Dingdorf mayor

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The mayor's office in Dingdorf was originally one of 29 Prussian mayor's offices into which the district of Prüm , which was newly formed in 1816 in the Trier administrative district, was administratively divided. From 1822 on, the mayor's office belonged to the Rhine Province . Eight municipalities were under the administration of the mayor's office . The administrative seat was from 1823 in the today's local community Schönecken in the Eifelkreis Bitburg-Prüm in Rhineland-Palatinate .

The mayor's office was renamed to Amt Dingdorf in 1927 .

Municipalities and associated localities

The following communities belonged to the mayor's office in Dingdorf (population figures, as of 1843):

A total of 922 people lived in 142 houses in the mayor's district in 1843. All residents were Catholic. There was a church in Niederlauch and a chapel in Plütscheid; There was also a school at both locations.

A statistical survey from 1885 counted 990 inhabitants in 169 households; the area of ​​the associated municipalities totaled 2,955 hectares , of which 1,013 hectares were forest, 844 hectares of arable land and 317 hectares of meadows.

history

Before 1794 all localities belonged to the Electorate of Trier , Oberlauch to the Prüm Office , and the other localities to the Schönecken Office . Dingdorf was the main town of a dairy farm owned by the Schönecken office, which also included the villages of Giesdorf , Heisdorf , Niederlauch , Winringen and the mill at Schweißtal.

In 1794 French revolutionary troops occupied the left bank of the Rhine . Under the French administration , the mentioned localities were assigned to the canton of Prüm from 1798 , which belonged to the arrondissement of Prüm in the Saar department .

Due to the resolutions at the Congress of Vienna in 1815, substantial parts of the Rhineland were 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 in Dingdorf corresponded to the previous Mairie Dingdorf. The Bürgermeisterei Dingdorf was the circle Prüm in Trier assigned. From 1822 the administrative district of Trier, including the mayor of Dingdorf, belonged to the Rhine province that was newly formed that year .

The administrative seat was initially in Dingdorf and from 1823 in Schönecken . The mayor's office in Schönecken also managed the mayor's offices of Burbach and Schönecken .

The mayor Ding village was in 1927, as all land mayors in the Rhine province , due to the Prussian law on the regulation of various points of the municipality of constitutional law renamed of 27 December 1927 in "Office Dingdorf" in 1936 as an independent office dissolved and with other offices for office Schönecken together .

Since 1970 the localities of Greimelscheid , Plütscheid , Staudenhof belong administratively to the then newly formed community of Arzfeld , the communities of Dingdorf , Heisdorf , Niederlauch , Oberlauch and Winringen to the community of Prüm in the Eifel district of Bitburg-Prüm in Rhineland-Palatinate .

Individual evidence

  1. 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. 142 ff ( uni-koeln.de )
  2. ^ A b c Georg Bärsch : Description of the government district of Trier , Volume 2, Trier, Lintz, 1846, p. 64 ( Google Books )
  3. Johann Josef Scotti: Collection of laws and ordinances, which in the former Churfürstenthum Trier ... , Wolf, 1832, p. 1717 ff ( Google Books )
  4. ^ Johann Friedrich Schannat , Georg Bärsch: Eiflia illustrata or geographical and historical description of the Eifel , Volume 3, Edition 2, Part 1, Mayer, 1854, p. 240 ( Google Books )
  5. a b c District administration of the Eifelkreis Bitburg-Prüm: Administrative affiliation of the individual communities ( online PDF )
  6. ^ Otto Beck: Description of the government district of Trier , Volume 1, Trier, Lintz, 1868, p. 149 ( Google Books )
  7. Article Nimshuscheid on www.region-trier.de
  8. Article Prüm on www.region-trier.de