Mayorry Daleiden

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The mayor's office Daleiden was one of originally 29 Prussian mayor's offices into which the district of Prüm , which was newly formed in 1816 in the administrative district of Trier, was administratively divided. From 1822 on, the Trier administrative district, including the Daleiden mayor, belonged to the Rhine province that was newly formed that year . Three municipalities were under the administration of the mayor's office . The administrative seat was in today's local community Daleiden in the Eifelkreis Bitburg-Prüm in Rhineland-Palatinate .

The mayor's office was renamed to Amt Daleiden in 1927 , which was dissolved in 1936 and merged with other offices to form the Amt Daleiden-Leidenborn , which was newly formed at the time .

Municipalities and associated localities

The following communities belonged to the mayor's office in Daleiden (as of 1843):

  • Daleiden (588 inhabitants) with the hamlets of Bommert (11), Hustrich (34) and Laarberg (10)
  • Falkenauel (94; was incorporated into Daleiden in 1885) with the hamlet of Kuhkirchhof (21) and the Burgberg house (6)
  • Reipeldingen (69)

A total of 833 people lived in 137 houses in the mayor's district in 1843. All residents were Catholic. There was a church in Daleiden and one in Reipeldingen and two chapels in Daleiden; the two schools were in Daleiden.

A statistical survey from 1885 counted 1,025 inhabitants in 197 households. Falkenauel has already been listed as a "community unit" belonging to Daleiden; in total, Daleiden consisted of 16 and Reipeldingen of 4 districts; The area of ​​the two associated municipalities totaled 2,029 hectares , of which 879 hectares were arable land, 184 hectares of meadows and 588 hectares of forest.

history

Before 1794, the villages in the administrative district of the mayor's office belonged to the Daleiden dairy in the Dasburg lordship , which was part of the Duchy of Luxembourg . In 1794 French revolutionary troops occupied the Austrian Netherlands , to which the Duchy of Luxembourg belonged, and annexed it in October 1795 . Under French administration , the area belonged to the canton of Arzfeld , which was administratively assigned to the arrondissement of Bitburg in the department of forests .

Due to the resolutions at the Congress of Vienna in 1815, the former Luxembourg area east of the Sauer and Our was assigned to the Kingdom of Prussia . Under the Prussian administration, new administrative districts and districts were formed in 1816 ; on the left bank of the Rhine, Prussia generally retained the administrative districts of the French Mairies for the time being. The Mayorry Daleiden corresponded to the previous Mairie Daleiden.

The mayorries of Arzfeld , Daleiden, Dasburg and Olmscheid were already administered by the Daleiden mayor in personal union in the second half of the 19th century, but remained independent administrative districts.

Like all rural mayor's offices in the Rhine Province , the Daleiden mayor's office was renamed "Amt Daleiden" in 1927. Finally, in 1936, the Daleiden Office was dissolved and, together with other offices, incorporated into the Daleiden-Leidenborn Office, which was newly formed at the same time .

All localities are now administratively part of the Arzfeld community in the Eifel district of Bitburg-Prüm in Rhineland-Palatinate .

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Georg Bärsch : Description of the government district of Trier , Volume 2, Trier, Lintz, 1846, p. 63 ( Google Books )
  2. a b c Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia , Volume XII Province of Rhineland, Publishing House of the Royal Statistical Bureau (ed.), 1888, p. 142 ff ( uni-koeln.de )
  3. ^ A b Otto Beck: Description of the government district of Trier , Volume 1, Trier, Lintz, 1868, p. 148 ( Google Books )
  4. ^ Georg Bärsch: Description of the government district of Trier , Volume 1, Trier, Lintz, 1849, p. 86 ( Google Books )
  5. a b District administration of the Eifelkreis Bitburg-Prüm: Administrative affiliation of the individual communities ( online PDF )
  6. Article Arzfeld on www.region-trier.de