Administrative Authority Rochlitz
Basic data | |
---|---|
District Headquarters | Leipzig |
Administrative headquarters | Rochlitz |
surface | 509 km² (1939) |
population | 106,841 (1939) |
Population density | 210 inhabitants / km² (1939) |
Location of the Rochlitz District Administration in 1895 | |
The Amtshauptmannschaft Rochlitz 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 central Saxony in Saxony . From 1939 to 1952 the administrative district was called the Rochlitz district .
history
As part of the administrative reorganization of the Kingdom of Saxony, the four district offices of Dresden , Bautzen , Zwickau and Leipzig were set up in 1835. The Leipzig district directorate had been subdivided into four administrative authorities since 1838 , including the II. Administrative authorities in the Rochlitz and Mittweida area . This was formed from the judicial districts of Burgstädt, Colditz, Frohburg, Geithain, Mittweida, Penig and Rochlitz.
1,874 were in Saxony Kingdom as part of a comprehensive administrative reform new district governor teams set up and Amtshauptmann teams. The now downsized Rochlitz Office was formed from the judicial districts of Burgstädt, Mittweida, Penig and Rochlitz. The judicial districts of Frohburg (except for the villages of Jahnshain, Linda and Meusdorf) and Geithain came to the Borna administration and Colditz to Grimma . In terms of their function and size, the Saxon authorities were comparable to a district .
In 1924 the city of Mittweida became a district-free city and thus left the administration. In 1939 the Rochlitz administration was renamed the Rochlitz district . The city of Mittweida was reintegrated into the district in 1946. Schlagwitz was reclassified to the Glauchau district on July 1, 1950 . The Rochlitz district continued in the GDR until the territorial reform of 1952 and was then divided into the new Rochlitz , Hainichen , Glauchau and Karl-Marx-Stadt-Land districts in the Karl-Marx-Stadt district and the Geithain district in the Leipzig district.
Office governors and district administrators
- 1874–1875 Georg Otto von Ehrenstein
- 1875–1880 Johann Georg Freiherr von Welck
- 1880–1894 Wilhelm Alexander Schäffer
- 1894–1896 Friedrich Wilhelm Albin Hänichen
- 1896–1898 Johannes Hallbauer
- 1898–1910 Horst Süßmilch
- 1910–1919 Bernhard Heinrich Roßberg
- 1919–1932 Heinrich Rudolf Freiherr von und zu Mannsbach
- 1933–1938 Push
- 1938–1939 Hans Heinrich Garten
- 1939–1945 Erich Rößler
Population development
year | 1849 | 1871 | 1900 | 1910 | 1925 | 1939 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Residents | 87,989 | 111,422 | 113,535 | 122,564 | 106,655 | 106,841 |
Communities
Cities and municipalities of the Rochlitz administration with more than 2,000 inhabitants (as of 1939):
local community | Residents |
---|---|
City of Burgstädt | 17,906 |
City of Geringswalde | 4,278 |
City of Lunzenau | 3,732 |
City of Penig | 8,533 |
City of Rochlitz | 6.154 |
Altmittweida | 2,675 |
Claussnitz | 2.119 |
Hartmannsdorf | 7.150 |
Mühlau | 3,174 |
Taura | 3,430 |
The independent city of Mittweida had 18,734 inhabitants in 1939.
Structure (as of January 1, 1939)
- Allodialgut Berthelsdorf
- Manor Crossen
- Part of the Frankenberg state forest district
- Rittergut Gepülzig
- Geringswalde State Forest District
- Großmilkau manor
- Kaufungen manor
- Kleinmilkau manor
- Rittergut Klostergeringswalde
- Kolkau Manor
- Königsfeld manor
- Manor Neusorge
- Neutaubenheim manor
- Fiefdom Penig
- Ringethal manor
- Rochlitz mountain
- Fiefdom of Rochsburg
- State forest district Rossau
- Good barn plow
- Schlaisdorf manor
- Thierbach manor near Penig
- Thierbach mill estate
- Fiefdom of Wechselburg
- Wolkenburg manor
- Zetteritz Manor
literature
- Thomas Klein : 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. 384-386.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c d Andreas Oettel: On the administrative structure of Saxony in the 19th and 20th centuries . In: State Statistical Office of the Free State of Saxony (Ed.): Statistics in Saxony . 175 years of official statistics in Saxony (Festschrift). No. 1 , 2006, ISSN 0949-4480 , p. 69-98 ( Digitalisat ( Memento of 30 March 2012 at the Internet Archive ) [PDF; 6.3 MB ; accessed on December 23, 2012]).
- ↑ Schlagwitz on gov.genealogy.net
- ^ A b Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. Rochlitz district. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
- ↑ a b c www.gemeindeververzeichnis.de