District of Bartenstein (East Pr.)
coat of arms | map |
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Basic data (status approx. 1945) | |
Existing period: | 1818 - 1945 |
Country : | Free State of Prussia |
Province : | East Prussia |
Administrative region : | Koenigsberg |
Administrative headquarters : | Bartenstein |
Surface: | 881.09 km² |
Residents : | 50,448 (May 17, 1939) |
Population density : | 57.3 inhabitants per km² |
License plate : | IC 1953 planned: BAR |
Circle structure: | 77 municipalities 1 manor district in 30 administrative districts |
The Friedland district , from 1927 to 1945: Bartenstein district (from 1939 Bartenstein district ), was a district in the Prussian province of East Prussia and existed from 1818 to 1945.
Administrative history
Kingdom of Prussia
After the Congress of Vienna , with the district reforms in the Kingdom of Prussia on February 1, 1818, the Friedland district in the Königsberg district of East Prussia was established.
This included the parishes :
- Allenau
- Allenburg
- Almenhausen / Abwangen
- Auglitten-Schönwalde
- Boettchersdorf
- German Wilten
- Domnau
- Friedenberg
- Friedland
- Georgenau
- Groß Schönau- Lindenau
- Klein Schönau
- Klingenberg
- Schippenbeil
- Schönbruch
- Stockheim
The district office was in Friedland.
As early as April 1, 1819, extensive changes were made to the district boundaries:
- Outsourcing of the parish Almenhausen / Abschwangen from the Friedland district to the Kreuzburg district ,
- Integration of the parishes of Bartenstein, Falkenau, Gallingen and Groß Schwansfeld from the Rastenburg district into the Friedland district ,
- Incorporation of the parishes of Friedenberg and Groß Schönau from the Friedland district into the Gerdauen district .
After the merger of the previous provinces of Prussia and West Prussia in 1824, the district belonged to the province of Prussia with its seat in Königsberg .
On April 1, 1845, the district seat was moved from Friedland to Domnau .
North German Confederation and German Empire
Since July 1, 1867, the district belonged to the North German Confederation and from January 1, 1871 to the German Empire . After the province of Prussia was divided into the provinces of East and West Prussia , the Friedland district became part of East Prussia on April 1, 1878.
On December 10, 1895, the Heinrichshof property , which had previously been mistakenly included in the Friedland district, was incorporated into the Wehlau district by the Friedland district.
The district office had been in Bartenstein since October 1, 1902, but it remained with the previous district name. Only from October 21, 1927 did the Friedland district use the name Bartenstein .
On November 1, 1928, the manor districts Bonschen, Glommen, Karolinenhof and Keegels moved from the Bartenstein district to the Preussisch Eylau district .
On September 30, 1929, a regional reform took place in the Bartenstein district in line with developments in the rest of Prussia, in which almost all previously independent manor districts were dissolved and assigned to neighboring rural communities. At the same time, the Elisenau-Frisching estate, Forst from the Bartenstein district to the Wehlau district . Around 1929 the district of Bartenstein had around 43,200 inhabitants with a total area of 880 km².
Occupied by the Red Army during the East Prussian Operation (1945) , the district came under Soviet administration. Due to the Potsdam Agreement , the district was divided by the Polish-Soviet demarcation line in the summer of 1945 when the occupation zones were established. The northern half came under Soviet administration and since the dissolution of the Soviet Union has been in the Russian Oblast Kaliningrad , divided between the Pravdinsk Raion ( Friedland ) and the Bagrationovsk Raion ( Prussian Eylau ). The southern half of the district was placed under Polish administration by the Soviet occupying power together with the southern half of East Prussia and all of West Prussia and is now in the Polish Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship , where it forms the Powiat Bartoszycki ( Bartenstein District ). As far as the German residents had not fled, they were expelled from the Polish-administered part of the district by the local Polish administrative authorities after the end of the war .
Local constitution
The Friedland district was initially divided into town communities, rural communities and - until they were almost completely eliminated - in independent manor districts.
With the introduction of the Prussian Municipal Constitution Act of December 15, 1933, there was a uniform municipal constitution for all municipalities from January 1, 1934. The previous municipalities of Bartenstein, Domnau, Friedland and Schippenbeil now carried the name city .
With the introduction of the German Municipal Code of January 30, 1935, the municipal constitution valid in the German Reich came into force on April 1, 1935, according to which the previous rural municipalities were now referred to as municipalities . These were grouped together in administrative districts .
A new district constitution was no longer created; The district regulations for the provinces of East and West Prussia, Brandenburg, Pomerania, Silesia and Saxony from March 19, 1881 continued to apply .
District administrators
- 1818–1834: Gustav von Sanden
- 1835–1845: Botho Heinrich zu Eulenburg (1804–1879)
- 1845–1857: Heinrich (I) von Gottberg (1785–1859)
- 1857–1893: Otto von Gottberg (1831–1913)
- 1893–1908: Heinrich (II) von Gottberg (1864–1931), first legislature
- 1908–1914: Walter von Christen (1874–1944)
- 1914–1915: Max von Bahnfeldt (1880–1964)
- 1915–1930: Heinrich (II) von Gottberg (1864–1931), second legislature
- 1930–1944: Friedrich Wever
cities and communes
Administrative structure 1945
At the beginning of 1945, the Bartenstein district consisted of 77 municipalities, including the cities of Bartenstein , Domnau , Friedland and Schippenbeil and an estate district:
Districts & Municipalities (1931) | Population (1939) | comment |
City of Bartenstein (East Pr.) | 12,912 | |
1. Bartenstein (Ostpr.), City | free of charge | |
City of Domnau | 2,990 | |
1. Domnau city | free of charge | |
City of Friedland (East Pr.) | 4,417 | |
1. Friedland (Ostpr.), City | free of charge | |
City of Schippenbeil | 3,434 | |
1. Schippenbeil, city | free of charge | |
Allenau district | 820 | |
1. Allenau | 528 | |
2. Heyde | 213 | |
3. Kukhnen | 79 | |
District Böttchersdorf | 733 | |
1. Böttchersdorf | 629 | |
2. Hohenstein | 104 | |
District of Deutsch Wilten (until 1930 Abbarten) | 1,460 | |
1. German Wilten | 759 | |
2. Georgenau | 312 | |
3. Wolmen | 389 | |
Falkenau district (until 1930 Wöterkeim) | 1,095 | |
1. Falkenau | 552 | |
2. Word seed | 543 | |
Gallingen district | 1,034 | |
1. Gallingen | 800 | |
2. Grommels | 234 | |
Gallitten district (until 1930 Galben) | 735 | |
1. Gallits | 275 | |
2. Gender | 460 | |
Groß Klitten district (until 1930 Groß Domnau) | 685 | |
1. Big Klitten | 275 | |
2. Prussian Wilten | 410 | |
Groß Schwansfeld district | 864 | |
1. Both thirds | 384 | |
2. Groß Schwansfeld | 480 | |
Groß Schwaraunen district | 1,708 | |
1. Big blacks | 462 | |
2. Hermenhagen | 341 | |
3. Kraftshagen | 536 | |
4. Plenary sessions | 369 | |
District Kapsitten (until 1934 Gertlack) | 439 | |
1. Kapsitten | Renamed May 8, 1934, formerly Gertlack | |
Karschau district | 342 | |
1. Karschau | 127 | |
2. Kipitten | 215 | |
Kinkeim District | 673 | |
1. Kinkeim | 161 | |
2. Sand varnish | 156 | |
3. Trumpets | 356 | |
District of Klein Schönau (until 1930 Dietrichswalde) | 548 | |
1. Dietrichswalde | 244 | |
2. Klein Schönau (East Pr.) | 304 | |
Klingenberg district | 496 | |
1. Klingenberg | ||
Landskron district | 893 | |
1. Landskron | 723 | |
2. Langhanken | 170 | |
District Langendorf | 1,008 | |
1. Langendorf | 618 | |
2. Stolzenfeld | 390 | |
Liekeim district | 1,138 | |
1. Damerau | 551 | |
2. Legien | 134 | |
3. Liekeim | 187 | |
4. Siddau | 266 | |
Liesken district | 1,611 | |
1. Liesken parish-free manor district | 561 | |
2. Rose germ | 233 | |
3. Skitten | 315 | |
4. Söllen | 259 | |
5. Wehrwilten | 243 | |
District of Maxkeim | 983 | |
1. Walk away | 180 | |
2. Maxkeim | 363 | |
3. Nohnen | 106 | |
4. Wang rides | 186 | |
5. Come on | 148 | |
Mertensdorf district | 369 | |
1. Mertensdorf | ||
Polkitten District | 740 | |
1. Lap germ | 288 | |
2. Polkitten | 181 | |
3. Redden | 271 | |
District Romsdorf | 832 | |
1. Massaunen | 375 | |
2. Romsdorf | 457 | |
Rosenort district | 695 | |
1. Pass varnish | 419 | |
2. Rosenort | 276 | |
Schönbruch District | 2,123 | |
1. Big Poninken | 448 | |
2. Juditten | 536 | |
3. Schönbruch | 1,139 | |
District of Schönwalde | 568 | |
1. Schönbaum | 241 | |
2. Schönwalde | 327 | |
District of Schwönau | 874 | |
1. Heinrichsdorf | 309 | |
2. Schwönau | 373 | |
3. Sommerfeld | 192 | |
Sehmen District | 503 | |
1. Take | ||
District Spittehnen | 1,091 | |
1. Ardappen | 122 | |
2. Loyds | 206 | |
3. Marks | 434 | |
4. Spinal tendons | 329 | |
Stockheim district (until 1937 pussiness) | 850 | |
1. Eisenbart | 306 | |
2. Stockheim | 544 | |
District Wohnsdorf (until 1930 Groß Wohnsdorf) | 785 | |
1. Althof | 230 | |
2. Residential village | 555 |
Place names
Two towns were given different names in 1938:
- Bartenstein: Bartenstein (Ostpr.)
- Friedland i. Ostpr .: Friedland (Ostpr.)
literature
- in order of appearance
- Leopold Krug : The Prussian Monarchy - represented topographically, statistically and economically . Part 1: Province of East Prussia , Berlin 1833, pp. 479-543 .
- Adolf Schlott: Topographical-statistical overview of the government district of Königsberg, according to official sources . Hartung, Königsberg 1861, pp 77-87.
- Prussian Ministry of Finance: The results of the property and building tax assessment in the Königsberg administrative district : Berlin 1966, 5th Friedland district, pp. 1–43.
- Gustav Neumann : Geography of the Prussian State. 2nd edition, Volume 2, Berlin 1874, p. 16, item 9.
Web links
- History and development of the district of Bartenstein (Ostpr.) On the website of the Heimatkreisgemeinschaft Bartenstein / Ostpr. e. V.
- Landkreis Bartenstein (Ostpr.) On the pages of Territorial Changes in Germany and German Administered Areas 1874-1945 by Rolf Jehke
- Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. Bartenstein district (Ostpr.). (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
Individual evidence
- ↑ The Big Brockhaus . 15th edition, 2nd volume, Leipzig 1929, p. 333.
- ^ Community encyclopedia for the Free State of Prussia, Volume 1: Province of East Prussia, Berlin 1931
- ^ Official directory of the German Reich 1939, 2nd edition 1941
- ^ Official directory of the German Reich 1939, 2nd edition 1941