Office Schladen

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The Schladen office was a historical administrative area of ​​the Principality of Hildesheim and the Kingdom of Hanover .

history

The Schladen Office goes back to the eponymous Stiftshildesheim castle northeast of Goslar . Besides the official seat, his district comprised only five parishes. In the 17th and 18th centuries, it was temporarily leased to the Schorlemer family. After the Prussian (from 1802) and Franco-Westphalian rule (from 1807) it was restituted in 1815 and expanded to include the rights of the monasteries Dorstadt and Heiningen , while the town of Ohlendorf left the official area. In 1831 the office was combined with the office of Vienenburg to form the new office of Wöltingerode .

Communities

The following table lists all municipalities that belonged to the Schladen office up to 1802 and their municipality membership today. Column 2 shows the number of all households in 1760, namely vacant houses, full courtyards, Halbspännerhöfe, Viertelspännerhöfe, Großköthnerhöfe, Kleinköthnerhöfe and Brinksitzer combined (each listed individually in the original). In column 3, the number of inhabitants in 1910 is recorded for comparison, in column 4 the current municipality affiliation.

Old church households 1910 today annotation
Burgdorf 73 819 Schladen-Werla since 1958: Werlaburgdorf
Gielde 56 602 Schladen-Werla
Neuenkirchen 33 226 Liebenburg in the original: Nienkerken
Ohlendorf 36 476 Salzgitter northern exclave
Ohrum 30th 509 Integrated municipality Oderwald northern exclave
Schladen 110 2,592 Schladen-Werla with sheep farm and office building

Drosten and bailiffs

Drosten

  • 1629/34: Gottfried Heister
  • 1636/43: Engelhard Joachim von Rintorff
  • 1689–1709: Franz Wilhelm von Schorlemer
  • 1715–1766: Werner von Schorlemer
  • 1768–1802: Theodor Werner von Bocholtz

Bailiffs

  • 1630–1631: Heinrich Körner
  • 1636/42: Jakob Bucholtz
  • 1642–1643: Gottfried Heister
  • 1643–1644: Ernst Schnur
  • 1644–1667: Christian Kessel
  • 1667–1675: Bernhard Thomas
  • 1676–1711: Johann Suitbert Schöler
  • 1711–1749: Josef Ludwig Busch
  • 1749–1782: Franz Arnold Ludwig Busch
  • 1782–1792: Gottlob Friedrich Klenze
  • 1793–1800: Franz Ferdinand Wippern
  • 1815–1816: Wiesen, 1st civil servant (interim)
  • 1816–1818: Benedix von der Betten, Drost
  • 1819–1820: Joseph Graem, representative of the 1st official
  • 1820–1831: Johann Otto Friedrich Wilhelm Meister, assessor, from 1828 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, p. 425f.
  • 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. 694-697

Individual evidence

  1. Houses, preambles and appraisals castratum from Hildesheim Monastery, written around 1760. In: Magazine for the new history and geography, created by Anton Friedrich Büsching, Halle 1783: p. 475-525. Retrieved July 18, 2020 .
  2. ^ Districts in the province of Hanover as of January 1, 1945. In: territorial.de. Retrieved July 18, 2020 .
  3. ^ Ulrich Schubert: Community directory Germany 1900 - Goslar district. Information from December 1, 1910. In: gemeindeververzeichnis.de. February 3, 2019, accessed July 17, 2020 .
  4. Michael Rademacher: Prussian Province Hanover, Hildesheim District. Retrieved July 18, 2020 .