Reinhausen Office

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Old office building in Reinhausen

The Reinhausen office was a historical administrative area of ​​the Principality of Göttingen , later of the Kingdom of Hanover and the Prussian Province of Hanover . From 1823 the Landdrostei Hildesheim was the higher administrative level .

history

The core of the official district goes back to the possession of the Reinhausen monastery , which was added to the Reformation in 1543 , whose lands have been administered by lordly bailiffs since 1587. The area of ​​the office included only three villages (Reinhausen, Ischenrode, Lichtenhagen). It was restored after the Westphalian rule and expanded to include the village of Diemarden (from the Friedland department ), which previously belonged to the Hilwartshausen monastery , in 1816 by the Niedeck department, which had been administered jointly with Reinhausen since 1777, and by the Neuengleichen department in 1825 . After Count von Goertz-Wrisberg renounced his jurisdiction, the Garte court with the villages of Beienrode, Bischhausen, Kerstlingerode, Rittmarshausen and Weißenborn came to the Reinhausen office. In 1852 the former Neuengleichen office was separated and added to the Radolfshausen office . To this end, the Reinhausen office was expanded to include the villages of Bremke, Gelliehausen and Wöllmarshausen of the repealed patrimonial Altenleichen . In 1859 the Friedland office was incorporated into the Reinhausen office. During the administrative reform of 1885 the office was dissolved.

Communities

When it was dissolved in 1885, the Reinhausen Office comprised the following communities:

(*) From the former Friedland office; (**) from the Duderstadt office ; (+) from the Radolfshausen office .

Bailiffs

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. 383–387.

Web links

References and comments

  1. During his tenure there was a reversal; the Reinhausen office was co-administered by him as an official in Niedeck. Wolfgang Ollrog: The residents of the castle and the Niedeck court yard over the centuries in: Göttinger Jahrbuch Volume 1963, p. 174