Lesum District Court

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Coat of arms stone on the former courthouse, modeled on the coat of arms of the patrimonial court of the Börde Lesum

The Lesum District Court was an ordinary court in Lesum .

history

After the revolution of 1848 was the Kingdom of Hanover , the jurisdiction of the administration separated and the patrimonial abolished. The district court was then founded with the ordinance of August 7, 1852 regarding the formation of the district courts and lower administrative authorities as a royal Hanover district court. It included the office of Lesum . The district court was subordinate to the higher court in Verden . It was repealed in 1859 and its judicial district was assigned to that of the Blumenthal District Court . The court continued to function locally as the "Lesum Division". In 1875, the community built a district magistrate's house on the opposite side of the street from the court.

As a result of the annexation of the Kingdom of Hanover by the Kingdom of Prussia, Prussian law came into force in 1866. As a result of the judicial reform, the Lesum District Court was made independent again in 1879. The judicial district comprised the districts of Aumund (without Lobbendorf), Borchshöhe, Brundorf, Burgdamm, Eggestedt, Erve, Friedrichsdorf, Grohn, Holthorst, Lesum, Lesumstotel, Leuchtenburg, Löhnhorst, Neuschönebeck, Platjenwerbe, St. Magnus, Schönebeck, Staumendorf, Stubben, Voraumund and Wollah.

With the fourth ordinance on the rebuilding of the Reich of September 28, 1939, a large part of the judicial district was incorporated into the state of Bremen on November 1, 1939. As a result, the district court of Lesum was repealed on January 1, 1943 by the decree on the change of judicial districts of October 9, 1942 and the judicial district was assigned to the district courts of Bremen and Blumenthal (Bremen) or Osterholz (Prussia), depending on the state to which it belonged.

Lesum District Court from 1854

Courthouse

In 1854 the judicial administration built the district court building for 9,622 thalers on the Chaussee, which was expanded in 1830/32 (today Hindenburgstrasse 32). The red brick building had semicircular windows and a flat tent roof. Four prison cells were built next to the courtrooms.

In the years 1912 to 1915, a new building was built north of the old district court and then the two buildings were connected by a lower central building. Today the building is used as a police station.

Magistrate

  • Wilhelm Adickes (1854-1894) (the father of Franz Adickes and Erich Adickes )
  • District Court Judge Dietrich Bernhard (1895–1925)
  • FW Regeniter (1925–1939)

In 1912 a second magistrate's post was set up, which was only occupied until 1926. Judge Bernhard received the supervision. The judges Pommy and Rohbach are named as job holders.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Law on the court constitution of November 8, 1850 ( Collection of Laws for the Kingdom of Hanover, p. 207 )
  2. Hanoverian legislation on state and municipal administration, 1852, pp. 32, 67, online
  3. Directory of the higher courts, annex to the ordinance for the implementation of §§ 14,15 and 35 of the law on the court constitution of November 8, 1850 of August 7, 1852, printed in: Gerhard Adolf Wilhelm Leonhardt: Die Justizgesetzgebung des Kingdom of Hanover: under special Consideration of government and class motives for practical use. Volume 3, 1852, p. 135 online
  4. ^ Ordinance of March 31, 1859 on the formation of the courts; Printed in: Christian Hermann Ebhardt: Laws, ordinances and tenders for the Kingdom of Hanover: from the period from 1813 to 1839. Fourth episode. 1856–1862: Department I. Legal Matters, Volume 12, 1863, p. 306, online
  5. Label e.g. B. "Actum District Court Blumenthal, to Lesum, January 4, 1869" on a contract recorded by the court.
  6. Ordinance on the formation of the district court districts of July 5, 1879 PrGS 1879 p. 393 (digitized version) and 517 (digitized version)
  7. Fourth ordinance on the rebuilding of the Reich of September 28, 1939
  8. RGBl. I 1942, p. 589. Digitized at the Austrian National Library.
  9. ^ Johann Hennings, The professional career of the judge Dietrich Bernhard , 1990 from the files of the district court of Lesum kept at the Bremen State Archives.
  10. ^ Gerhard Schmolze: Judges and Vögte . In: Heimat- und Verschönerungsverein Burg-Lesum (Hrsg.): Burg-Lesumer Heimatbuch . Bremen 1985, p. 453 .

Coordinates: 53 ° 10 ′ 7.5 ″  N , 8 ° 41 ′ 26.3 ″  E