Friedland Office (Niederlausitz)

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The Friedland (Niederlausitz) office does not have a coat of arms
Friedland Office (Niederlausitz)
Map of Germany, position of the Friedland (Niederlausitz) office highlighted

Coordinates: 52 ° 6 ′  N , 14 ° 16 ′  E

Basic data (as of 2003)
Existing period: 1992-2003
State : Brandenburg
County : Oder-Spree
Area : 172.95 km 2
Residents: 3409 (Dec. 31, 2002)
Population density : 20 inhabitants per km 2
Office structure: 2 municipalities
Office administration address
:
Lindenstrasse 13
15848 Friedland
Template: Infobox community association in Germany / maintenance / coat of arms

The Friedland (Niederlausitz) office , originally also Friedland / Niederlausitz office , was a Brandenburg office formed in 1992 in which 16 communities in the then Beeskow district (now the Oder-Spree district , Brandenburg ) had merged to form an administrative association. The seat of the official administration was in the city of Friedland . The Friedland (Niederlausitz) office was dissolved again in 2003. At the end of 2002 it had 3,409 inhabitants in the last two municipalities that were part of the government.

Geographical location

The Friedland (Niederlausitz) office was in what was then the Beeskow district and bordered the city of Beeskow to the north, the Schlaubetal office to the east, the Schenkendöbern office (then Guben district ) in the southeast, the Lieberose office to the south and the Tauche / Trebatsch Office ( called Tauche Office from 1994 ).

history

On September 11, 1992, the Minister of the Interior of the State of Brandenburg gave his consent to the formation of the Friedland / Niederlausitz Office according to Office Model 2, i.e. H. the office used the administration of a municipality or city belonging to the office to carry out its official tasks. September 15, 1992 was set as the date of establishment of the office. The approval was initially limited to September 15, 1994. The office had its seat in the city of Friedland and consisted of 16 communities in what was then the district of Beeskow (in the order in which they were named in the official gazette):

  1. Great Muckrow
  2. Leißnitz
  3. Weichensdorf
  4. Great Briesen
  5. Günthersdorf
  6. Niewisch
  7. Pieskow
  8. Kummerow
  9. Zeust
  10. Reudnitz
  11. Schadow
  12. Little Muckrow
  13. Chossewitz
  14. Lindow
  15. Karras
  16. City of Friedland

The time limit was lifted from August 25, 1994. Since about 1998 the spelling Amt Friedland (Niederlausitz) prevailed.

With effect from March 31, 2001, the Ministry of the Interior of the State of Brandenburg had the formation of a new city Friedland from the communities Chossewitz, Groß-Briesen, Günthersdorf, Karras, Klein Muckrow, Kummerow, Leißnitz, Lindow, Niewisch, Pieskow, Schadow, Weichensdorf, Zeust and the city of Friedland approved. The changed office Friedland (Niederlausitz) only consisted of the following municipalities: Friedland, Groß Muckrow and Reudnitz. On December 31, 2001, the municipality of Reudnitz was also incorporated into the city of Friedland, so that only two official municipalities remained, the city of Friedland and the municipality of Groß Muckrow. On October 26, 2003, the community of Groß Muckrow was incorporated into the city of Friedland by law. The Friedland (Niederlausitz) office was dissolved, the city of Friedland free of office.

Office Director

The first and last official director was the former mayor of Friedland, Manfred Krüger. After the office was dissolved, he was re-elected mayor of the core town of Friedland.

supporting documents

  1. Contribution to statistics. State Office for Data Processing State of Brandenburg Statistics. Historical municipality register of the state of Brandenburg 1875 to 2005 19.9 District Oder-Spree PDF
  2. Formation of the offices of Friedland / Niederlausitz and Hoppegarten. Announcement by the Minister of the Interior of September 11, 1992. Official Gazette for Brandenburg - Joint Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, Volume 3, No. 75, October 5, 1992, p. 1869.
  3. Abolition of fixed-term offices. Announcement of the Minister of the Interior of September 20, 1994. Official Gazette for Brandenburg - Joint Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, Volume 5, Number 71, October 7, 1994, p. 1446.
  4. First ordinance on the repeal of externally administered areas in the state of Brandenburg (First External Administration Repeal Ordinance - 1. FremdverwAufhV)
  5. ^ Formation of a new city Friedland. Announcement of the Ministry of the Interior of February 13, 2001. Official Gazette for Brandenburg Common Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, Volume 12, 2001, Number 11, March 14, 2001, p. 225.
  6. ^ Change of office in Friedland (Niederlausitz). Communication from the Ministry of the Interior of April 30, 2001. Official Gazette for Brandenburg Common Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, Volume 12, 2001, Number 22, Potsdam, May 30, 2001, p. 390 PDF
  7. ^ Incorporation of the Reudnitz community into the city of Friedland. Announcement of the Ministry of the Interior of November 23, 2001. Official Gazette for Brandenburg Common Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, Volume 12, 2001, Number 51, December 19, 2001, p. 878.
  8. Sixth law on state-wide municipal reform concerning the districts of Dahme-Spreewald, Elbe-Elster, Oberspreewald-Lausitz, Oder-Spree and Spree-Neiße (6th GemGebRefGBbg) of March 24, 2003, Law and Ordinance Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, I ( Laws), 2003, No. 05, p. 93
  9. Official Gazette for the Oder-Spree district, Volume 10, No. 8, from November 3, 2003 PDF ( Memento of the original from January 20, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.landkreis-oder-spree.de