Ellingen court

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The lordship court Ellingen was a lordship court of the barons von Wrede zu Ellingen . It existed from 1815 to 1848. Until 1817 it was part of the Oberdonaukreis , from 1817 it belonged to the Rezatkreis . In 1848 it was converted into a judicial and police authority, and finally in 1852 into the Ellingen district court .

location

The ruling court bordered on the regional courts of Greding , Gunzenhausen , Heidenheim , Pleinfeld , Weißenburg and at the ruling court Pappenheim .

structure

Within the ruling court there were 11 tax districts , which were formed in 1808 and initially administered by the Rentamt Weißenburg (1808-1827), then by the Rentamt Spalt (1827-1834) and finally again by the Rentamt Weißenburg (from 1834). The Ettenstadt tax district was added on May 5, 1816 by the Greding district court .

With the second community edict (1818), 22 rural communities were formed:

  • Alesheim
  • Bubenheim
  • Dorsbrunn
  • Ellingen with the bubbles yard, Bräumühle, Lauterbrunnmühle, Lindenmühle, Walkershöfe and Zollmühle
  • Emetzheim
  • Ettenstadt with castle, Enhofen, Kruglmühle and Wöllmetzhofen
  • Graben (from the Pappenheim rulership)
  • Gundelsheim
  • Holzingen
  • Höttingen with Oberndorf and Ottmarsfeld
  • Hörlbach with Massenbach
  • Hundsdorf with Auhof, Rohrbach and Wolfsmühle
  • Kattenhochstatt with Metzenhof and Schertnershof
  • Oberhochstatt with goose inn, houses on Wülzburger Berg, Kehl, Niederhofen and Wiesenmühle
  • St. Veit with Banzermühle, Gündersbach and Walkerszell
  • Stopfenheim with Tiefenbach
  • Störzelbach
  • Suffersheim with Hammermühle, Heuberg, Laubenthal, Lutschmühle and Potschmühle
  • Trommetsheim with Lengenfeld
  • Wachenhofen
  • Weiboldshausen with Hagenbuch
  • Weimersheim Dürrnhof, Fallhaus, Hattenhof and Schmalwiesen

In 1840 the Ellingen ruling court was 4 square miles and had 8,225 inhabitants (2,501 Catholics, 5,624 Protestants and 100 Jews). There were 62 localities (1 town , 14 parish villages , 5 parish villages , 13 villages , 6 hamlets and 23 wastelands ) and 22 parishes (1 magistrate 3rd class and 21 rural parishes).

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 404 u. 408 .
  2. Alphabetical index of all the localities contained in the Rezat district , p. 45f. of the second part.
  3. HH Hofmann, p. 229.
  4. ^ HH Hofmann, p. 226.
  5. ^ Address and statistical handbook for the Rezatkreis in the Kingdom of Baiern , pp. 85f; HH Hofmann, p. 225f.
  6. Eduard Vetter (Ed.): Statistical handbook and address book of Middle Franconia in the Kingdom of Bavaria. 1846, p. 270.