Cadastral rod

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Cadastral rod , also cadastral rod , was a German measure of length in Hessen-Kassel and in the Grand Duchy of Oldenburg. In Oldenburg , Jever , Delmenhorst , Bremen and Hamburg it was the Oldenburg cadastral rod.

In Germany existed at the land registry , as well as in Austria so-called "cadastral measurements" such. B. cadastral foot, cadastral jück and cadastral rod. However, these were not the same across countries.

In Hessen-Kassel:

In the Grand Duchy Oldenburg Oldenburg Katastralrute / Katạsterrute was with these values: This rod different from the so-called new rod (18 feet were 5.325822 meter) in the number of allotted to the measure foot . The basis was the Oldenburg foot with 0.295879 meters , or 3.379759 Oldenburg feet resulted in 1 meter.

  • 1 cadastral rod = 10 feet = 2.95879 meters

The unit of area based on it, the cadastre jück , was

It had 640 cadastral rods in 1836, 160 square rods from 1871, which was 45,383 ares . In the construction industry, the former field size was calculated to be 40 ares. The cadastral rod was also the basis for the land survey and was therefore used as a measure of the area of ​​the cadastral square rod , also known as the cadastral square rod.

  • 1 cadastral square rod = 100 square feet = 8.7544 square meters
  • 1 Jück (old) = 160 square rods (old) = 640 cadastral rods = 5602.84 square meters = 56.028 ares

literature

  • Meyers : Large conversation lexicon . Volume 10. Leipzig 1907, p. 325.
  • W. JORDAN: Handbook of surveying. Stuttgart 1897.
  • Max Foerster: paperback for civil engineers. Volume 1, Springer, 1921, p. 671.
  • Helmut Kahnt, Bernd Knorr: Old measures, coins and weights. BI-Wiss.-Verlag, 1986, p. 139, ISBN 978-3-41102-148-2 .
  • Hermann Haack : Geographical yearbook. Volume 1, Geographisch-Kartographische Anstalt Gotha, Justus Perthes, Gotha 1866, p. XXXIV.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Christian Noback , Friedrich Eduard Noback : Complete paperback of the coin, measure and weight relationships. Volume 1, FA Brockhaus, Leipzig 1851, p. 539.