Judicial district Rudolfswerth

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Former judicial district Rudolfswerth
( Slovenian : sodni okraj Novo mesto )
Basic data
state Carniola
district Rudolfswerth (Rudolfovo)
Seat of the court Rudolfswerth (Rudolfovo / Novo mesto)
Template: Infobox judicial district / maintenance / no code number
competent regional court  Rudolfswerth
surface 247.20 km 2  (1910)
Residents 28,861  (1910)
Dissolved 1919
Assigned to Yugoslavia

The judicial district Rudolfswerth also judicial district Rudolfswert , originally judicial district Neustadtl ( Slovene : sodni okraj Rudolfovo or sodni okraj Novo mesto ) was a judicial district in the crown land of Carniola, subordinate to the district court Rudolfswerth . It comprised parts of the political district of Rudolfswerth (Rudolfovo) and was added to the state of Yugoslavia in 1919 .

history

The judicial district of Rudolfswerth was originally called Neustadtl and was created as a result of a ministerial lecture on August 6, 1849, in which the main features of the court division were laid down. After the territorial division of the judicial districts and the allocation of the judicial districts to the newly established district authorities had been determined by the "Political Organizing Commission" in December 1849, the district courts of Carniola began their work on June 1, 1850. The District Court Rudolfswerth were by the provincial division of Krain in March 1850, the 46 cadastral Bela Cerkva (Weisskirchen) Beršlin (Werschlin) Blatnik (Rußbach), Brusnice (Wrussnitz) Čermošnice (Tschermoschnitz) Čermošnice (Tschermoschnitz) Cerovec (Zerouz) , Črešnica (Kerschdorf), Dobni Dol (Eichenthal), Doljni Verh (Dolniwerch), Družinska Vas (Gesindeldorf), Gaberje (Gaberje), Globodol (Tiefenthal), Golobinjek (Taubenberg), Gorenja Orehovca (Obernussdorf), Gorenja Straža (Oberstrascha) , Gorenje Polje (Oberfeld), Gotna Vas (Gothendorf), Herinja Vas (Hereindorf), Hmelčič (Hmeltschitz), Hrušica (pear tree), Jurka Vas (Jurkendorf), Kandija (Kandia), Lakovnice (Lakounitz), Mirna Peč (Hönigstein) , Novo Mesto (Neustadtl), Podturn (Unterthurn), Polhovca (Pochouza), Poljane (Pöllandl), Posterica (stone wall), Potov Verh (Potendorf), Prečna (Pretschna), Šentpeter (St. Peter), Smolena Vas (Pechdorf) , Štale (Stalldorf), Stranska Vas (Seitendorf), Težka Voda (Schwerenbach), To maža Vas (Thomasdorf), Toplica (Töplitz in the Lower Carniola), Veliki Podljuben (Grosspodluben), Vina Vas ( wine village), Žage (Altsaag), Zagorica (Sagoritz), Zajčji Verh (Hasenberg), Žalovce (Schalowitz) and Ždinja Vas ( Seidendorf). Together with the judicial district Seisenberg (Žužemberk) and Treffen , the judicial district Rudolfswerth formed the district Rudolfswerth.

year Area
(km²)
Check-
residents
Slovenian-
speaking
German
speakers
1880 26,040 22,956 2,981
1890 27,248 24,548 2,585
1900 511.00 28,289 25,517 2,494
1910 508.74 28,861 25,346 2,274

The judicial district had a population of 26,040 present in 1880, with 22,956 people reporting Slovenian and 2,981 people using German as their colloquial language. In 1910 28,861 people were expelled from the judicial district, of whom 25,346 spoke Slovene (87.8%) and 2,274 German (7.9%). Around 70% of the German-speaking minority lived in the Tschermoschnitz community in 1910, where they made up 95% of the population. There was also a strong German-speaking population in the municipality of Pöllandl, where the German-speaking population comprised 80% of the population.

Due to the border regulations of the Treaty of Saint-Germain concluded on September 10, 1919 , the judicial district of Rudolfswerth was completely added to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.

Courthouse

As a result of the merging of the cadastral municipalities into municipalities in 1910, the Rudolfswert court district comprised the 12 municipalities of Bela Cerkev (Weißkirchen), Brusnice (Wrussnitz), Črmošnjice (Tschermoschnitz), Gorenje Polje (Oberfeld), Mirna Peč (Hönigstein), Orehovica (Nussdorf), Prečna ( Pretschna), Rudolfovo (Rudolfswert), Šent Peter (St. Peter), Šmihel-Stopiče (Sankt Michael-Stopitsch) and Toplica (Töplitz).

Individual evidence

  1. State law and government gazette for the Kronland Carniola, 1849, III. Piece, No. 26. "Announcement of the Political Organizing Commission for the Crown Land of Carniola of December 23, 1849."
  2. ^ State law and government gazette for the Kronland Carniola. Born in 1850, VI. Piece, No. 134. “Announcement of the kk inneröst. coastal Appeal Court of April 18, 1850. On the date of the beginning of the effectiveness of the new courts. "
  3. ^ State law and government gazette for the Kronland Carniola. Year 1850, Volume IV, No. 92. “Announcement of the Imperial and Royal Lieutenancy for Carniola from March 8, 1850. Regional division of Carniola into regional courts, district authorities, criminal district courts, district courts, tax offices, cadastral communities and localities.” (German) or ( Slovenian )
  4. ^ Kk Statistische Central-Commission (Ed.): Special-Orts-Repertorium von Krain. (Obširen imenik Krajev na Krajnskem) Vienna 1884, p. 117
  5. kk Central Statistical Commission (ed.): Spezialortsrepertorium von Krain. Edited on the basis of the results of the census of December 31, 1910. Vienna 1919, p. 74

literature

  • kk Central Statistical Commission (ed.): Special-Orts-Repertorium von Krain (Obširen imenik Krajev na Krajnskem). Vienna 1884 (special local repertories of the kingdoms and countries represented in the Reichsrathe)
  • kk Statistische Central-Commission (Ed.): Special-Orts-Repertorium von Krain. Revised on the basis of the results of the census of December 31, 1890. Vienna 1894 (Special-Orts-Repertorien der Reichsrathe, Bd. 6) = Specijalni repertorij Krajev na Krajnskem
  • kk Central Statistical Commission (ed.): Leksikon Občin za Kamniksko. Izdelan po rezultatih popisa ljudstva dne 31. Grudna 1900. Vienna 1906 (Community encyclopedia of the kingdoms and countries represented in the Imperial Council, vol. 6)
  • kk Central Statistical Commission (Hrsg.): Spezialortsrepertorium von Krain. Edited on the basis of the results of the census of December 31, 1910. Vienna 1919 (Special locations repertories of the Austrian states. Volume VI. Krain)