Mayor's office in Nennig

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The mayor's office Nennig was one of originally twelve Prussian mayor offices into which the district of Saarburg , which was newly formed in 1816 in the administrative district of Trier, was administratively divided. From 1822 it belonged to the Rhine Province . Four municipalities were under the administration of the mayor's office . The administrative seat was in the eponymous place Nennig , today part of the municipality Perl in the district Merzig-Wadern in Saarland ; In 1843 the administrative seat was moved to Palzem . The mayor's office Nennig was merged with the mayor's office of Sinz to form the mayor's office of Sinz-Nennig in 1863 .

Communities

The following communities belonged to the mayor's office in Nennig (population as of 1830):

history

The villages in the administrative district of the mayor's office Nennig belonged to the Duchy of Luxembourg before 1795 ( Remich dairy in the Remich quarter). Nennig, Wies and Berg were under the common sovereignty of Luxembourg and Kurtrier , Wehr belonged to the Luxembourg rule of Wincheringen .

After 1792 French revolutionary troops occupied the Austrian Netherlands , to which the Duchy of Luxembourg belonged, and in 1795 incorporated it into French territory . When the then new French administrative structure was introduced, the localities were assigned to the canton of Remich of the Department of Forests ; from 1798 on, the towns of Nennig and Wies belonged in part to the Canton of Saarburg of the Saar department . As a result of the so-called Wars of Liberation , the canton of Remich was initially subordinated to an Austro-Bavarian administration and temporarily incorporated into the canton of Saarburg. Unlike the rest of the left bank of the Rhine, this was initially assigned to Austria at the Congress of Vienna (1815) . In the Second Peace of Paris , Austria ceded the territory to the Kingdom of Prussia with effect from July 1, 1816 .

Under the Prussian administration, new administrative districts and districts were formed in 1816 , the mayor's office Nennig belonged to the Saarburg district in the Trier administrative district and from 1822 to the Rhine province .

In 1863, the mayor's offices Nennig and Sinz , which had been administered in personal union from 1843, were merged to form the mayor's office of Sinz-Nennig , which later became the Palzem office .

Nennig is now a district of the municipality of Perl in the Merzig-Wadern district in Saarland , Dittlingen is a district of Merzkirchen , Kreuzweiler and Wehr districts of Palzem in the Trier-Saarburg district in Rhineland-Palatinate .

statistics

According to a "Topographical-Statistical Description of the Royal Prussian Rhine Provinces" from 1830, the mayor's office of Kanzem included four villages, three hamlets, four castles and two courtyards. In 1816 there were a total of 1,113 inhabitants in 186 households, in 1828 there were 1,323 inhabitants, 1,317 of whom belonged to the Catholic and 6 to the Protestant faith.

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Friedrich von Restorff : Topographical-Statistical Description of the Royal Prussian Rhine Provinces , Nicolai, 1830, p. 930 ( Google Books )
  2. a b Article Palzem on www.region-trier.de
  3. a b Georg Bärsch : Description of the government district of Trier , Volume 2, Trier, Lintz, 1846, p. 92 ( Google Books )
  4. ^ Wilhelm Fabricius : Explanations of the historical atlas of the Rhine province, Volume 2: The map of 1789. Bonn, Hermann Behrend, 1898, p. 29 ff
  5. Clomes: attempt at a statistical-geographic description of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg , Schmit-Bruck, 1840, p 8 ( Google Books )
  6. Collection of the ordinances published under the Governorate of the Middle Rhine in Kreuznach , Speyer, Oswald's Buchhandlung, 1819, p. 193 ff ( Google Books )
  7. ^ Wilhelm von der Nahmer: Handbook of Rhenish Particular Law , Volume 3, Frankfurt: Sauerländer, 1832, p. 227 ( Google Books )