Tax office Straubing

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The Straubing tax office is a local tax authority in Bavaria and the tax office of the city of Straubing . It is subordinate to the Bavarian State Tax Office in Munich and has the Federal Tax Office number 9162. The Straubing Tax Office is housed in the Duke's Castle in Straubing in the northeast of Neustadt.

The area of ​​responsibility of the tax office includes the municipalities Aholfing, Aiterhofen, Ascha, Atting, Bogen, Falkenfels, Feldkirchen, Geiselhöring, Haibach, Haselbach, Höhenstein, Hunderdorf, Irlbach, Kirchroth, Konzell, Laberweinting, Leiblfing, Loitzendorf, Mallersdorf-Pfaffenberg, Mariaposching, Mitter , Neukirchen, Niederwinkling, Oberlindberg, Oberschneiding, Parkstetten, Perasdorf, Perkam, Rain, Rattenberg, Rattiszell, Salching, Sankt Englmar, Schwarzach, Stallwang, Steinach, Straßkirchen, Straubing, Wiesenfelden and Windberg.

history

Until the tax reform by the Bavarian minister Count von Montgelas in 1802, there was a system of two-part financial management. Land taxes were levied in the ducal, aristocratic or monastery caste farms, and land taxes in the landscape tax offices. The abolition of the ecclesiastical and later aristocratic manors under Montgelas also ushered in the liberation of the peasants.

An ordinance of March 24, 1802 created new law for the financing of state and royal financial needs. As a result, the Straubing Rent Office , founded in 1507, became a pure financial authority and thus a forerunner of today's tax office. In 1919 the "Rentamt" was renamed the "Finanzamt" as a state authority and was subordinated to the German Reich. After the Second World War, the tax offices again became state authorities.

With the dissolution of the Mitterfels tax office in 1932 as part of an administrative reform, its territory fell to the Straubing tax office. A territorial reform in 1973 led to the dissolution of the Mallersdorff tax office, the territory of which was largely assigned to the Straubing tax office.

building

Straubing tax office in the Duke's Castle

The residential palace from 1356 housed numerous government and administrative offices after its completion. The south and east wings facing the city were used to collect taxes in the ducal caste office and in the rent master's office.

In 1802, the Royal Bavarian Rent Office in Straubing moved into the rooms of the former government building in the western castle extension on Rentamtsberg. The originally late Gothic administrative building was gutted during the reign of 1738 and received a rococo facade by the Munich court architects Effner and Gunetzrhainer.

Due to the increase in tasks, a new building was built in 1977–1981, including the old district office. 1990–1995 the late Gothic south and east wings of the ducal castle, once the ducal rent master's office and caste office, were converted for use by the tax office.

See also

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Tax office Straubing: About us - history. Retrieved November 23, 2017 .