RB 29

154 3. poshlinnyi i aktsiznyi kontor (customs and excise office) 4. pervyi russkii kontor (first Russian office) 5. vtoroi russkii kontor (second Russian office) 6. tretii russkii kontor (third Russian office) 7. lifliandskii kontor (Livonian office) 8. kamornyi arkhiv (archives) 3. tullkontorct (customs office) 4. l:sta svenska landskontoret (first Swedish provincial office) 5. 2:dra svenska landskontoret (second Swedish provincial office) 6. finska landskontoret (Finnish provincial office) 7. kammararkivet (archives) 8. proviantet (provisions office) 9. myntet (the mint) 10. klädekammaren (clothing office) 9. platenaia kamora, klcnder kamer (clothing office) 11. krigskontoret (war office) 12. militiebokskontoret (accounting of military allotment system farms) 13. kopparkontoret (copper office) 14. vagstaten för stora kopparberget (scales budget for Stora kopparberget) 15. lantmäterikontoret (surveyors office)®^ It is clear from this schematic presentation that the organizational plan for the kamer-kollegiia had no element which lacked a counterpart in the Swedish college. The Russian college was merely expanded by a fourth economic office, the so-called Livonian office. On the other hand, there are some offices mentioned in the personnel budget of the kammarkollegium which were not created as special organizational units in the Russian college. The copper office and the scales budget for Stora kopparberget were excluded, since they reflected specifically Swedish conditions without any counterparts in Russia. Nor can one find any counterpart to the war office or the militiebokskontoret in the Russian collegial system. The tasks performed by these offices were charged in the Russian administration to the krigs-kollegiia and the admiralteiskaia kollegiia.^- Here it is necessary to interject that the personnel budget of 1715 did not reflect the actual organizational situation in Sweden on this point. The militiebokskontoret was transferred to the krigskollegium in 1715 and did not appear on the personnel budget for the kammarkollegium in 1716. Instead, "O Ibid., 1. 280. The surveyors office was on the e.xtraordinary budget of the kammarkollegium. Since its inception, the surveyors office had been part of the kammarkollegium, which drew up its instructions and provided the surveyors with the various authorizations necessary to their work. Olof Bagger-Jorgensen, “Lantmäteriets organisation," in idem et al.. Svenska lantmäteriet 1628—1928 (2 v., Stockholm, 1928), I, 6—11. •- ZA (no. 420), 576.

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