Heilbronn camera office

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The camera office in Heilbronn, demolished in 1894
Seal of the K. Württ. Kameralamt Heilbronn

The Heilbronn Kameralamt was an institution of the Kingdom of Württemberg that administered state property and income in the administrative district. It existed in Heilbronn from 1806 to 1922 . The camera office was created as part of the reorganization of the state finance administration in the Kingdom of Württemberg.

history

According to the ordinance of 1807, all camera offices in Heilbronn were combined into one camera office and the towns of Horkheim, Ober- and Untereisesheim, Kirchhausen, Biberach, the formerly German order share in Talheim together with the Hohenreiner-Hof were assigned to it.

According to the decree of July 7, 1807, the part of the Talheim office of the patrimonial rule of Gemmingen was assigned to the Heilbronn camera office. By ordinance of June 6, 1819, the Heilbronn camera office took over the Bonfeld and Fürfeld locations as well as the forest and hunting slopes of the Neuenstadt district in the Neuenstadt forest office from the Kochendorf camera office. According to the decree regarding the change of the camera district division of 1837, the place Großgartach was ceded by the camera office Brackenheim to the camera office Heilbronn, after which this included the Oberamtsgebiet Heilbronn completely. By resolution of March 15, 1837, the camera office took over:

  • from the camera office Großbottwar the places Abstatt with Happenbach, Vohenlohe and Wildeck, Untergruppenbach and Obergruppenbach, Donnbronn and Stettenfels,
  • from the Kameralamt Weinsberg to the Stettenfels Revier belonging to the Neuenstadt Forestry Office.

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