Office Hunnesrück

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Hildesheim Monastery
Office Hunnesrück
main place The same
founding 1310
resolution 1859
Incorporated into Office Einbeck
Cities 1

The Hunnesrück Office was a historical administrative area of ​​the Hildesheim Monastery and the Kingdom of Hanover .

history

The Hildesheim bishop Siegfried II bought the Hunnesrück Castle and the surrounding villages in 1310 . He had the area that emerged from the former county of Dassel administered from this castle by magistrates. After the Hildesheim Monastery had to hand this area over to the Principality of Calenberg in 1523 , the area was henceforth administered in the Erichsburg office. In 1643 the area came back to the Hildesheim Monastery. It was now an exclave 25 kilometers away from the nearest office of Winzenburg . With the exception of the office of Hunnesrück in the extreme southwest of its territory, there was only one contiguous national territory in the prince-bishopric of Hildesheim after 1643. Since then, the administration has no longer taken place in the now demolished Hunnesrück Castle, but in newly constructed administration buildings in the village of Hunnesrück . The area belonged to the canton of Dassel under Westphalian rule from 1807 to 1813 . In 1817 the Hunnesrück Office was merged with the neighboring Erichsburg Office and finally incorporated into the Einbeck Office in 1859 .

Communities

The following localities belonged to the Hunnesrück Office:

Drosten and bailiffs

Drosten

  • 1649–1675: Arnold Friedrich von Landsberg, Drost
  • 1675–1694: Arnold von Bilandt, Drost
  • 1694–1732: Jobst Edmund von Brabeck, Drost
  • 1733–1754: Engelbert Ignaz Arnold von Bocholtz, Drost
  • 1754–1769: Johann Georg Raban Gottlob von Hörde, Drost
  • 1769–1777: Johann Ferdinand Graf von Plettenberg, Drost
  • 1777–1802: Clemens August Freiherr (1792 Count) von Westphalen , Drost

Bailiffs

  • 1694–1699: Andreas Probst
  • 1728–1740: Ignaz Christopherus Schlanstein
  • 1741–1758: Franz Anton Müller
  • 1758-1770: Edmund Müller
  • 1770: Franz A. Sironval
  • 1770–1779: Joachim Franz Graen
  • 1779–1797: Philipp Anton Flöckher
  • 1797–1802: Edmund Osthaus

literature

  • Johann Ernst Fabri: Geography for all classes: First Part Fifth Volume, 1808, p. 703
  • Iselin Gundermann , Walther Hubatsch : Outline of the German administrative history 1815-1945 . Row A: Prussia, Volume 10: Hanover. Marburg (Lahn) 1981
  • Thomas Klingbiel: A stand of its own? Local officials in the early modern period: Studies on state formation and social development in the Hildesheim Monastery and in the older Principality of Wolfenbüttel . Hannover 2002, pp. 654-661
  • Heinrich D. Sonne: Description of the Kingdom of Hanover . Volume 4. 1830, p. 64. ISBN 978-1179-5818-66