District (GDR)
A district was an administrative unit in the German Democratic Republic .
Between 1952 and 1990 he formed the middle level of state administration. The administrative reform of 1952 established 14 districts that took on the tasks of the state governments . They were further divided into rural and urban districts. The State Council of the GDR turned East Berlin in 1961, the districts of the same.
The districts were comparable to the federal German government districts in terms of population, area and status . The districts had no political ( member state ) autonomy like a Land of the Federal Republic of Germany and no self-administration rights like a local authority . It was the middle state administrative level between the central state and the district, on which the state performed tasks to a greater extent than is the case with the federal German administrative districts.
List of districts
The following districts existed from north to south:
location | district | Area in km² | Inhabitants (1989) |
Population density in inhabitants / km² |
Automotive Ind. |
District structure (1989) |
Communities |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rostock | 7,075 | 916,500 | 130 | A. | 10 rural districts, 4 urban districts |
360 | |
Schwerin | 8,672 | 595.200 | 69 | B. | 10 rural districts, 1 urban district |
389 | |
Neubrandenburg | 10,948 | 620,500 | 57 | C. | 14 districts, 1 urban district |
492 | |
Potsdam | 12,568 | 1,123,800 | 89 | D, P | 15 rural districts, 2 urban districts |
755 | |
Frankfurt (Oder) | 7.186 | 713,800 | 99 | E. | 9 rural districts, 3 urban districts |
438 | |
Magdeburg | 11,526 | 1,249,500 | 108 | H, M | 17 rural districts, 1 urban district |
655 | |
cottbus | 8,262 | 884,700 | 107 | Z | 14 districts, 1 urban district |
574 | |
Hall | 8,771 | 1,776,500 | 203 | K, V | 20 rural districts, 3 urban districts |
684 | |
Leipzig | 4,966 | 1,360,900 | 274 | S, U | 12 districts, 1 urban district |
422 | |
Erfurt | 7,349 | 1,240,400 | 169 | L, F | 13 rural districts, 2 urban districts |
719 | |
Dresden | 6,738 | 1,757,400 | 261 | R, Y | 15 rural districts, 2 urban districts |
594 | |
Karl-Marx-City * | 6.009 | 1,859,500 | 309 | T, X | 21 rural districts, 3 urban districts |
601 | |
Gera | 4,004 | 742,000 | 185 | N | 11 rural districts, 2 urban districts |
528 | |
Suhl | 3,856 | 549,400 | 142 | O | 8 rural districts, 1 urban district |
358 | |
Berlin ** | 403 | 1,279,200 | 3,174 | I. | (11 boroughs ) | 1 | |
GDR | 108,333 | 16,669,300 | 154 | - | 191 rural districts, 27 urban districts (+ East Berlin) |
7,570 |
*) At its beginning and end, the Karl-Marx-Stadt district had the name Chemnitz district for a short time in reference to the name of the city of Chemnitz , which was called Karl-Marx-Stadt from May 10, 1953 to May 30, 1990 .
**) East Berlin was not officially a district, but had been given the function of a district since 1961 ( see status of East Berlin ).
Administration of a district
The highest body of a district was a representative body called the district day. The composition of the district days was in the National Front merged block parties and mass organizations through the establishment of unit lists determined. The task of the district days was to vote on proposals that were introduced by the district council. Theoretically, the members of the district days had the right to submit their own applications, but this was hardly used. In order to reach a decision, so-called “appointed citizens” could be consulted during the deliberations.
The district council as the administrative authority was determined by the district assembly. The authority was headed by a chairman, the central person in the authority being the secretary of the council. The district planning commission as a counterpart to the central state planning commission belonged to the various specialist departments . In theory, the work of the district council should be effectively controlled by both the district council and the superordinate council of ministers of the GDR according to the principle of dual subordination. However, the influence of the district days was very weak. The decisive force in the respective district was the district leadership of the SED with its first secretary, whose position was far more influential than that of the members of the district council.
history
Administrative reform of 1952
After the Second World War , five countries were established as administrative units in the Soviet occupation zone by order of the Soviet military administration in Germany . Until the dissolution of Prussia in 1947, in the case of Saxony-Anhalt and Brandenburg, provinces were also used . The states of Mecklenburg , Saxony-Anhalt , Brandenburg , Thuringia and Saxony formed the larger administrative units of the GDR from 1949.
At the beginning of July 1952, the Second Party Conference of the SED proclaimed the construction of socialism in the GDR. In the course of this development it was decided to redesign the state structure based on the Soviet model in order to achieve better control ( democratic centralism ) and to dissolve the countries as remnants of the federal order . Although the prime ministers of the five federal states were much more dependent on the government in East Berlin for their decisions than their colleagues in the western German states, the central government saw the potential danger of being too independent. The GDR leadership, however, shied away from lifting the status quo of the states in the constitution of the GDR , as they considered this point to be important for a future clarification of the German question . So you chose a middle ground.
The law on the further democratization of the structure and functioning of the state organs in the states in the German Democratic Republic of July 23, 1952 imposed on the states to reorganize the districts in their area and to combine several districts into districts. Then the state governments should transfer their tasks to the new districts. These requirements were implemented in the federal states through corresponding laws of July 25, 1952. 132 districts became 217 (→ district reforms in the GDR ). They have been grouped into 14 districts. The state parliaments dissolved themselves, and their members became members of the new district parliaments according to their place of residence .
The federal states relieved themselves of their administrative functions. A symbolic remnant of federalism was retained in the form of the GDR Land Chamber , which was composed of representatives from the Landtag. In 1954 the district days met once again, sorted by country, in order to elect the members of the 2nd regional chamber. The 3rd regional chamber was unconstitutionally elected directly by the district assembly. In December of the same year, the state chamber was formally abolished through a constitutional amendment. The states were thus effectively dissolved.
In public, those responsible justified the administrative reform with the fact that a division into independent countries and large circles was an inherent element from the imperial era . The state administrations were seen as "bastions of bourgeois thinking". The new structure corresponds more to the requirements of the new tasks of the state and an approximation of the administration to the population will follow.
Cutting the districts
When drawing the boundaries, economic criteria were the main guidelines and attempts were made to concentrate certain economically important industries within the individual districts. With the Rostock district, a coastal district was created that covered the entire Baltic Sea region of the GDR. Cottbus became a coal district, Frankfurt a steel district and Halle a chemical district. A textile district and a caliber district were planned, but could not be realized. In the south of the GDR in particular, industry was too diverse for only one branch to shape the districts there. Schwerin and Neubrandenburg were agricultural districts, but Frankfurt, Cottbus, Magdeburg and Potsdam also remained strongly agrarian.
In addition to the economic aspects, however, security policy considerations also came into play. The Potsdam district owed its size solely to the fact that a single district was supposed to deal with questions of border security to West Berlin . At the same time, parts of the Brandenburg district of Westprignitz went to the new Schwerin district, so as not to burden the Potsdam district with the border to West Germany . The new districts Templin , Prenzlau and Bernau should first belong to the district of Potsdam, but then came to other districts so that from there on the way to the district town West Berlin would not have to be crossed. In other regions, especially in Saxony and Thuringia, security issues were given less attention when drawing the border. A total of eight out of 14 districts were concerned with border issues.
With the cutting of the new districts and districts and the definition of the district cities, a break with the past was also sought in some cases. For example, Neubrandenburg instead of Neustrelitz and Suhl instead of Meiningen became the seat of the district administration. Weimar came to the district of Erfurt instead of forming a district of Weimar with the districts of the Gera district.
Status of East Berlin
After 1945 East Berlin did not belong to any country in the Soviet zone of occupation, but was subject to the four-power status of Greater Berlin . Thus from 1949 it did not become a constitutive member of the GDR. After the administrative reform of 1952, its status increasingly approximated that of the districts. On September 7, 1961, East Berlin was given the function of a district by a decree of the State Council of the GDR (“The capital of the German Democratic Republic exercises the function of a district”). This gave the city the status of a district, but was still not one. As East Berlin gradually lost its privileges vis-à-vis the GDR administration over the next two decades, this difference was of little importance in practice. In many publications of the GDR East Berlin is listed as the 15th district, mostly with the simple name "Capital Berlin". Berlin was assigned the license plate "I".
End of the districts
On July 22, 1990, the People's Chamber passed the Land Introduction Act , which came into force on October 14 of the same year. This created the five states of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania , Brandenburg , Saxony-Anhalt , Saxony and Thuringia .
On October 3, 1990, the day the GDR acceded to the Federal Republic of Germany, the five new states had already been re-established. East Berlin, which had only recently given itself its own constitution as a city, was united with West Berlin on the same day . The district days and councils of the districts were liquidated as early as August 1990 or integrated into the new state authorities.
The districts of Rostock, Schwerin and Neubrandenburg essentially formed the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. The districts of Potsdam, Frankfurt and Cottbus became the state of Brandenburg, the districts of Magdeburg and Halle became part of the state of Saxony-Anhalt. The districts of Erfurt, Gera and Suhl became the Free State of Thuringia and the Free State of Saxony was created from the districts of Leipzig, Dresden and Karl-Marx-Stadt (Chemnitz district again since 1990). Some districts and municipalities moved to another federal state in the following years. The new state borders are now neither completely in line with the old district borders nor with the state borders of 1952. In Saxony and Saxony-Anhalt the districts were wholly or partially transferred to government or administrative districts , which were dissolved again in Saxony-Anhalt in 2003 and abolished in Saxony in 2012 by amalgamation.
Population development
district | 1952 | 1965 | 1975 | 1988 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Rostock | 859,000 | 842.743 | 868.674 | 916,541 |
Schwerin | 681,000 | 594.786 | 590,347 | 595.176 |
Neubrandenburg | 706,000 | 633.209 | 626,362 | 620.467 |
Magdeburg | 1,504,000 | 1,323,644 | 1,280,615 | 1,249,518 |
Potsdam | 1,232,000 | 1,127,498 | 1,120,557 | 1,123,759 |
Frankfurt (Oder) | 665,000 | 660.666 | 688.883 | 713.764 |
Erfurt | 1,343,000 | 1,249,540 | 1,242,454 | 1,240,394 |
Hall | 2,112,000 | 1,932,733 | 1,876,516 | 1,776,458 |
Leipzig | 1,621,000 | 1,510,773 | 1,445,840 | 1,360,923 |
Dresden | 1,986,000 | 1,887,739 | 1,835,621 | 1,757,363 |
cottbus | 804,000 | 839.133 | 872.968 | 884.744 |
Suhl | 558,000 | 549,398 | 549.453 | 549,442 |
Gera | 755,000 | 735.175 | 737.916 | 742.023 |
Karl Marx City | 2,287,000 | 2,082,927 | 1,976,869 | 1,859,525 |
Web links
- Law on the further democratization of the structure and functioning of state organs in the countries of the German Democratic Republic. 23 July 1952.
- Map of the administrative units of the GDR (1957) of the CIA in the archive of the Library of Congress : East Germany: Administrative divisions-June 1957. 5-58.
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Regulations on the tasks and working methods of the city council of Greater Berlin and its organs , decree of the Council of State of the GDR of September 7, 1961 (GBl. SDr. 341, p. 3)
- ↑ Law on the further democratization of the structure and functioning of the state organs in the states in the German Democratic Republic (Journal of Laws of the Federal Republic of Germany , p. 613)
- ^ Siegfried Mampel : The socialist constitution of the German Democratic Republic: Commentary; with an addendum on the legal development up to the fall of 1989 and the end of the socialist constitution . Keip, Goldbach 1997, ISBN 3-8051-0275-5 , p. 137