District Office Sinsheim
The Sinsheim district office was established in 1813 from the Hilsbach cellar and office . The Neckarbischofsheim district office was added in 1864 and the Eppingen district office in 1924 , and in 1939 it was renamed the Sinsheim district . This was dissolved on January 1, 1973.
Hilsbach winery
Through the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss 1803 and the dissolution of the Electoral Palatinate , the Hilsbach winery and its associated locations came to the newly created principality of Leiningen . The Rheinbund act mediated the House of Leiningen in 1806 and the princes of Leiningen became landlords under the sovereignty of Baden .
The Hilsbach winery now became one of many civil offices in the Grand Duchy of Baden called the Princely-Liningian Office Hilsbach in the province of the Lower Rhine . In 1809 the Hilsbach office and winery were dissolved and the Sinsheim office was created.
District Office Sinsheim
This civil office, also called Princely Leiningisches Amt Sinsheim , belonged to the Odenwälderkreis (Mannheim) from 1809 and to the Neckarkkreis (Mannheim) from 1810.
From the Grand Ducal Baden Government Gazette No. XXII of July 30, 1813, p. 137: The Sinsheim district office emerges from the Sinsheim justice office without Schluchtern with Sinsheim , Kirchardt , rows , Steinsfurt and the landlords Rohrbach bei Sinsheim , Adersbach , Ehrstetten with Eulenhof and Neuhauß, Hoffenheim , Zuzenhausen , Dühren , Eschelbronn , Neidenstein , Weiler am Steinsberg, Grombach , Daisbach and takes over the village of Waldangelloch from the Gochsheim office .
In 1841 the towns of Elsenz , Hilsbach and Richen fell to the Sinsheim office. Richen (1849) and Elsenz (1850) came back to the Eppingen district office . In 1850 Eichtersheim , Eschelbach and Michelfeld , previously at the Wiesloch district office, were assigned to the Sinsheim district office.
The Sinsheim district office belonged to the Lower Rhine District (Mannheim) from 1832 and to the Heidelberg district in the Mannheim district commissioner from 1864. In 1864 the Neckarbischofsheim district office was dissolved and its area was assigned to the Sinsheim district office.
On April 1, 1924, the Eppingen district office was abolished and the communities of Eppingen , Mühlbach , Rohrbach am Gießhübel , Gemmingen , Berwangen , Stebbach , Adelshofen , Schluchtern and Richen came to the Sinsheim district office.
Like all Baden district offices, the Sinsheim district office was named district in 1939 . On January 1, 1973, the district of Sinsheim was dissolved.
Bailiffs
You can find it under Sinsheim district
Individual evidence
- ^ Grand Ducal Baden Government Gazette 1849, pp. 442f
- ^ Grand Ducal Baden Government Gazette 1850, p. 280
literature
- Wolfgang Ehret: The public conditions in the district of Sinsheim after the Baden Revolution of 1848/49 (with excerpts from the report by assessor Gustav Jägerschmidt of September 3, 1849). In: Kraichgau. Contributions to landscape and local research. Edited by the Heimatverein Kraichgau . Volume 16/1999, ISBN 3-921214-17-3 , pp. 95-112.