District Court of Stade

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Building Wilhadikirchhof 2
Entrance to the court (Wilhadikirchhof 1)

The Stade District Court is one of eight district courts in the Stade District Court and is based in Stade .

Judicial district

The judicial district includes the following places and districts: Aspe , Assel , Balje , Behrste , Blumenthal , Bossel , Breitenwisch , Brobergen , Burweg , Bützfleth , Deinste , Drochtersen , Düdenbüttel , Engelschoff , Essel , Estorf , Freiburg / Elbe , Gräpel , Groß Fredenbeck , Groß Sterneberg , Großenwörden , Grünendeich , Guderhandviertel , Haddorf , Hagen , Hagenah , Hammah , Heinbockel , Helmste , Himmelpforten , Hollern-Twielenfleth , Hüll , Klein Fredenbeck , Kranenburg , Krautsand , Krummendeich , Kuhla , Kutenholz , Mittelkirchen , Mitteldorf , Mulsum , Neuenkirchen , Neuland (Wischhafen) , Oederquart , Oldendorf , Schölisch , Schwinge (Fredenbeck) , Stade , Steinkirchen , Wedel , Wiepenkathen and Wischhafen .

Superior courts

The District Court of Stade , the Higher Regional Court of Celle and the Federal Court of Justice in Karlsruhe are superordinate to the Stade District Court.

history

On October 1, 1852, the Stade City Court and the Bützfleth Graef Court were replaced by the Stade and Bützfleth District Courts, thus transferring lower jurisdiction to the state. The district court was subordinate to the higher court district of Stade . The Bützfleth District Court was dissolved as early as 1859 and part of its territory was transferred to the Stade District Court. At the same time, that part of the judicial district of the Himmelpforten district court , which was on the right bank of the Oste, was assigned to the Stade district court.

The first service building of both local courts was in the main prison built in 1840/41, today's social and youth welfare office between Beguinenstrasse and Gründelstrasse. In 1889, the building had to be extended to the rear due to a lack of space.

The purchase of a building at Wilhadikirchhof enabled a more spacious new building on the corner of Ritterstraße and Wilhadikirchhof between 1903 and 1905. The building, the front of which faces the church, was built in the historicizing style ( late renaissance in transition to baroque ). In this building, the district court moved to the ground floor.

In 1973 the judicial district expanded to include the districts of the dissolved district courts of Freiburg / Elbe and Osten .

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ 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

Coordinates: 53 ° 36 ′ 0.6 ″  N , 9 ° 28 ′ 42 ″  E