Office Werder

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coat of arms Germany map
The Werder office does not have a coat of arms
Office Werder
Map of Germany, position of the Werder office highlighted

Coordinates: 52 ° 22 '  N , 12 ° 56'  E

Basic data (as of 2003)
Existing period: 1992-2003
State : Brandenburg
County : Potsdam-Mittelmark
Residents: 4396 (Dec. 31, 2002)
Office structure: 3 municipalities
Office administration address
:
Eisenbahnstraße 13-14
14542 Werder (Havel)
Template: Infobox community association in Germany / maintenance / coat of arms

The Werder office was an office in Brandenburg formed in 1992 , in which eight municipalities in what was then the Potsdam-Land district (now the Potsdam-Mittelmark district , Brandenburg) were combined to form an administrative community. The official seat was the officially free city of Werder (Havel) . The Werder office was dissolved again in 2003. At the end of 2000 it had 9187 inhabitants and after the incorporation of some municipalities into the city of Werder (Havel) at the end of 2002 (with 3 municipalities) still 4396 inhabitants.

Geographical location

The Werder office was in the northeast of what is now the Potsdam-Mittelmark district. It bordered in the north on the Ketzin office and the state capital Potsdam , in the east on Potsdam and the Schwielowsee office, in the southeast and south also on the Schwielowsee office and for a short distance on the Beelitz office , and in the west on the Lehnin and Groß Kreutz offices .

history

On July 20, 1992, the Minister of the Interior of the State of Brandenburg gave his consent to the formation of the Werder office. July 31, 1992 was set as the date of establishment of the office. The office had its seat in the non-official city of Werder (Havel). It initially consisted of eight communities in what was then Potsdam-Land :

  1. Bliesendorf
  2. Glindow
  3. pit
  4. Golm
  5. Kemnitz
  6. Phoebas
  7. Roach
  8. Töplitz

The listing of the city of Werder in the announcement of the Minister of the Interior of July 20, 1992 (Official Gazette for Brandenburg) is certainly a mistake, because the city of Werder, although the seat of the Werder office, remained vacant. At the time it was founded, the Werder office had 7,368 inhabitants.

The community of Grube was already on the 5th / 6th December 1993 incorporated into the city of Potsdam and left office.

Most of the municipalities of the office were gradually incorporated into the city of Werder (Havel). The community of Bliesendorf was incorporated on December 31, 1998. Plötzin followed on December 31, 2000. As of December 31, 2001, Glindow , Kemnitz and Phöben were incorporated.

On October 26, 2003, the municipality of Töplitz was incorporated into the city of Werder (Havel). At the same time the municipality of Golm was incorporated into the state capital Potsdam by law, and the Werder office was dissolved. Also on October 26, 2003, the Derwitz community of the Groß Kreutz office was incorporated into the city of Werder (Havel).

Office Director

The Werder office was created according to the so-called office model 3, the official business of the municipalities belonging to the office was carried out by the administration of the city of Werder (Havel). The mayor of the city was also the official director of the Werder office. The first and only official director was Werner Große, who became mayor of Werder (Havel) in 1989.

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Contribution to the statistics of the State Office for Data Processing and Statistics. Historical municipality register of the State of Brandenburg 1875 to 2005 November 19, district of Potsdam-Mittelmark PDF
  2. Formation of the offices of Nordwestuckermark, Kremmen, Spreenhagen, Oder-Welse, Prenzlau-Land, Am Senftenberger See, Schipkau and Werder. Announcement of the Minister of the Interior of July 20, 1992. Official Gazette for Brandenburg - Joint Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, Volume 3, Number 58, August 12, 1992, pp. 1015–7.
  3. Landtag Brandenburg Drucksache 3/4882 3rd electoral period draft law of the state government. Third law on state-wide municipal area reform PDF
  4. Incorporation of the Bliesendorf community into the city of Werder (Havel). Announcement of the Ministry of the Interior of December 22, 1998. Official Gazette for Brandenburg - Joint Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, Volume 10, Number 5, February 9, 1999, p. 70.
  5. Incorporation of the community of Plötzin into the city of Werder (Havel). Announcement of the Ministry of the Interior of December 12, 2000. Official Gazette for Brandenburg Common Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, Volume 12, 2001, Number 2, Potsdam, January 10, 2001, p. 43, PDF .
  6. ^ Incorporation of the communities Glindow, Kemnitz and Phöben into the city of Werder (Havel). Communication from the Ministry of the Interior of December 14, 2001. Official Gazette for Brandenburg - Joint Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, Volume 12, 2001, Number 52, Potsdam, December 27, 2001, p. 901, PDF .
  7. Incorporation of the municipality of Töplitz into the city of Werder (Havel). Announcement of the Ministry of the Interior of April 30, 2002. Official Gazette for Brandenburg - Joint Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, Volume 13, 2002, Number 22, Potsdam, May 29, 2002, p. 561, PDF .
  8. Fourth law on the state-wide municipal area reform concerning the districts Havelland, Potsdam-Mittelmark, Teltow-Fläming (4th GemGebRefGBbg) of March 24, 2003 . Law and Ordinance Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, I (Laws), 2003, No. 05, p. 73.
  9. ^ Incorporation of the Derwitz community into the city of Werder (Havel). Announcement of the Ministry of the Interior of February 20, 2003. Official Gazette for Brandenburg Common Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, Volume 14, 2003, Number 9, Potsdam, March 5, 2003, p. 275, PDF .
  10. Mayor Werner Große turns 60 today - How four of his companions congratulate , Potsdamer Latest News from November 9, 2009.

annotation

  1. The office was only called Werder, in contrast to the city of Werder (Havel)