Digitalisate EconBiz Logo Full screen
  • First image
  • Previous image
  • Next image
  • Last image
  • Show double pages
Use the mouse to select the image area you want to share.
Please select which information should be copied to the clipboard by clicking on the link:
  • Link to the viewer page with highlighted frame
  • Link to IIIF image fragment

Cost of living in German towns

Access restriction


Copyright

The copyright and related rights status of this record has not been evaluated or is not clear. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information.

Bibliographic data

fullscreen: Cost of living in German towns

Monograph

Identifikator:
866449027
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-93831
Document type:
Monograph
Title:
Cost of living in German towns
Place of publication:
London
Publisher:
Stat. Off.
Year of publication:
1908
Scope:
1 Online-Ressource (LXI, 548 Seiten)
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
Get license information via the feedback formular.

Contents

Table of contents

  • Cost of living in German towns
  • Title page
  • Contents

Full text

BERLIN. 
25 
light are characteristics common to most of such dwellings inhabited by working- 
class households, and these defects are often met with in aggravated form. Many 
of these dwellings are approached through dark corridors and passages along 
which it is necessary to grope one’s way step by step, and it is no uncommon 
custom to keep a small lamp burning all day long. Basement rooms were 
visited in which no direct light ever enters, yet they were used as living 
rooms by day and as bedrooms by night. Notes like the following were the 
result of house visitation in the Centre, where basement dwellings of the worst 
class abound :— 
“ Basement dwelling, consisting of one room, 14 feet by 10 feet by 7 feet 
high, with kitchen, reached by a descent of nine steps ; damp. Six persons sleep 
in the one room. The kitchen has a brick floor. Rent 14s. monthly ; tenant a 
labourer with wages of 20s. per week.” 
“ Basement dwellings, each consisting of one room and a kitchen, and 
costing 20s. monthly. Lime falling from the brickwork, never repaired, dark 
rooms in spite of whitewashing of area walls.” 
" Basement dwellings of two rooms and a kitchen ; dark, small and low. 
Rent 22s. 6c?. per month.” 
“ Basement dwelling of one room and kitchen, costing 17s. W. per month ; 
inhabited by a saddler, his wife, two children, and an adult lodger. A bed in 
the kitchen. The corridor pitch-dark.” 
" Basement dwelling, consisting of one room, costing 9s. per month ; a 
small iron stove used for cooking and heating. Another, consisting of one 
room and kitchen, 18s. per month ; three beds in the room, with a sofa used as 
a bed and a cradle.” 
" Basement dwelling, consisting of two rooms and kitchen, rent 19s. ; 
occupied by six persons. Rooms small, dark, and cold ; two beds in kitchen. 
Size of rooms, 10 by 10 by 12 feet.” 
“ Basement dwelling, consisting of three rooms and kitchen, one room 
used as a workshop. One dark bedroom has three beds, another similar room 
has two beds, and the kitchen has two beds.” 
The accommodation most usually met with in basement dwellings is one 
living room and a kitchen, and from 14s. to 18s. per month is a common rent. 
A fitting counterpart to the basement dwellings of the older parts of Berlin 
is found in the attics and higher stories of the same districts, and the Centre 
is again specially instructive. In the narrow by-streets found here 
housing conditions of the worst kind exist—dilapidated buildings, which would 
appear to be never repaired,-narrow and dark staircases at times dangerous of 
ascent, rickety balustrades, rotten floors, and rooms at once small, low, and 
poorly lighted. There is, however, much bad property in the North and East 
as well, and where the worst dwellings are, there also is the worst poverty. 
Rents entirely disproportionate both to the quantity and the quality of the 
accommodation are charged. For two small rooms, each 10 by 10 by 7 feet, and 
a kitchen, 9 by 9 by 7 feet, the monthly rent was 26s. 6&, a lodger at 10s. 
helping the tenant to eke out the rent ; in another case, a living room, a dark 
anteroom, and a kitchen cost 30s. monthly ; in another, two rooms and a kitchen 
cost 24s.,'and here again lodgers were kept ; in another, a labourer earning 26s. 
per week paid 26s. per month, with the help of lodgers, for a room and a 
kitchen ; and in another, a widow with her two sons and daughter paid 22s. 6d. 
monthly for a dwelling consisting of a living room, 10 feet square and 6 feet 
6 inches high, a bedroom, in which stood three beds, and a kitchen without window. 
In one dwelling consisting of a large room and a kitchen, a family of ten persons, 
the parents and eight children, lived. The rent was 5s. per week. In the kitchen 
were six beds. Both husband and wife were employed in the clothing trade, and 
they earned together about £45 per annum, in addition to which they received 
£10 in poor relief. A tenement in another house consisted of a single room, 
rented at 12s. per month, and it contained three beds. A room in the same 
house served a tailor as living room, bedroom, and workshop, the rent being 9s. 
per month. In a dwelling consisting of one room and a kitchen, rented at 
18s. 6d. per month, the husband and wife had beds in the kitchen, and the living 
D 
29088
	        

Download

Download

Here you will find download options and citation links to the record and current image.

Monograph

METS MARC XML Dublin Core RIS Mirador ALTO TEI Full text PDF EPUB DFG-Viewer Back to EconBiz
TOC

This page

PDF ALTO TEI Full text
Download

Image fragment

Link to the viewer page with highlighted frame Link to IIIF image fragment

Citation links

Citation links

Monograph

To quote this record the following variants are available:
URN:
Here you can copy a Goobi viewer own URL:

This page

To quote this image the following variants are available:
URN:
Here you can copy a Goobi viewer own URL:

Citation recommendation

Cost of Living in German Towns. Stat. Off., 1908.
Please check the citation before using it.

Image manipulation tools

Tools not available

Share image region

Use the mouse to select the image area you want to share.
Please select which information should be copied to the clipboard by clicking on the link:
  • Link to the viewer page with highlighted frame
  • Link to IIIF image fragment

Contact

Have you found an error? Do you have any suggestions for making our service even better or any other questions about this page? Please write to us and we'll make sure we get back to you.

What is the fourth digit in the number series 987654321?:

I hereby confirm the use of my personal data within the context of the enquiry made.