Neuhaus Castle Office

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms is missing
Help on coat of arms
Neuhaus Castle Office
Map of Germany, position of the Neuhaus Castle office highlighted

Coordinates: 51 ° 45 '  N , 8 ° 43'  E

Basic data (as of 1974)
Existing period: 1844-1974
State : North Rhine-Westphalia
Administrative region : Detmold
Circle : PaderbornTemplate: Infobox municipality in Germany / maintenance / district does not exist
Area : 127.75 km 2
Residents: 31,844 (May 27, 1970)
Population density : 249 inhabitants per km 2
Office structure: 3 municipalities
Office administration address
:
Bielefelder Str.
1 4794 Neuhaus Castle

The Amt Schloß Neuhaus , until September 22, 1959 Amt Neuhaus , was an office of the Paderborn district in North Rhine-Westphalia , Germany with its seat in the municipality of Schloß Neuhaus .

geography

The office of Schloss Neuhaus was in the southeast of the Westphalian Bay . In the south, the office had a share in the Hellwegbörde , which is connected directly to the north by the lip lowlands . In the center of Neuhaus, the Alme and the Pader flow into the Lippe. The Senne covered most of the office in the east and north . The source of the Ems lies between Hövelhof and Stukenbrock .

Neighboring municipalities and offices

Starting in the east in a clockwise direction, the Neuhaus office bordered the city of Bad Lippspringe , the city ​​of Altenbeken , the city of Paderborn and the church of Kirchborchen (all in the Paderborn district), the Salzkotten-Boke office ( Büren district ) and the Delbrück office (Paderborn district ) ), the Verl district ( Wiedenbrück district ), the Brackwede district ( Bielefeld district ) and the Detmold district . (Based on the territorial status of 1950.)

Office structure

(Area and resident population as of 1950, administrative seat *):
Neuhaus district: 167.01 km², 27,223 E

  1. Neuhaus *: 26.35 km², 10,107 E
  2. Elsen : 20.08 km², 4,825 E.
  3. Hövelhof : 55.50 km², 5,584 E
  4. Sands : 22.41 km², 2,147 E
  5. Stukenbrock : 42.67 km², 4,560 E

history

Former administrative office, today an administrative branch of the Paderborn city administration

Already in the time of the Principality of Paderborn (until 1802/03) Neuhaus was the seat of an office and the upper office (responsible for the kitchen / office Neuhaus, office Boke and the office Delbrück ). As the residence of the Prince-Bishop, Neuhaus was in a special position in the administration.

In 1844, as part of the introduction of the rural community order for the province of Westphalia in the Paderborn district, the Neuhaus office was established. The office initially included the three communities Elsen, Neuhaus and Sande. In 1895 the two communities Hövelhof and Stukenbrock were added from the Delbrück office .

In September 1957, after the celebration of its 700th anniversary, the Neuhaus community was given the addition of a castle , which also changed the name of the office to Amt Schloß Neuhaus .

1970 Stukenbrock concluded by Schloss Holte and transmission from the Office Verl , Kreis Wiedenbrück , the new municipality Schloss Holte-Stukenbrock together and came to a temporary circle Bielefeld , from 1973 to Gütersloh . In 1969, the municipality of Sande also joined the municipality of Neuhaus Castle.

On January 1, 1975 the Sauerland / Paderborn law came into force, whereby the old Paderborn district was merged with almost the entire area of the Büren district to form the new Paderborn district and all offices were dissolved. Hövelhof was expanded to include parts of the Ostenland municipality from the Delbrück office, while Neuhaus and Elsen Castle were incorporated into Paderborn. The legal successor to the office of Schloss Neuhaus is the city of Paderborn.

Individual evidence

  1. Decision of the state government of September 23, 1959, published in the Ministerialblatt NRW 1959, p. 2638, document of October 14, 1959 according to the notification of the Paderborn city archives of January 4, 2011
  2. Landgemeinde -ordnung for the Province of Westphalia from October 31, 1841 (PDF; 1.6 MB)
  3. ^ Official Journal of the Minden Government 1844: Formation of the Neuhaus Office. Retrieved March 3, 2014 .
  4. ^ Wolfgang Leesch: Administration in Westphalia 1815-1945 . In: Publications of the Historical Commission for Westphalia . tape 38 . Aschendorff, Münster 1992, ISBN 3-402-06845-1 .