Levico Judicial District

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Former judicial district of Levico
Basic data
state Tyrol
district Borgo
Seat of the court Levico
Template: Infobox judicial district / maintenance / no code number
competent regional court  Trent
surface 158.75 km 2  (1910)
Residents 15,463  (1910)
Dissolved 1919
Assigned to Italy

The judicial district Levico was the District Court Levico under standing judicial district in the princely county of Tyrol . The judicial district in Trentino was part of the Borgo district .

After the First World War , Austria had to cede the entire judicial district to Italy .

history

The judicial district of Levico was created by a proclamation of the Provincial Court Introductory Commission passed in 1849 and originally comprised the nine municipalities of Caldonazzo , Casotto , Lavarone , Levico , Lusern , Pedemonte , Senta , Vattaro and Vosentino .

The judicial district of Levico formed in the course of the separation of the political from the judicial administration from 1868 together with the judicial districts of Borgo and Strigno, the district of Borgo . The Levico judicial district had a population of 14,611 in 1869.

In 1910, 15,463 people were expelled from the judicial district, of whom 944 stated German (6.1%) and 14,232 Italian or Ladin (92.0%) as the colloquial language. The German-speaking minority lived almost exclusively in the municipality of Lusern ( Luserna in Italian ), where they made up the absolute majority with a population of 735 people and a population share of 87%. Lusern is one of the best-known and best-preserved German-speaking islands of the Zimbri people in northern Italy.

Due to the border provisions of the Treaty of Saint-Germain concluded on September 10, 1919 , the judicial district of Levico was completely slammed into Italy.

Courthouse

The court district in 1910 comprised the ten municipalities of Bosentino , Calceranica , Caldonazzo , Casotto , Centa , Lavarone , Levico , Lusern , Pedemonte and Vattaro .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Provincial law and government gazette for the Kronland Tirol and Vorarlberg. 1850, 1st piece, No. 1: Announcement of the State Court Introductory Commission of November 29, 1849, about the organization of courts in the Crown Lands of Tyrol and Vorarlberg
  2. ^ Reichs-Gesetz-Blatt for the Empire of Austria. Born in 1868, XVII. Piece, No. 44. "Act 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 Statistische Central-Commission (Hrsg.): Local repertory of the princes of Tyrol and Vorarlberg. Edited on the basis of the census of December 31, 1869. Innsbruck 1873, p. 5
  5. ^ Kk Central Statistical Commission (Ed.): Special locations repertory of Tyrol and Vorarlberg. Edited on the basis of the results of the census of December 31, 1910. Vienna 1917, p. 7 f.

literature

  • kk Statistische Central-Commission (Hrsg.): Local repertory of the princes of Tyrol and Vorarlberg. Edited on the basis of the census of December 31, 1869 . Innsbruck 1873
  • kk Central Statistical Commission (Ed.): Special locations repertory of Tyrol and Vorarlberg. Edited on the basis of the results of the census of December 31, 1910. Vienna 1917 (Special locations repertories of the Austrian states. Volume VIII. Tyrol and Vorarlberg)