Rule Dasburg

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Ruin of Dasburg Castle

The rule Dasburg (also Land Dasburg ) was a territory in the Duchy of Luxembourg that existed until the end of the 18th century. The main town was today's local community Dasburg in the Eifelkreis Bitburg-Prüm in Rhineland-Palatinate , from which Dasburg Castle was named .

Associated localities

The Dasburg rule was divided into three administrative and judicial districts called dairy farms :

After Fabricius , Dasburg also had its own dairy.

history

The Dasburg rule came to the Counts of Vianden in the 14th century . The Dasburg lordship was part of the Luxembourg administrative district Quartier Vianden until the end of the 18th century .

In 1794 French revolutionary troops occupied the Austrian Netherlands , to which the Duchy of Luxembourg belonged at the time, and annexed it in October 1795 . Under French administration , the area was assigned to the Forests Department .

Today all localities with the exception of the village of Steffeshausen and part of Stupbach ( Stoubach ) belong to the Eifelkreis Bitburg-Prüm ; Both localities are now part of the municipality of Burg-Reuland in the German-speaking part of East Belgium .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b Wilhelm Fabricius : Explanations of the historical atlas of the Rhine province, Volume 2: The map of 1789. Bonn, Hermann Behrend, 1898, pp. 35, 36
  2. Clomes: attempt at a statistical-geographic description of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg , Schmit-Bruck, 1840, p 9 ( Google Books )
  3. Georg Bärsch : Description of the government district of Trier: according to official sources ... , Volume 1, Lintz, 1849, p. 86 ( Google Books )