Office Frankfurt / Oder
The Frankfurt / Oder office , usually just called Frankfurt office in contemporary literature , was a royal-Prussian (rent) office that was created in 1811 to manage the properties of the then dissolved Brandenburg University of Frankfurt around Frankfurt (Oder) . The official seat was in Frankfurt (Oder), the former official area is today in the area of the independent city of Frankfurt (Oder), the district of Oder-Spree (Brandenburg), and to a lesser extent in the Lebus Voivodeship , Poland. The Frankfurt / Oder office was dissolved in 1872/4.
history
The economic basis of the Brandenburg University in Frankfurt (Oder), which was founded in 1506, was essentially based on property or the rents from this property. It consisted of two property complexes, the property of the Carthusian monastery in Frankfurt an der Oder, which was abolished in 1540, and, since 1551, the property of the St. Nikolai Cathedral monastery in Stendal. After the dissolution of the University of Frankfurt (Oder) in 1811 and its relocation or merger with the University of Breslau, these goods fell to the Prussian king. The Frankfurt / Oder office was formed to manage the goods around Frankfurt (Oder).
- Charterhouse near Frankfurt (monastery building, no longer exists, today the stadium of friendship is on the site of the former monastery)
- Arensdorf . The place belonged from 1811 to 1821 to the Frankfurt / Oder office, from 1822 to 1872 / to the Fürstenwalde rent office.
- Briesen . The place came to the Frankfurt office in 1811 (until 1823), from 1824 it was administered by the Fürstenwalde Rent Office.
- Brieskow . The location assigned to the Frankfurt Office in 1811 was transferred to the Fürstenwalde Rent Office in 1824.
- Döbberin . The place belonged to the Frankfurt office until 1823, then from 1824 to 1839 to the Lebus office, and again to the Frankfurt office from 1839 to 1872.
- Hasenfelde . Hasenfeld belonged to the Frankfurt office until 1821 and from 1822 to the Fürstenwalde rent office.
- Jacobsdorf with Vorwerk. The place was administered by the Frankfurt office until 1823, from 1824 by the Biegen office, and from 1839 to 1872 by the Frankfurt office.
- Niederjesar with Vorwerk. Niederjesar belonged to the Frankfurt office until 1823. In 1824 the place was assigned to the Lebus office. From 1839 to 1872 it was again administered by the Frankfurt Office.
- Unterlindow (merged into Groß Lindow ). The suburb of Groß Lindow belonged to the Frankfurt office until 1823, then from 1824 to the Biegen office. From 1839 to 1872 he was again assigned to the Frankfurt office.
In 1821/23 the Frankfurt office was temporarily dissolved. In 1839 it was re-established as a pure rent office. It took over the rent and police administration of the offices in Biegen , Lebus and Neuendorf / NM .
According to the financial statistics of the royal state domains in the Frankfurt administrative district, as published by Berghaus in 1850 , the Frankfurt Rent Office managed a whole series of smaller leased properties:
- Neubrücker Forst , the Hohenwalder Pfarrwiesen, four other leased pieces and the Sandfurthsche Wiese
- three lakes near Müllrose , a patch of garden land near Müllrose
- Kornbusch and Zauchsee (silted up) near Neu Lebus / Nowy Lubusz ( Słubice , Lebus Voivodeship, Poland)
- Old Mahlisch , separated pieces from the Vorwerk there
- Frankfurt (Oder) , a meadow at Marienwinkel and the Berlachswiese belonging to the government building in Frankfurt (Oder)
- a lease at the Klixmühle (residential area of Brieskow-Finkenheerd) in the Schlaubetal
Officials
- 1818 Budee, council of war
- 1821 Buddee, war councilor and rent bailiff
- 1841 Hoffmann
- 1848 Hoffmann
- 1851 Hoffmann
- 1852 Kuhlke
- 1868 Kuhlke, domain councilor
supporting documents
literature
- Friedrich Beck, Lieselott Enders , Heinz Braun (with the assistance of Margot Beck, Barbara Merker): Authorities and institutions in the territories of Kurmark, Neumark, Niederlausitz until 1808/16. XII, Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv Corporation. Böhlau, Weimar 1964 (overview of the holdings of the Brandenburg State Main Archive Potsdam, Part 1, Series of publications: Publications of the Brandenburg State Main Archive Volume 4), ISSN 0435-5946 ; 4
- Peter P. Rohrlach: Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. Part VII Lebus. 503 p., Hermann Böhlaus successor Weimar, 1983.
- Berthold Schulze: Property and settlement history statistics of the Brandenburg authorities and cities 1540-1800. Supplement to the Brandenburg office map. (= Individual writings of the historical commission for the province of Brandenburg and the imperial capital Berlin. Volume 7). In the commission publishing house von Gsellius, Berlin 1935.
Individual evidence
- ^ Heinrich Karl Wilhelm Berghaus: Land book of the Mark Brandenburg and the Markgrafthum Nieder-Lausitz in the middle of the 19th century; or geographical-historical-statistical description of the Province of Brandenburg, at the instigation of the State Minister and Upper President Flottwell. Third volume. XCV S. + 783 S., printed and published by Adolph Müller, Brandenburg, 1856. Online at Google Books (p. 777)
- ↑ Handbook on the royal Prussian court and state for the year 1818. 459 p., Berlin, Georg Decker, 1818 (p. 199)
- ↑ Handbook on the royal Prussian court and state for the year 1821. 518 p., Berlin, Georg Decker, 1821 (p. 226)
- ↑ Handbook on the royal Prussian court and state for the year 1841. 695 p., Berlin, Georg Decker, 1841 (p. 294)
- ↑ Handbook on the royal Prussian court and state for the year 1848. 869 p., Berlin, Georg Decker, 1848 (p. 327)
- ↑ Royal Prussian State Calendar for the year 1851. 840 p., Berlin, Georg Decker, 1851 (p. 334)
- ↑ Royal Prussian State Calendar for the year 1852. 868 S., Berlin, Georg Decker, 1852 (p. 344)
- ↑ Handbook on the royal Prussian court and state for the year 1868. 963 p., Berlin, Georg Decker, 1868 (p. 416)
annotation
- ↑ This is the notation in the literature (Beck et al.).
Coordinates: 52 ° 21 ' N , 14 ° 33' E