Flitsch judicial district

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Former judicial district Flitsch
( Slovenian : Bovec )
( Italian : Plezzo )
Basic data
Crown land Gorizia and Gradisca
district Tolmein
Seat of the court Flitsch (Bovec)
Template: Infobox judicial district / maintenance / no code number
competent regional court  Gorizia
surface 363.53 km 2  (1910)
Residents 5,621  (1910)
Dissolved 1919
Assigned to Italy

The judicial district of Flitsch ( Slovenian : Bovec , Italian : Plezzo ) was a judicial district in the duchy counties of Gorizia and subordinate to the district court Flitsch . Flitsch was the second largest judicial district in the county of Gorizia in terms of area and had the smallest number of inhabitants and the lowest population density of all judicial districts.

The judicial district included areas in what is now the Slovenian region of Goriška on the border with Italy and belonged to the Flitsch district . After the First World War , Austria had to cede the entire judicial district to Italy, after the Second World War most of the area came to Yugoslavia .

history

The judicial district of Flitsch was created around 1850 as a result of the dissolution of the original patrimonial jurisdiction in the Fürstete Grafschaft Görz and Gradisca as well as in the entire Austrian Empire . The judicial district was subordinate to the regional court of Gorizia , which was responsible for the entire county and which in turn was subordinate to the higher regional court of Trieste , which began operating on May 1, 1850. Even after Gorizia and Gradisca or Trieste as well as Istria gained their independence as crown lands from the original crown land coastal land, the higher regional court of Trieste remained the highest instance for the judicial district Flitsch.

The judicial district Bovec formed political from judicial administration from 1868 together with the jurisdictions during the separation Kirchheim and Tolmein the district Tolmein . Most recently, the Karfreit judicial district was also part of the Tolmein district.

The judicial district of Flitsch had a population of 5,621 in 1910, of which 5,528 stated Slovene as the colloquial language. Furthermore, 26 German speakers , 8  Italian speakers and 59 foreign speakers or foreigners lived in the judicial district  .

Due to the border regulations of the Treaty of Saint-Germain concluded on September 10, 1919 , the judicial district of Flitsch was completely slammed into Italy. After the Second World War, the area became part of Yugoslavia , today it is part of the municipality of Bovec in Slovenia .

Courthouse

In 1910, the court district comprised the seven municipalities of Bovec (Flitsch or Plezzo), Čezsoča , Log (Breth), Serpenica , Soča , Trenta and Žaga .

Individual evidence

  1. General Reich Law and Government Gazette for the Empire of Austria. 1850, XLI. Piece, No. 138: "Ordinance of the Minister of Justice of April 6, 1850 [...]"
  2. ^ Reichs-Gesetz-Blatt for the Empire of Austria. Born in 1868, XVII. Piece, No. 44. "Law of May 19, 1868 on the establishment of political administrative authorities in the kingdoms ..."
  3. ^ Reichs-Gesetz-Blatt for the Empire of Austria. Born in 1868, XLI. Piece, No. 101: Ordinance of July 10, 1868
  4. ^ Kk Central Statistical Commission (ed.): Special locations repertory for the Austrian-Illyrian coastal region. Edited on the basis of the results of the census of December 31, 1910. Vienna 1918, p. 24

literature

  • kk Central Statistical Commission (Ed.): Special locations repertory for the Austrian-Illyrian coastal region. Edited on the basis of the results of the census of December 31, 1910. Vienna 1918 (special location repertories of the Austrian states)