives. In June 2007, UNESCO added the archives of the International Prisoners of War Agency (1914–1923) to its Memory of the World Register, in testimony to “the extent of human suffering during the First World War, but also of pioneer­ing action to protect civilians”. The extensive programme launched by the ICRC in 2006 to restore and digitize these archives is to be completed in 2012.
    (Info resources\ICRC information services\Archives)
    Annual Report

Other site
    23-2-2005
    International Tracing Service in Arolsen
    The International Tracing Service at Bad Arolsen (ITS) serves victims of Nazi persecutions and their families by documenting their fate through the archives it manages. The ITS preserves these historic records and makes them available for research.
    (Info resources\Other sites\Red Cross and Red Crescent)
    Other site


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© 2008  International Committee of the Red Cross
2-12-2008