Wildstein judicial district

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Former judicial district Wildstein
( Czech : soudní okres Vildštejn )
Basic data
Crown land Bohemia
district Eger
Seat of the court Wildstein (Vildštejn)
Template: Infobox judicial district / maintenance / no code number
competent regional court  Eger
surface 140.34 km 2  (1910)
Residents 12,170  (1910)
Dissolved 1919
Assigned to Czechoslovakia

The judicial district Wildstein ( Czech : soudní okres Vildštejn ) was a judicial district subordinate to the district court Wildstein in the crown land of Bohemia . It included areas in the west of Bohemia in the Okres Domažlice . The center of the judicial district was the town of Wildstein (Vildštejn). The area has belonged to the newly founded Czechoslovakia since 1918 and has been part of the Czech Republic since 1991 .

history

The original patrimonial jurisdiction was abolished in the Austrian Empire after the revolutionary years of 1848/49 . They were replaced by the district, regional and higher regional courts, which were planned according to the principles of the Minister of Justice and whose creation was approved by Emperor Franz Joseph I on July 6, 1849 . The judicial district Wildstein initially belonged to the Eger district and in 1854 comprised 44 cadastral communities. In the course of the separation of the political from the judicial administration from 1868, the judicial district Wildstein together with the judicial district Eger (Cheb) formed the district Eger .

18,849 people lived in the Wildstein judicial district in 1869, compared with 20,602 in 1900.

The Wildstein judicial district had a population of 22,923 in 1910, of whom 22,324 stated German and only 12 Czech as the colloquial language. There were also 587 foreign speakers or foreigners living in the judicial district.

Due to the border regulations of the Treaty of Saint-Germain , which was concluded on September 10, 1919 , the Wildstein judicial district became part of the newly founded Czechoslovakia , with the court division essentially remaining in place until 1938. After the Munich Agreement , the area was added to the district of Eger or the Sudetenland .

After the Second World War, the area became part of the Okres Cheb , to which it still belongs today. After the district authorities lost their administrative powers in the course of an administrative reform in 2003, these are taken over by the municipalities and Karlovarský kraj , and the area around Vildštejn / Poběžovice has been amalgamated with other districts since the beginning of the 21st century.

Courthouse

In 1910 the court district comprised the 27 communities Absroth ( Opatov ), Altenteich ( Starý Rybnik ), Berg ( Horka ), Dürngrün ( Výspa ), Fassattengrün ( Božetín ), Fleißen ( Plesná ), Frauenreuth ( Kopanina ), Großfloh ( Velký Luh ), Höflas ( Dvorek ), Hörsin ( Hrzín ), Klinghart ( Křižovatka ), Mühlessen ( Milhostov ), Neudorf ( Nová Ve ), Neukirchen ( Nový Kostel ), Oberschönbach ( Horní Luby ), Rohr ( Nový Drahov ), Schnecken ( Šneky ), Schönbach ( Luby ), Schossenreuth ( Částkov ), Sirmitz ( Zirovice ), Steingrub ( Lomnička ), Unterschönbach ( Dolní Luby ), Voitersreuth ( Vojtanov ), Watzgenreuth ( Vackovec ), Wildstein ( Vildštejn ) and Zweifelsreuth ( Čižebná ).

Individual evidence

  1. State Law and Government Gazette for the Crown Land of Bohemia (Third Section of the Supplementary Volume) 1849, No. 110: "Organization of the Courts in the Crown Land of Bohemia."
  2. State Government Gazette for the Kingdom of Bohemia 1854, Division I, XLVII. Item, No. 277: Ordinance of the Ministries of the Interior, Justice and Finance of October 9, 1854, concern the political and judicial organization of the Kingdom of Bohemia
  3. ^ Reichs-Gesetz-Blatt for the Empire of Austria. Born in 1868, XVII. Piece, No. 44. Law of 19 May 1868 on the establishment of political administrative authorities in the kingdoms ...
  4. ^ Reichs-Gesetz-Blatt for the Empire of Austria. Born in 1868, XLI. Item, No. 101: Ordinance of July 10th, 1868, the implementation of the law of May 19th, 1868 (Reichs-Gesetz-Blatt Nr. 44) in Bohemia, Dalmatia, Austria under and above the Enns, Styria, Carinthia, Bukowina, Concerning Moravia, Silesia, Tyrol and Vorarlberg, Istria, Gorizia and Gradiska.
  5. ^ Bohemian kk Lieutenancy (ed.): Local repertory of the Kingdom of Bohemia. With the use of the k .k. Statistical Central Commission compiled results of the census of December 31, 1869 published. Prague 1872, p. 7
  6. Ck místodržitelství (ed.): Seznam míst v Království českém. K rozkazu ck místodržitelství na základě úřadních udání sestaven. Prague 1907, p. 107
  7. kk Central Statistical Commission (Ed.): Spezialortsrepertorium von Böhmen. Edited on the basis of the results of the census of December 31, 1910. Vienna 1915, p. 94

literature

  • kk Central Statistical Commission (Ed.): Spezialortsrepertorium von Böhmen. Edited on the basis of the results of the census of December 31, 1910. Vienna 1915 (special location repertories of the Austrian states)