Coppenbrügge Office

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Coppenbrügge office was a historical administrative area of ​​the Kingdom of Hanover with its seat in Coppenbrügge .

history

The former official building (now a museum)

The Coppenbrügge office was formed from the municipalities of the former county of Spiegelberg , which was only sold to the Kingdom of Hanover by the House of Orange-Nassau in 1819 . Initially it only comprised the six originally Spiegelberg villages, but during the administrative reform of 1852 it was replaced by parts of the neighboring offices of Lauenstein (Ahrenfeld, Benstorf, Dörpe, Esbeck, Hemmendorf, Marienau, Oldendorf, Osterwald, Quanthof and Sehlde) and Springe (Bäntorf, Behrensen , Diedersen) considerably enlarged. In 1853 Esbeck , 1855 Ahrenfeld , Benstorf , Hemmendorf , Oldendorf and Quanthof were reclassified into the Lauenstein office. Sehlde came to the office of Elze in 1853 . In 1859 the Coppenbrügge office was abolished and merged with the Lauenstein office, but without the villages of Behrensen and Diedersen, which fell under the Hameln office.

Communities

When the office was abolished (1859) it consisted of the following municipalities:

Bailiffs

  • Anton Cleve
  • 1820–1835: Carl Anton Terlinden, Counselor
  • 1836–1843: Georg Ludwig von Torney , official assessor
  • 1844–1859: Carl Theodor Friedrich Wilhelm Schwarz, official assessor

literature

  • Iselin Gundermann , Walther Hubatsch : Outline of the German administrative history 1815-1945 . Row A: Prussia, Volume 10: Hanover. Marburg (Lahn) 1981
  • Manfred Hamann : Overview of the holdings of the Lower Saxony Main State Archives in Hanover. Third volume: Central and subordinate authorities in the Landdrostei and administrative districts of Hanover, Hildesheim and Lüneburg until 1945. Göttingen 1983, pp. 315–318.