Kamenz Authority

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Kamenz Authority
Basic data
District Headquarters Bautzen
Administrative headquarters Kamenz
surface 690 km² (1939)
population 83,055 (1939)
Population density 120 inhabitants / km² (1939)
Location of the Kamenz administration in 1905
Location of the Kamenz administration in 1905

The Amtshauptmannschaft Kamenz was an administrative district in the Kingdom of Saxony and later in the Free State of Saxony . Today your area belongs to the district of Bautzen in Saxony. From 1939 to 1952 the administrative district was called Landkreis Kamenz .

history

1,874 were in Saxony Kingdom as part of a comprehensive administrative reform new district governor teams set up and Amtshauptmann teams. The Kamenz District Administration was formed from the court districts of Kamenz, Königsbrück and Pulsnitz, which had previously been part of the Bautzen District Administration . The Saxon Amtshauptmann teams were in function and size similar to a county .

In 1939 the Kamenz administration was renamed the Kamenz district . The district of Kamenz continued to exist in the GDR until the territorial reform of 1952 and was then transferred in a modified form to the new district of Kamenz , which was assigned to the district of Dresden .

Office governors and district administrators

Population development

year 1900 1910 1925 1939
Residents 69,546 76.070 77.506 83,055

Of a total of 69,546 inhabitants in 1900, 61,844 were Protestant (89%) and 7,650 Catholic (11%), the latter mainly in the villages of the St. Marienstern monastery .

Communities

Municipalities of the Kamenz administration with more than 2,000 inhabitants (as of 1939):

local community Residents
Bretnig 2,952
Großröhrsdorf 8,844
Kamenz 13,202
Koenigsbrück 6,348
Ohorn 2,730
Pulsnitz Meissner site 2,301
Pulsnitz (city) 4,406

All cities and municipalities (1939) of the Kamenz administration in alphabetical order:
Auschkowitz , Bernbruch , Biehla , Bischheim , Bohra , Brauna , Bretnig , Bulleritz , Cannewitz , Caseritz , Cosel , Crostwitz , Cunnersdorf , Cunnewitz , Döbra , Dürrwicknitz , Elstra , Friedersdorf , Gelenau , Gersdorf , Glaubnitz , Gödlau , Gottschdorf , Gräfenhain , boundary , United Baselitz (to 1937 German Baselitz ), United grave , Großnaundorf , Grossroehrsdorf , Grüngräbchen , Häslich , Hausdorf , Hauswalde , Hennersdorf , Höckendorf , Höflein , Horka , Jaworski , Jiedlitz , Kamenz , Kaschwitz , Kindisch , small Baselitz (to 1937 Wendisch Baselitz ), Klein Dittmannsdorf , Kleinhänchen , Koenigsbrueck , Koitzsch , Krakow , Kriepitz , Kuckau , Ländchen Wohla , Laske , Laußnitz , Lehndorf , Lichtenberg , Liebenau , Lieske , Lückersdorf , Lüttichau , Milstrich , Miltitz , Mittelbach , Möhrsdorf , Naußlitz , Nebelschütz , Neukirch , Neustädtel , Niederlichtenau , Niedersteina , Nucknitz , Oberlichtenau , Oberste ina , Ohorn , Oßling , Ostro , Panschwitz , Petershain , Piskowitz , Prietitz , Pulsnitz (Meißner side), Pulsnitz (city), Räckelwitz , Ralbitz , Rauschwitz , Reichenau , Reichenbach , Röhrsdorf , Rohna , Rosenthal , Säuritz , Schiedel , Schmeckwitz , Schmerlitz , Schmorkau , Schönau , Schönbach , Schweinerden , Schwepnitz , Schwosdorf , Sella (dissolved in 1938), Siebitz , Skaska , Steinborn , Straßgräbchen , Trado , Tschaschwitz , Weißbach b. Königsbrück , Weißbach b. Pulsnitz , Weißig , Wiesa , Zeisholz , Zerna , Zochau , Zschornau .

Former municipalities of the Amtshauptmannschaft (before 1939) sorted alphabetically:

  • Jesau , (November 1, 1935 incorporated into the city of Kamenz)
  • Stenz , (October 1, 1939 incorporated into the city of Königsbrück)

literature

  • Thomas Klein (Ed.): Outline of German administrative history 1815-1945. Row B: Central Germany. Tape. 14: Saxony. Johann Gottfried Herder Institute, Marburg / Lahn 1982, ISBN 3-87969-129-0 , pp. 280–282.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Andreas Oettel: On the administrative structure of Saxony in the 19th and 20th centuries. (PDF; 6.6 MB) State Statistical Office of the Free State of Saxony, accessed on December 18, 2011 .
  2. ^ A b c Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. /kamenz.html. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  3. ^ The census on December 1, 1900 in the German Reich (=  Statistics of the German Reich . Volume 150 ). 1903, p. 113 .