Ahrensbök Office

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Memorial stone at the court of the Ahrensbök office

The office of Ahrensbök was an administrative district of the Duchy of Schleswig-Holstein-Plön , then the Duchy of Holstein and finally the Principality of Lübeck . Today it belongs to the Ostholstein district in Schleswig-Holstein .

history

The Ahrensbök office was created in the 16th century through the secularization of the Ahrensbök monastery properties . From 1622 it was part of the Duchy of Schleswig-Holstein-Plön and was administered together with the Office of Plön .

In 1761 the Duchy of Schleswig-Holstein-Plön went to the Danish King after the sidelines had died out and became part of the Duchy of Holstein.

In 1842, with the Treaty of Plön, the Holstein share in Gleschendorf , Fassensdorf , the village of Garkau , Gothendorf , the Holstein share in Ratekau (including the Feldstein Church in Ratekau and the pastorate ) and the Holstein share in Schürsdorf and Schulendorf fell to the Principality Lübeck.

As a result of the German-Danish War with the Gastein Convention of August 1865 , Holstein and the remaining office of Ahrensbök were annexed initially briefly by Austria and then after the German War and the Peace of Prague in August 1866 by Prussia . On June 19, 1867, the Ahrensbök office (excluding Travenhorst ) went to the Oldenburg Principality of Lübeck as a result of the Kiel Treaty concluded on February 23, 1867, to compensate for the Oldenburg rights to Schleswig-Holstein . The Ahrensbök office now linked the two parts of the Principality of Lübeck (Eutin and Schwartau). It comprised the communities: Flecken Ahrensbök , rural community Ahrensbök, community Gnissau , community Curau , community Süsel . In 1867 the Ahrensbök office was given the Ahrensbök district court.

In 1879 the offices in the Principality of Lübeck were dissolved in favor of the Eutin district , with jurisdiction being transferred to the local courts due to the Reich Justice Acts. This resulted in the division of the area into the spots and the rural community of Ahrensbök .

literature

  • Ernst-Günther Prühs: The administration of the office Ahrensbök 1848/49 - in: Yearbook for local history, Eutin 1997 (p. 51–54)
  • Gustav Peters: Das Amt Ahrensbök 1735 - in: Jahrbuch für Heimatkunde, Eutin 1968 (p. 62–64)
  • Otto Rönnpag: How four Baltic seaside resorts came to the North Sealand Oldenburg - in: Yearbook for local history 1987 (p. 74–78)
  • Walter Körber - Churches in Vicelins Land; Eutin 1977

Web links