Ehrenburg Office
The Ehrenburg office was a historical administrative area of the County of Hoya , later of the Principality of Calenberg and the Kingdom of Hanover .
history
The office goes back to the frontier castle Ehrenburg , which was occupied for the first time in 1346 , and gained a considerable size due to the internal colonization of the early modern period. From 1706 it also took over the administration of the neighboring Barenburg office . In 1823 both offices were merged to form the Ehrenburg-Barenburg office (again referred to as the Ehrenburg office from 1852). In the course of the administrative reform of 1852, the office transferred the communities of Barenburg , Dörrieloh , Groß and Klein Lessen , Lindern , Nordsulingen , Rathlosen , Ströhen , Sulingen , Varrel and Wehrbleck to the office of Sulingen and a courtyard of the village of Wedehorn , which otherwise belongs to the office of Freudenberg Office Freudenberg. In 1859 the Ehrenburg office was abolished and its parishes were divided between the Sulingen and Freudenberg offices .
scope
When it was abolished in 1859, the office comprised the following municipalities:
(*) to the office of Sulingen; (**) to the Freudenberg Office
Bailiffs
- 1816–1833: Heinrich Conrad von Hinüber, bailiff, from 1833 senior bailiff
- 1835–1841: Heinrich Ferdinand Frank, bailiff
- 1842–1859: Harry von Trampe , assessor, from 1849 bailiff
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, p. 398f.