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Bergregal

The Bergregal[1] (German: [ˈbɛʁk.ʁeˌɡaːl]) was the historic right of ownership of untapped mineral resources in parts of German-speaking Europe; ownership of the Bergregal meant entitlement to the rights and royalties from mining. Historically, it was one of those privileges that constituted the original sovereign rights of the king.[2]

The hammer and pick: symbol of mining

In addition to the Bergregal, another important sovereign privilege was the Münzregal or minting rights, which was a consequence of the Bergregal since coins were minted near the mines from which their metal was obtained.[3]

History edit

In the early days of the Roman Empire, the landowner had the right to extract minerals. The reason behind this was that mineral resources were seen as "fruit of the soil" which were deemed to belong the landowner.[4] The first regalia, or royal privileges, emerged in the first millennium, but there was still no Bergregal governing mining rights as part of the laws regulating property. Emperors and kings, the nobility or clerics who ruled over a territory, established this right for themselves, based on their ownership of land and the mineral resources found therein. This was easy for the king or territorial princes because, as a rule, they were the actual landowners.[5] But it was often political and economic circumstances rather than law and statute that were instrumental in the establishment of the Bergregal.

 
Statue of Otto the Rich in Freiberg, centre of mining in the Ore Mountains

The Emperor, Barbarossa, had the Bergregal recorded in writing for the first time in Germany as part of the Roncaglian Constitution in 1158. This effectively removed the right to extract minerals from the landowner who, from then on, had to purchase such rights from the king. As a result of the Roncaglian Constitution, mining rights passed over time into the hands of the territorial lords. This led to arbitrary presumptions of rights by these territorial princes.[4] Because of Kleinstaaterei – the plethora of minor states – and the special position of ecclesiastical principalities in the Holy Roman Empire, enforcement of the Bergregal by the emperor was virtually impossible.[5] and so, in many cases, it was given to the princes. For example, Frederick I vested this privilege in Otto the Rich, the Margrave of Meissen.[6] Likewise, the Bishop of Chur was given the Bergregal in 1349[4] and the King of Bohemia already received these rights even before the Golden Bull was issued.

In 1356, the Golden Bull finally enshrined in writing that these rights were ultimately held, not by the emperor, but by the seven electoral princes (the archbishops of Cologne, Mainz and Trier, the King of Bohemia, the Count Palatine of the Rhine, the Duke of Saxony, Margrave of Brandenburg) as his territorial lords.[6] Existing grants of rights to lower-ranking lords were unaffected. In general, the electoral princes were keen to retain the Bergregal for themselves.

The Treaty of Westphalia in 1648, saw the rights of the Bergregal pass from the electoral princes to the lesser nobility. To enforce their mining rights, the territorial lords had mining regulations enacted, the so-called Bergordnung, which regulated in detail the mining activities, the duties or tithes (the Zehnt), the structure of the mining authorities and the privileges of the miners themselves. [7]

In the 19th century the Bergregal in the German states was gradually superseded by mining acts or Berggesetze. In Prussia, the Bergregal was ended by the General Mining Act for the Prussian States (Allgemeine Berggesetz für die Preußischen Staaten) or ABG of 24 June 1865. Landowners' rights were removed and mining regulations were clearly defined in the Berggesetz.[8] This process began with the Napoleonic conquests, when French law was temporarily enacted in many parts of Germany, and was largely completed with the adoption of the General Mining Act of the Kingdom of Saxony (Allgemeinen Berggesetzes für das Königreich Sachsen) on 16 June 1868.[9]

Legal implications and exercise edit

As a result of the Bergregal, there was a legal separation of property ownership and mining rights. Local landowners were only left with exploration and mining rights for a few unimportant minerals.[6] The territorial prince, on the other hand, had three options by which he could exercise his rights under the Bergregal:

  1. He could reserve the right to mine for himself (self-profit)
  2. He could award mining rights to a third party (transfer of profit)
  3. He could give everyone the right to mine (alienation of the Bergregal to third parties)

The first opportunity for mining to be operated for the benefit of the state came in those countries in which mining was regulated by free declaration (Freierklärung). But here, the ruler had to have explicitly renounced his rights to the exploitation of natural resources. In practice, no German state – indeed no European state – had a monopoly over mining rights.

The way mining rights were granted went back to the days of feudalism. However, mining privileges was not just granted to certain individuals, but also to entire estates or towns.[10] In particular, towns involved in the mining industry for a long time were given special privileges and rights. One of these was the granting of the "freedom to mine" (Bergfreiheit), with its associated privileges, to the miners and burghers of the towns. These privileges were intended to support the mining industry and growth of the towns.[11] However, this freedom was not part of the Bergregal; it was based, in the German states at least, on the old mining constitutions. In these constitutions, the Bergregal was exercised through the declaration of such freedom. It was also quite common for all three options described above to be used simultaneously in the same state.[10]

Distinctions and demarcations edit

Specifically which minerals were governed by the Bergregal varied from state to state, but generally there were two categories: the "upper" or "higher" Bergregal and the "lower" Bergregal.[12] The upper Bergregal, which covered the mining of precious metals (gold and silver), but could include salt and precious stones remained, almost without exception, in the hands of the state rulers.[13] Precious stones and salt were not part of the upper Bergregal in all countries, however.[14] The lower Bergregal covered the mining of base metals, like iron, tin, copper, cobalt, lead and bismuth, as well as the minerals arsenic, sulphur, saltpetre and antimony. In many cases these rights were awarded to a third party or granted to landowners under the mining regulations (Bergordnung).[13]

The mining of bituminous coal, brown coal and peat did not initially come under the Bergregal; instead ownership remained with the landowners because these resources were classed as fossil fuels. But the territorial lords very quickly realised that coal mining was potentially very lucrative and, as a result, the Bergregal was soon extended to cover coal too.[6] Peat cutting continued to fall outside the Bergregal,[12] as did the quarrying of gravel, clay, marl and limestone. These minerals were the property of the landowners.[14] In the Prussian states, semi-precious stones and precious stones were not part of the Bergregal if they were lying loose in a field or were brought to light in the course of economic activity such as ploughing.[12]

Issues edit

Issues inevitably arose over the Bergregal. In states where specific resources were not governed by a mining act (Bergrecht), but were now regulated by a newly introduced Bergregal, there was serious opposition from the mining companies. They did not initially want to denounce their ownership in order to lease the right to mine or to have to lease their mine property. In addition, new taxes, such as the mine tithe and special mine duties like the so-called Quatembergeld, led to unrest amongst the mine operators.[8] The introduction of coal tithes frequently led to disputes. To pay the coal tithe, 10 per cent of coal production had to be separated into special heaps. This coal had to be sold first, the profit going to the territorial lords. This coal was often stolen by night.[6] As a result, the mining companies had to be supervised by mining authorities (Bergbehörde). In the mining fields of the Mark of Brandenburg, there was such unrest that the military had to intervene.[8]

Other problems were caused by the location of the ore deposits. If a deposit extended over two territories, there could be disagreements at the state border. The mining operators often ended up in conflict. Because different organizations were responsible on either side of the border, there was the question of which mining jurisdiction (mining court or Berggericht) was responsible for handling a case. These disputes could adversely affect the relationship between the territorial princes as well as the local mining industry. The situation was aided slightly, if the powers of one mining court were greater than those of the other.[15]

Economics edit

The Bergregal represented a considerable source of income for its owner. The entitlement to a fixed percentage (usually 10%) of the commodity (in the early days of mining usually salt or ore) from each pit, (the so-called mine tithe, Bergzehnt or Fron) formed the basis for the wealth of the great rulers, for example, in the Electorate of Hanover and Duchy of Saxony, helping to finance their expensive royal households.[14] The owner of the Bergregal also had the option of first refusal. This effectively resulted in a monopoly. In this way, many regions laid the economic foundations for their future development and the territorial lords and princes showed great interest in the promotion of the mines in their lands, whether through advances, grants or joint construction, because a decline in the mining industry could result in an empty treasury.

Present-day regulations edit

Following the end of the Bergregal, mining acts were introduced in the individual states to govern the extraction of mineral resources. In Germany the exploration and extraction of natural resources is governed by the Federal Mining Act (Bundesberggesetz).[16] The Austrian equivalent is the Raw Materials Act (Mineralrohstoffgesetz).[17] In Switzerland, the exploration and mining of minerals is regulated by the Swiss Bergregal.[18] In 1649, ten courts in Graubünden broke away from Austrian rule. At that time it was already laid down that mining rights under the Bergregal lay with the landowner. This regulation is still in force today.[19]

See also edit

Literature edit

  • Heiner Lück: Art. Bergrecht, Bergregal. In: Albrecht Cordes, Heiner Lück, Dieter Werkmüller, Ruth Schmidt-Wiegand (eds.), Handwörterbuch zur deutschen Rechtsgeschichte, 2nd, fully revised and expanded edition, Vol. I, Erich-Schmidt-Verlag, Berlin, 2008, pp. 527–533. ISBN 978-3-503-07912-4
  • Guido Pfeifer: Ius Regale Montanorum. Ein Beitrag zur spätmittelalterlichen Rezeptionsgeschichte des römischen Rechts in Mitteleuropa, Münchener Universitätsschriften – Juristische Fakultät – Abhandlungen zur rechtswissenschaftlichen Grundlagenforschung, Vol. 88, Aktiv Druck & Verlag GmbH, Ebelsbach am Main, 2002. ISBN 3-932653-12-2
  • Wakefield, Andre (2009). The Disordered Police State: German Cameralism as Science and Practice, Chapter 2: Science and Silver for the Kammer, University of Chicago.
  • Hübner, Rudolf (xxxx). A History of Germanic Private Law
  • Postan, Michael Moïssey and Miller, Edward (1987). The Cambridge Economic History of Europe: Trade and industry in the Middle Ages, Cambridge University Press.
  • United States. Dept. of the Treasury,Rossiter Worthington Raymond (1869). Statistics of mines and mining in the states and territories West of the Rocky Mountains, Band 1868

References edit

  1. ^ Berg, "mountain" or, in this context, "mining" + Regal, "regalia" or "right", as in droit de régale. Sometimes seen as Bergwerksregal.
  2. ^ Wirtschaftsvereinigung Bergbau e.V.: Das Bergbau Handbuch. 5th edition, Verlag Glückauf GmbH, Essen, 1994, ISBN 3-7739-0567-X
  3. ^ Hermann Schulz: Das System und die Prinzipien der Einkünfte im werdenden Staat der Neuzeit. Druckerei Duncker & Humblot, Berlin, 1982, ISBN 3-428-05144-0
  4. ^ a b c Hans Krähenbühl: Bergrichter, Bergordnungen und Bergknappen. In Der Bergknappe 85 4 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine (accessed on 22 August 2011)
  5. ^ a b Volker Dennert: Salzgewinnung und Salzrecht 26 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine (accessed on 22 August 2011)
  6. ^ a b c d e Joachim Huske: Der Steinkohlenbergbau im Ruhrrevier von seinen Anfängen bis zum Jahr 2000. 2nd edition, Regio-Verlag Peter Voß, Werne, 2001, ISBN 3-929158-12-4
  7. ^ Bergrecht. TH Clausthal Zellerfeld 12 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine (accessed on 22 August 2011)
  8. ^ a b c Helmut Schelter: Die historische Entwicklung des Landesoberbergamtes Nordrhein-Westfalen. (accessed on 22 August 2011)
  9. ^ Bergrecht bei Zeno.org (accessed on 22 August 2011)
  10. ^ a b Carl Hartmann (ed.): Handwörterbuch der Berg-, Hütten- u. Salzwerkskunde der Mineralogie und Geognosie. First Volume, Second fully reworked edition, Buchhandlung Bernhard Friedrich Voigt, Weimar, p. 185
  11. ^ C. J. B. Karsten: Ueber den Ursprung des Berg-Regals in Deutschland. Druck und Verlag von G. Reimer, Berlin, 1844
  12. ^ a b c Hermann Brassert: Berg-Ordnungen der Preussischen Lande. F.C. Eisen's Königliche Hof-Buch- und Kunsthandlung, Cologne, 1858
  13. ^ a b Heinrich Veith: Deutsches Bergwörterbuch mit Belegen. Verlag von Wilhelm Gottlieb Korn, Breslau 1871
  14. ^ a b c Johann Samuel Schröter: Mineralisches und Bergmännisches Wörterbuch über Rahmen, Worte und Sachen aus der Mineralogie und Bergwerkskunde. First Volume, bei Barrentrapp und Wenner, Frankfurt am Main, 1789
  15. ^ Hans Ladstätter: Zur Geschichte des Bergbaues in Defereggen. In Osttiroler Heimatblätter 6 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine (accessed on 23 August 2011)
  16. ^ Bundesberggesetz Online (accessed on 23 August 2011)
  17. ^ Österreichisches Mineralrohstoffgesetz – MinroG. Online 7 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine (accessed on 23 August 2011)
  18. ^ Vollzugsverordnung zur Verordnung über das Bergregal und die Nutzung des. Untergrundes 1. (dated 30 May 2000). Online 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine (accessed on 23 August 2011)
  19. ^ Kurt Bächtinger: Lagerstättenbildung und Anfänge des Bergbaues in der Schweiz aus neuen Erkenntnissen 29 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine (accessed on 23 August 2011)

bergregal, german, ˈbɛʁk, ʁeˌɡaːl, historic, right, ownership, untapped, mineral, resources, parts, german, speaking, europe, ownership, meant, entitlement, rights, royalties, from, mining, historically, those, privileges, that, constituted, original, sovereig. The Bergregal 1 German ˈbɛʁk ʁeˌɡaːl was the historic right of ownership of untapped mineral resources in parts of German speaking Europe ownership of the Bergregal meant entitlement to the rights and royalties from mining Historically it was one of those privileges that constituted the original sovereign rights of the king 2 The hammer and pick symbol of mining In addition to the Bergregal another important sovereign privilege was the Munzregal or minting rights which was a consequence of the Bergregal since coins were minted near the mines from which their metal was obtained 3 Contents 1 History 2 Legal implications and exercise 3 Distinctions and demarcations 4 Issues 5 Economics 6 Present day regulations 7 See also 8 Literature 9 ReferencesHistory editIn the early days of the Roman Empire the landowner had the right to extract minerals The reason behind this was that mineral resources were seen as fruit of the soil which were deemed to belong the landowner 4 The first regalia or royal privileges emerged in the first millennium but there was still no Bergregal governing mining rights as part of the laws regulating property Emperors and kings the nobility or clerics who ruled over a territory established this right for themselves based on their ownership of land and the mineral resources found therein This was easy for the king or territorial princes because as a rule they were the actual landowners 5 But it was often political and economic circumstances rather than law and statute that were instrumental in the establishment of the Bergregal nbsp Statue of Otto the Rich in Freiberg centre of mining in the Ore Mountains The Emperor Barbarossa had the Bergregal recorded in writing for the first time in Germany as part of the Roncaglian Constitution in 1158 This effectively removed the right to extract minerals from the landowner who from then on had to purchase such rights from the king As a result of the Roncaglian Constitution mining rights passed over time into the hands of the territorial lords This led to arbitrary presumptions of rights by these territorial princes 4 Because of Kleinstaaterei the plethora of minor states and the special position of ecclesiastical principalities in the Holy Roman Empire enforcement of the Bergregal by the emperor was virtually impossible 5 and so in many cases it was given to the princes For example Frederick I vested this privilege in Otto the Rich the Margrave of Meissen 6 Likewise the Bishop of Chur was given the Bergregal in 1349 4 and the King of Bohemia already received these rights even before the Golden Bull was issued In 1356 the Golden Bull finally enshrined in writing that these rights were ultimately held not by the emperor but by the seven electoral princes the archbishops of Cologne Mainz and Trier the King of Bohemia the Count Palatine of the Rhine the Duke of Saxony Margrave of Brandenburg as his territorial lords 6 Existing grants of rights to lower ranking lords were unaffected In general the electoral princes were keen to retain the Bergregal for themselves The Treaty of Westphalia in 1648 saw the rights of the Bergregal pass from the electoral princes to the lesser nobility To enforce their mining rights the territorial lords had mining regulations enacted the so called Bergordnung which regulated in detail the mining activities the duties or tithes the Zehnt the structure of the mining authorities and the privileges of the miners themselves 7 In the 19th century the Bergregal in the German states was gradually superseded by mining acts or Berggesetze In Prussia the Bergregal was ended by the General Mining Act for the Prussian States Allgemeine Berggesetz fur die Preussischen Staaten or ABG of 24 June 1865 Landowners rights were removed and mining regulations were clearly defined in the Berggesetz 8 This process began with the Napoleonic conquests when French law was temporarily enacted in many parts of Germany and was largely completed with the adoption of the General Mining Act of the Kingdom of Saxony Allgemeinen Berggesetzes fur das Konigreich Sachsen on 16 June 1868 9 Legal implications and exercise editAs a result of the Bergregal there was a legal separation of property ownership and mining rights Local landowners were only left with exploration and mining rights for a few unimportant minerals 6 The territorial prince on the other hand had three options by which he could exercise his rights under the Bergregal He could reserve the right to mine for himself self profit He could award mining rights to a third party transfer of profit He could give everyone the right to mine alienation of the Bergregal to third parties The first opportunity for mining to be operated for the benefit of the state came in those countries in which mining was regulated by free declaration Freierklarung But here the ruler had to have explicitly renounced his rights to the exploitation of natural resources In practice no German state indeed no European state had a monopoly over mining rights The way mining rights were granted went back to the days of feudalism However mining privileges was not just granted to certain individuals but also to entire estates or towns 10 In particular towns involved in the mining industry for a long time were given special privileges and rights One of these was the granting of the freedom to mine Bergfreiheit with its associated privileges to the miners and burghers of the towns These privileges were intended to support the mining industry and growth of the towns 11 However this freedom was not part of the Bergregal it was based in the German states at least on the old mining constitutions In these constitutions the Bergregal was exercised through the declaration of such freedom It was also quite common for all three options described above to be used simultaneously in the same state 10 Distinctions and demarcations editSpecifically which minerals were governed by the Bergregal varied from state to state but generally there were two categories the upper or higher Bergregal and the lower Bergregal 12 The upper Bergregal which covered the mining of precious metals gold and silver but could include salt and precious stones remained almost without exception in the hands of the state rulers 13 Precious stones and salt were not part of the upper Bergregal in all countries however 14 The lower Bergregal covered the mining of base metals like iron tin copper cobalt lead and bismuth as well as the minerals arsenic sulphur saltpetre and antimony In many cases these rights were awarded to a third party or granted to landowners under the mining regulations Bergordnung 13 The mining of bituminous coal brown coal and peat did not initially come under the Bergregal instead ownership remained with the landowners because these resources were classed as fossil fuels But the territorial lords very quickly realised that coal mining was potentially very lucrative and as a result the Bergregal was soon extended to cover coal too 6 Peat cutting continued to fall outside the Bergregal 12 as did the quarrying of gravel clay marl and limestone These minerals were the property of the landowners 14 In the Prussian states semi precious stones and precious stones were not part of the Bergregal if they were lying loose in a field or were brought to light in the course of economic activity such as ploughing 12 Issues editIssues inevitably arose over the Bergregal In states where specific resources were not governed by a mining act Bergrecht but were now regulated by a newly introduced Bergregal there was serious opposition from the mining companies They did not initially want to denounce their ownership in order to lease the right to mine or to have to lease their mine property In addition new taxes such as the mine tithe and special mine duties like the so called Quatembergeld led to unrest amongst the mine operators 8 The introduction of coal tithes frequently led to disputes To pay the coal tithe 10 per cent of coal production had to be separated into special heaps This coal had to be sold first the profit going to the territorial lords This coal was often stolen by night 6 As a result the mining companies had to be supervised by mining authorities Bergbehorde In the mining fields of the Mark of Brandenburg there was such unrest that the military had to intervene 8 Other problems were caused by the location of the ore deposits If a deposit extended over two territories there could be disagreements at the state border The mining operators often ended up in conflict Because different organizations were responsible on either side of the border there was the question of which mining jurisdiction mining court or Berggericht was responsible for handling a case These disputes could adversely affect the relationship between the territorial princes as well as the local mining industry The situation was aided slightly if the powers of one mining court were greater than those of the other 15 Economics editThe Bergregal represented a considerable source of income for its owner The entitlement to a fixed percentage usually 10 of the commodity in the early days of mining usually salt or ore from each pit the so called mine tithe Bergzehnt or Fron formed the basis for the wealth of the great rulers for example in the Electorate of Hanover and Duchy of Saxony helping to finance their expensive royal households 14 The owner of the Bergregal also had the option of first refusal This effectively resulted in a monopoly In this way many regions laid the economic foundations for their future development and the territorial lords and princes showed great interest in the promotion of the mines in their lands whether through advances grants or joint construction because a decline in the mining industry could result in an empty treasury Present day regulations editFollowing the end of the Bergregal mining acts were introduced in the individual states to govern the extraction of mineral resources In Germany the exploration and extraction of natural resources is governed by the Federal Mining Act Bundesberggesetz 16 The Austrian equivalent is the Raw Materials Act Mineralrohstoffgesetz 17 In Switzerland the exploration and mining of minerals is regulated by the Swiss Bergregal 18 In 1649 ten courts in Graubunden broke away from Austrian rule At that time it was already laid down that mining rights under the Bergregal lay with the landowner This regulation is still in force today 19 See also editBergamt mining office Berggesetz mining act Bergordnung mining regulations Bergrecht mining lawLiterature editHeiner Luck Art Bergrecht Bergregal In Albrecht Cordes Heiner Luck Dieter Werkmuller Ruth Schmidt Wiegand eds Handworterbuch zur deutschen Rechtsgeschichte 2nd fully revised and expanded edition Vol I Erich Schmidt Verlag Berlin 2008 pp 527 533 ISBN 978 3 503 07912 4 Guido Pfeifer Ius Regale Montanorum Ein Beitrag zur spatmittelalterlichen Rezeptionsgeschichte des romischen Rechts in Mitteleuropa Munchener Universitatsschriften Juristische Fakultat Abhandlungen zur rechtswissenschaftlichen Grundlagenforschung Vol 88 Aktiv Druck amp Verlag GmbH Ebelsbach am Main 2002 ISBN 3 932653 12 2 Wakefield Andre 2009 The Disordered Police State German Cameralism as Science and Practice Chapter 2 Science and Silver for the Kammer University of Chicago Hubner Rudolf xxxx A History of Germanic Private Law Postan Michael Moissey and Miller Edward 1987 The Cambridge Economic History of Europe Trade and industry in the Middle Ages Cambridge University Press United States Dept of the Treasury Rossiter Worthington Raymond 1869 Statistics of mines and mining in the states and territories West of the Rocky Mountains Band 1868References edit Berg mountain or in this context mining Regal regalia or right as in droit de regale Sometimes seen as Bergwerksregal Wirtschaftsvereinigung Bergbau e V Das Bergbau Handbuch 5th edition Verlag Gluckauf GmbH Essen 1994 ISBN 3 7739 0567 X Hermann Schulz Das System und die Prinzipien der Einkunfte im werdenden Staat der Neuzeit Druckerei Duncker amp Humblot Berlin 1982 ISBN 3 428 05144 0 a b c Hans Krahenbuhl Bergrichter Bergordnungen und Bergknappen In Der Bergknappe 85 Archived 4 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine accessed on 22 August 2011 a b Volker Dennert Salzgewinnung und Salzrecht Archived 26 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine accessed on 22 August 2011 a b c d e Joachim Huske Der Steinkohlenbergbau im Ruhrrevier von seinen Anfangen bis zum Jahr 2000 2nd edition Regio Verlag Peter Voss Werne 2001 ISBN 3 929158 12 4 Bergrecht TH Clausthal Zellerfeld Archived 12 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine accessed on 22 August 2011 a b c Helmut Schelter Die historische Entwicklung des Landesoberbergamtes Nordrhein Westfalen accessed on 22 August 2011 Bergrecht bei Zeno org accessed on 22 August 2011 a b Carl Hartmann ed Handworterbuch der Berg Hutten u Salzwerkskunde der Mineralogie und Geognosie First Volume Second fully reworked edition Buchhandlung Bernhard Friedrich Voigt Weimar p 185 C J B Karsten Ueber den Ursprung des Berg Regals in Deutschland Druck und Verlag von G Reimer Berlin 1844 a b c Hermann Brassert Berg Ordnungen der Preussischen Lande F C Eisen s Konigliche Hof Buch und Kunsthandlung Cologne 1858 a b Heinrich Veith Deutsches Bergworterbuch mit Belegen Verlag von Wilhelm Gottlieb Korn Breslau 1871 a b c Johann Samuel Schroter Mineralisches und Bergmannisches Worterbuch uber Rahmen Worte und Sachen aus der Mineralogie und Bergwerkskunde First Volume bei Barrentrapp und Wenner Frankfurt am Main 1789 Hans Ladstatter Zur Geschichte des Bergbaues in Defereggen In Osttiroler Heimatblatter Archived 6 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine accessed on 23 August 2011 Bundesberggesetz Online accessed on 23 August 2011 Osterreichisches Mineralrohstoffgesetz MinroG Online Archived 7 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine accessed on 23 August 2011 Vollzugsverordnung zur Verordnung uber das Bergregal und die Nutzung des Untergrundes 1 dated 30 May 2000 Online Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine accessed on 23 August 2011 Kurt Bachtinger Lagerstattenbildung und Anfange des Bergbaues in der Schweiz aus neuen Erkenntnissen Archived 29 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine accessed on 23 August 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bergregal amp oldid 1150003628, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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