Predecessors and first issues The predecessors of the were the '''' (Federal Law Gazette for the North German Confederation), the official journal of the
North German Confederation, which was established on 26 July 1867, and the older of the
Kingdom of Prussia. The was first issued – as – under this name on 8 May 1871. The issues of the 1871 volume of the were still published under the title (Federal Law Gazette for the North German Confederation), while the issues (27 January 1871 – 2 May 1871) of said volume were titled (Federal Law Gazette for the
German Confederation). The was originally published by the office of the German
Reich Chancellor, while the Prussian (Law Collection Office) was in charge of the technical aspects of publishing the paper. Later the '''' (1880–1918) and afterwards the (1918–1945) were responsible for its publication. The laws published in each volume of the – always covering one year – were numbered chronologically.
Splitting of the The was split into two parts on 1 April 1922; a
proclamation of 6 March 1922 explained the splitting: Part II of the gazette would henceforth print those "publications that experience has shown to take up a lot of space and that many customers can do without", while laws and publications on all others topics would be published in part I. A list of topics was established that clarified which publications would be printed in part II. These were: In 1924, publications concerning the "Administration of the
Reichsbahn Company" () and "Matters of Industrial Burden" () were added as topics for part II of the gazette by a
proclamation dated 30 August 1924.
Publication of ordinances In October 1923, a law was passed on the publication of ordinances of the country (). It was decided that such ordinances should generally be published in the , but they could also be published in the (Reich Ministerial Gazette) or the '''' (German Reich Gazette). In 1924, the legal scholar J. Jastrow considered this to be the most important change in the history of the because since then it was no longer the only government gazette in which all laws (in a material sense) had to be published. He wrote:
Nazi Germany, extension to Austria and successor gazettes published as 1933 I p. 141 The continued to be used in
Nazi Germany (1933–1945). The
Enabling Act of 1933, for example, provided in its Article 3 that all laws enacted by the
government – and not only those passed by the legislature (the
Reichstag) – were to be published in the . The ordinances of the Reich () were at first still published in the three publications named in the 1923 law, but soon other government gazettes were formed and prescribed as suitable for publication of such ordinances. The publication requirement for laws was, however, no longer generally observed; the legal scholar notes that not all binding law was published by the Nazi authorities in their government gazettes. Furthermore, the was no longer a government gazette for laws only, but also a paper for certain propaganda appeals by the Reich government without any legal value (for example, the [Proclamation of the Reich Government to the German People] concerning the re-introduction of compulsory military service in 1935). He comments: After the , the scope of application of the was extended to
Austria on 15 March 1938. Laws especially pertaining to Austria were printed in the and the '''' (Law Gazette for the Land of Austria): the latter was, however, discontinued in March 1940, and only the was used thereafter. In the wake of the
Antiqua–Fraktur dispute, the stopped using the typeface class
Fraktur and began using
Antiqua beginning with its first issue of 1942. The
last issue () of the was published in its part I on 11 April 1945, five days before the
Battle of Berlin began. Its successors are the (Federal Law Gazette) for
Germany (1949–) and the '''' (Law Gazette of the German Democratic Republic) for
East Germany, which was published from 1949 to 1990. == Citing the ==