Mayor's office of Üdersdorf

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The mayor Uedersdorf was one of the original twelve Prussian mayors , the 1816 newly formed in the Kreis Daun in Trier divided administratively. From 1822 it belonged to the Rhine Province . Six municipalities were under the administration of the mayor's office . The administrative seat was in the eponymous place Üdersdorf , later in Niederstadtfeld . Today the administrative area is in the Vulkaneifel district in Rhineland-Palatinate .

At the end of 1927, the Üdersdorf mayor's office was renamed the Üdersdorf office , and in the 1930s this was merged with the Weidenbach office to form the Niederstadtfeld office.

Communities

Six municipalities belonged to the mayor's office of Üdersdorf (population and number of households (fireplaces) as of 1818):

  • Niederstadtfeld (189 inhabitants, 42 households)
  • Oberstadtfeld (314 inhabitants, 60 households)
  • Tettscheid (85 inhabitants, 16 households; since 1971 district of Üdersdorf)
  • Trittscheid (98 inhabitants, 19 households; since 1971 district of Üdersdorf)
  • Üdersdorf with the Üdersdorfer Mühle (250 residents, 45 households)
  • Weiersbach (92 inhabitants, 15 households; Daun district since 1979 )

history

Up to the end of the 18th century all communities belonged to the Electorate of Trier , Niederstadtfeld and Oberstadtfeld were subordinate to the Manderscheid office , the rest to the Daun office.

In 1794 French revolutionary troops occupied the left bank of the Rhine . After the Peace of Campo Formio (1797), the then new French administrative structure was introduced by the French directorate government (1798). All localities of the later mayor's office of Üdersdorf belonged to the canton of Daun in the Saar department , Üdersdorf became the chief town ( chef-lieu ) of a Mairie in 1800 . As a result of the so-called Wars of Liberation , the region was temporarily subordinated to the Generalgouvernement Mittelrhein , then to the Generalgouvernement Nieder- and Mittelrhein .

At the Congress of Vienna (1815), the entire Eifel was assigned to the Kingdom of Prussia . Under the Prussian administration, new administrative districts and districts were formed in 1816 ; on the left bank of the Rhine, Prussia generally retained the administrative districts of the French Mairies for the time being. The mayor's office of Üdersdorf corresponded to the previous Mairie Üdersdorf. The mayor's office in Üdersdorf belonged to the district of Daun in the administrative district of Trier and from 1822 to the Rhine province .

The administrative seat was initially in the eponymous municipality of Üdersdorf . This was also the administrative seat of the otherwise independent Mayor's office Weidenbach . Both administrations were moved to Niederstadtfeld in 1878.

At the end of 1927, the mayor's office in Üdersdorf, like all the mayor's offices in the Rhine Province , was renamed "Amt Üdersdorf" due to the Prussian law regulating various points of the municipal constitutional law of December 27, 1927. Later the offices of Üdersdorf and Weidenbach were merged to form the “Office Niederstadtfeld”. This office existed until October 1, 1968, it was initially part of the Niederstadtfeld association. Finally, 1,970 were community association Gillenfeld and Niederstadtfeld with the municipality down together.

statistics

According to a "Topographical-Statistical Description of the Royal Prussian Rhine Provinces" from 1830, the mayor of Üdersdorf included six villages and a mill. In 1818 there were a total of 1,028 inhabitants in 197 households, in 1828 there were 1,180 inhabitants, all of whom belonged to the Catholic faith. Catholic parish churches existed in Üdersdorf and Niederstadtfeld.

Further details are taken from the "Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia" from 1888, which is based on the results of the census of December 1, 1885. A total of 1,478 residents lived in 327 houses and 303 households in the administrative area of ​​the mayor's office in Üdersdorf; 1,474 of the residents were Catholic and four Protestant.

The total area of ​​the municipalities belonging to the mayor's office was 3,884 hectares , of which 1,669 hectares were arable land, 335 hectares of meadows and 1,359 hectares of forest (as of 1885).

Individual evidence

  1. Statistical-topographical description of the government district of Trier , Hetzrodt, 1818, p. 30 ( Google Books )
  2. a b c Georg Bärsch : Description of the government district of Trier , Volume 2, Trier, Lintz, 1846, p. 41 ( Google Books )
  3. a b c Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia , Volume XII Province of Rhineland, Publishing House of the Royal Statistical Bureau (Ed.), 1888, p. 138 ff ( uni-koeln.de )
  4. ^ Wilhelm Fabricius : Explanations of the historical atlas of the Rhine province, Volume 2: The map of 1789. Bonn, Hermann Behrend, 1898, p. 112, 118
  5. FWA Schlickeysen: Repertory of laws and ordinances for the royal. Prussian Rhine provinces , Trier: Leistenschneider, 1830, p. 13 ff ( dilibri.de )
  6. Erwin Schaefer: The Prussian administrative division in the early years of the Daun district. In: Heimatjahrbuch 1980. Vulkaneifel district, accessed on April 9, 2019 .
  7. ^ Otto Beck: Description of the government district of Trier , Volume 1, Trier, Lintz, 1868, p. 147 ( Google Books )
  8. a b Hans Joachim Theis: 700 years of Üdersdorf. In: Heimatjahrbuch 1987. Landkreis Vulkaneifel, accessed on April 9, 2019 .
  9. ^ Friedbert Wißkirchen: reorganization of the association communities with extensive reforms. In: Heimatjahrbuch 1995. Vulkaneifel district, accessed on April 9, 2019 .
  10. Friedrich von Restorff : Topographical-Statistical Description of the Royal Prussian Rhine Provinces , Nicolai, 1830, p. 888 ( Google Books )