Mayor's office in Halsenbach

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The mayor's office in Halsenbach was one of ten Prussian mayor's offices in which the Sankt Goar district, formed in 1816 in the Koblenz administrative district, was administratively divided. From 1822 on, the region belonged to the Rhine Province that was newly formed that year . Ten rural communities were under the administration of the mayor's office . The administrative seat was in today's local community Halsenbach in the Rhein-Hunsrück district in Rhineland-Palatinate .

In 1927, the mayor's office in Halsenbach was renamed to Amt Halsenbach , which was incorporated into the Verbandsgemeinde Halsenbach in 1968 and into the newly formed Verbandsgemeinde Emmelshausen and Boppard in 1970.

Municipalities and associated localities

The following communities and localities belonged to the mayor's office in Halsenbach (historical spelling of the place names; population figures as of 1885):

history

With the exception of Karbach, the communities in the mayor's district of Halsenbach belonged from the Middle Ages to the end of the 18th century to the Gallscheider court in Trier , which belonged to the Boppard district authority . Karbach belonged to the Ehrenberg lordship . In 1794 French revolutionary troops occupied the left bank of the Rhine . Under French administration, the area belonged to the arrondissement of Koblenz ( Canton Boppard ) from 1798 to 1814 , which was assigned to the Rhine-Moselle department . After the Peace of Paris (1814), the region was initially subordinated to the Joint State Administration Commission based in Kreuznach, which was under the administration of Austria and Bavaria .

Mayor's office in Halsenbach

Due to the resolutions at the Congress of Vienna in 1815, the Rhine-Moselle department was assigned to the Kingdom of Prussia . Under the Prussian administration, administrative districts and districts were newly formed in 1816 . The mayor's office in Halsenbach was assigned to the Sankt Goar district and the Koblenz district (then "Coblenz district") in the Grand Duchy of Lower Rhine province (1822 Rhine province ). In contrast to the surrounding mayor's offices, where Prussia usually retained the administrative districts of the French Mairies for the time being, the municipalities of Halsenbach were reassigned. From the previous Mairie Halsenbach, all municipalities were taken over into the mayor's office of Halsenbach , except for Bickenbach (came to the mayor's office in Pfalzfeld ). In 1816 Udenhausen came from the Mairie Rhens and Oppenhausen from the Mairie Niederfell; In 1817 Dörth and Karbach followed from the Mairie Pfalzfeld ( arrondissement Simmern , canton Sankt Goar ).

Office of Halsenbach

Like all mayor's offices in the Rhine Province, the mayor's office in Halsenbach was renamed to Amt Halsenbach in 1927. In the prefecture of the Office Halsbach 1935 from the communities was Basselscheid and Liesenfeld ( Office Obergondershausen ) the new community Emmelshausen . Otherwise there were no changes in the associated communities until 1968.

Verbandsgemeinde Halsenbach

In the course of the first Rhineland-Palatinate administrative reform in 1968, the Halsenbach office became part of the Halsenbach community. In 1969, the communities belonging to the Halsenbach Association were separated from the Sankt Goar district, which was dissolved at the same time, and incorporated into the newly formed Rhein-Hunsrück district .

The Verbandsgemeinde Halsenbach was dissolved in 1970 on the basis of the "Eighth State Law on Administrative Simplification in the State of Rhineland-Palatinate". The local communities Dörth, Emmelshausen, Halsenbach, Karbach, Kratzenburg and Ney were assigned to the newly formed community of Emmelshausen . The local communities Buchholz, Herschwiesen, Oppenhausen and Udenhausen came to the Boppard Association in 1970 and to the City of Boppard in 1975 .

Previous affiliations

The following table provides an overview of the previous affiliations of the municipalities of the mayor's office in Halsenbach:

local community Territory before 1792 Canton and Mairie before 1815 Parish after 1815
Basselscheid Kurtrier , Gallscheider Court Boppard , Halsenbach Halsenbach
Buchholz ( Boppard ) Kurtrier, Gallscheider Court Boppard, Halsenbach Herschwiesen
Dörth Kurtrier, Gallscheider Court Sankt Goar , Pfalzfeld Halsenbach
Halsenbach Kurtrier, Gallscheider Court Boppard, Halsenbach Halsenbach
Herschwiesen , ( Boppard ) Kurtrier, Gallscheider Court Boppard, Halsenbach Herschwiesen
Karbach Reign of Ehrenberg Sankt Goar, Pfalzfeld Halsenbach
Kratzenburg Kurtrier, Gallscheider Court Boppard, Halsenbach Halsenbach
Ney Kurtrier, Gallscheider Court Boppard, Halsenbach Halsenbach
Oppenhausen , ( Boppard ) Kurtrier, Gallscheider Court Boppard, Niederfell Herschwiesen
Udenhausen , ( Boppard ) Kurtrier, Gallscheider Court Boppard, Rhens Herschwiesen

statistics

According to the "Topographical-Statistical Description of the Royal Prussian Rhine Province" from 1830, the mayorry of Halsenbach included ten villages, six individual farms and seven mills. In 1816 a total of 1,899 inhabitants were counted; In 1828 there were 2,641 inhabitants, including 1,316 men and 1,325 women; 1,898 of the inhabitants belonged to the Catholic and one inhabitant of the Protestant faith. In 1843 there was a school in every parish with the exception of Ney and Oppenhausen.

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 3,351 residents lived in 658 houses and 673 households in the administrative area of ​​the mayor's office in Halsenbach; 1,712 of the population were male and 1,649 were female. With regard to religious affiliation, all but four Protestant residents were Catholic. There were Catholic churches in Halsenbach and Herschwiesen .

In 1885 the total area of ​​the municipalities belonging to the mayor's office was 5,417 hectares , of which 2,074 hectares were arable land, 435 hectares of meadows and 2,518 hectares of forest.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c d Heinrich Wilhelm Ludwig Pauli : The government district of Coblenz, directory of all the localities of the government district according to their division into communities, mayor's offices and districts , Coblenz: Pauli, 1817; P. 9 ( www.dilibri.de )
  2. a b c Topographical-statistical overview of the government district of Coblenz , Coblenz: Hölscher, 1843, p. 86 ( www.dilibri.de )
  3. a b c d Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia , Volume XII Provinz Rheinland, Verlag des Königlich Statistischen Bureaus (Ed.), 1888, p. 4 ff ( digitalis.uni-koeln.de )
  4. a b c Handbook for the residents of the Rhine-Mosel Department for the year 1808 , Coblenz: Prefecture-Buchdruckerey, 1808, p. 50 ff ( www.dilibri.de )
  5. FWA Schlickeysen: Repertory of laws and ordinances for the royal. Prussian Rhine provinces , Trier: Leistenschneider, 1830, p. 15 ( www.dilibri.de )
  6. a b Halsenbach in the historical local dictionary ( regionalgeschichte.net ; PDF; 49 kB)
  7. ^ History of the Emmelshausen Association
  8. Friedrich von Restorff : Topographical-Statistical Description of the Royal Prussian Rhine Province , Nicolai, Berlin and Stettin 1830, p. 600 ( Google Books )