Isenhagen office

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The Isenhagen office was a historical administrative area of ​​the Principality of Lüneburg , later of the Kingdom of Hanover and the Prussian Province of Hanover .

history

The administrative district emerged from the possession of the Cistercian convent of Isenhagen , which was added to the Reformation in 1528 and later converted into an aristocratic convent , whose property was transferred to the state. The former provost's office has been administered as a monastery office by a ducal official since 1529. At first only the monastery and the parish of Isenhagen were subordinate to him . The rest of the monastery property was divided into six offices. In 1799, the Gografschaft Hankensbüttel , which had previously belonged to the Gifhorn office , and the Steinhorst bailiwick were incorporated into the Isenhagen office. In 1852 it was expanded to include the Bailiwick of Wahrenholz (previously the Knesebeck office ). During the administrative reform of 1859, the entire Knesebeck office, including the former Brome and Fahrenhorst courts, was attached to the Isenhagen office. Since 1867 the offices of Isenhagen, Fallersleben , Gifhorn and Meinersen as well as the non-governmental city of Gifhorn have formed the (tax) district of Gifhorn. In 1885 the office was introduced into the district constitution .

scope

The Isenhagen office comprised the following municipalities when it was abolished in 1885:

(*) From the former Knesebeck office

Bailiffs

  • 1818–1839: Carl Christian Ulrich Schwarz, bailiff, senior bailiff
  • (1840) 1841–1842: Georg Alfred Heyne, bailiff
  • 1842–1859: Ernst August Schulze, bailiff, from 1853 senior bailiff
  • 1860: Rudolph Schepler , bailiff
  • (1863) 1865–1868: Ernst Georg Heinrich Otto Albert, bailiff
  • 1868–1870: Wilhelm Hammer, bailiff
  • 1871–1884: Ernst Heinrich Friedrich Hermann Sudendorf, 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, pp. 307–311.