Mayor's office Neustadt (Wied)

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Border stone from 1680:
at that time it marked the border between the parishes of Erpel , Neustadt and Linz , in Prussian times between the mayor's offices of Unkel, Neustadt and Linz, today between the local communities Erpel and Vettelschoss and the city of Linz

The mayor Neustadt , formal "mayoralty Neustadt-Wied," was one of first ten Prussian mayors , the formed in 1816 in the district of Neuwied in the administrative district of Coblenz was divided originally administratively. Six communities and around 75 villages, hamlets, individual farms and mills belonged to the mayor's office. The administrative seat of the mayor's office was in the Kirchdorf Neustadt . Until 1848 the mayor's office belonged to the marital area in the Neuwied district.

The mayor's office was renamed Amt Neustadt in 1927 .

The eponymous church village Neustadt was part of the municipality of Bertenau, which was renamed the municipality of Neustadt in 1953. On January 1, 1969, the old parish of Neustadt was dissolved and the current local parish of Neustadt (Wied) was re-formed from it and the communities of Bühlingen , Elsaffhal and Rahms, which were also dissolved .

Municipalities and localities

Bertenau

The municipality of Bertenau belonged to the Neustadt mayor's office from 1817, initially as a tribute . The community was renamed "Neustadt" in 1953, dissolved on January 1, 1969 and the villages with a total of 2090 inhabitants were assigned to the current local community of Neustadt (Wied).

  • Old people's hut
  • Bertenau
  • Borscheid
  • Dasbach
  • Eilenberg
  • Fernthal
  • Funkenhausen
  • Grübelsberg
  • Grübelshof
  • Hombach
  • Hombachsmühle
  • Jungfernhof
  • Manroth
  • Mettelshahn
  • Neschen
  • Neschermühle
  • Neustadt
  • Stone courtyard
  • Telegraph

Bühlingen

The community of Bühlingen belonged as a sonship from 1817 to 1823 to the mayor's office Altenwied and was assigned to the mayor's office of Neustadt after its dissolution. On January 1, 1969, this community was dissolved and the villages with a total of 915 inhabitants were assigned to today's local community Neustadt (Wied).

  • Fractions
  • Bühlingen
  • Ehrenberg
  • Etscheid
  • Hammerhof
  • Krummenau
  • Niederetscheid
  • Oberetscheid
  • Oligswiese
  • Prangenberg
  • Ruddel
  • Thalhof
  • Vogtslag
  • Voltheim
  • Wasemsfeld
  • Weierau

Elsaffhal

From 1817 to 1823, the municipality of Elsnahmhal belonged to the Altenwied mayor's office and was assigned to the Neustadt mayor's office after its dissolution. On January 1, 1969, this community was dissolved and the localities with a total of 802 inhabitants assigned to today's local community Neustadt (Wied).

  • Steeg
  • Lower Elsa
  • Wahrenberg
  • Wied
  • Wiedmühle
  • Wölsreeg

Lorscheid

From 1817 to 1823, the municipality of Lorscheid initially belonged to the Altenwied mayor's office and was assigned to the Neustadt mayor's office after its dissolution. On June 7, 1969, this community was dissolved and the villages with a total of 1095 inhabitants were assigned to today's local community of St. Katharinen .

  • Anxbach
  • Brochenbach
  • Hinterlorscheid
  • Homscheid
  • Cross

Creams

The Rahms community belonged to the Neustadt mayor's office from 1817, initially as a tribute . On January 1, 1969, this community was dissolved and the villages with a total of 999 inhabitants were assigned to today's local community Neustadt (Wied).

  • Ammerich
  • Gerhardshahn
  • Hop down
  • Oberhoppen
  • Paffhausen
  • Panau
  • Creams
  • Scharenberg
  • Oath
  • Weissenfels

Vettelschoss

The municipality of Vettelschoss belonged as "Honnschaft Lorscheid II" from 1817 to 1823 to the Altenwied mayor's office and was assigned to the Neustadt mayor's office after its dissolution. Since 1970 the local community Vettelschoss belongs to the Verbandsgemeinde Linz am Rhein .

history

Starting position

The Neustadt mayor's office was created together with the Altenwied and Asbach mayor 's offices after 1815 from the Altenwied administrative office in Cologne, which had existed since the middle of the 13th century .

The rule of Kurköln ended in 1803 with the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss . The area of ​​the Altenwied office was initially assigned to the Principality of Wied-Runkel , became part of the Duchy of Nassau in 1806 due to the Rhine Confederation Act and, after the Congress of Vienna in 1815, to the Kingdom of Prussia .

With regard to local administration, the Prussian government took over the existing structures, which, however, differed in details due to the different previous rule relationships. In the area of ​​the mayor's offices Altenwied, Asbach and Neustadt, honnships as an early form of communities had already formed in the Middle Ages . The term "Honnschaft" was retained for the time being. It was not until the municipal regulations for the Rhine Province of July 23, 1845 that the uniform designation “ municipality ” was regulated .

Changes

The mayor's office of Neustadt initially included the Bertenau, Rahms and Schöneberg communities . The place Neustadt as a church village originally belonged to the Honnschaft Bertenau. Due to the dissolution of the mayor's office Altenwied in 1823, the honors Bühlingen, Elsaff im Thal and Lohrscheid were assigned to the mayor's office Neustadt, while Schöneberg was transferred to the mayor's office Asbach.

Neustadt Office

The Neustadt mayor's office, like all the mayor's offices in the Rhine Province , was renamed "Amt Neustadt" on December 27, 1927 due to the Prussian law regulating various points of the municipal constitutional law .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia , Publishing House of the Royal Statistical Bureau (ed.), 1888, p. 38 ff.
  2. Address book for the district of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Coblenz Düsseldorf: Lindner-Verlag (Ed.), 1926, p. XXXII
  3. a b c d e f Official municipality directory 2006 ( Memento from December 22, 2017 in the Internet Archive ) (= Statistisches Landesamt Rheinland-Pfalz [Hrsg.]: Statistische Bände . Volume 393 ). Bad Ems March 2006, p. 189, 195 (PDF; 2.6 MB). Info: An up-to-date directory ( 2016 ) is available, but in the section "Territorial changes - Territorial administrative reform" it does not give any population figures.  
  4. a b c d e f g h local community Asbach (ed.): Asbach / Westerwald. Pictures and reports from the last 200 years ; 1990, p. 44 ff.
  5. ^ Nassauische Annalen: Jahrbuch des Verein für Nassauische Altertumskunde und Geschichtsforschung, Volume 9-10 , 1868, p. 305.