Gronau district

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Basic data
Prussian Province Hanover
Administrative region : Hildesheim administrative district
Circular seat Gronau (Leine)
surface 205.9 km²
Residents 21,432 (1925)
Population density 104 inhabitants / km² (1925)
Communities 31 (1932)
Location of the district of Gronau in the province of Hanover (1905)
District of Gronau in Hanover 1905.png

The district of Gronau was a Prussian district in the south of the province of Hanover . The district encompassed the northernmost part of the Leinebergland at its transition to the North German Plain.

history

The Gronau district was formed in 1885 from the old Hanoverian office of Gronau and the places Deilmissen , Deinsen , Dunsen , Esbeck , Heinsen , Marienhagen and Tegge of the old office of Lauenstein. It bordered the Hameln district to the west, the Springe district and the Hildesheim district to the north and the Marienburg district to the east .

The Gronau district was dissolved on October 1, 1932 and incorporated into the Alfeld (Leine) district.

Population development

year Residents
1890 19,300
1900 19,483
1910 20,607
1925 21,432

District administrators

Cities, municipalities, manor districts and forest districts

The following cities, municipalities, manor districts and forest districts belonged to the Gronau district:

Dumbbells
Barfelde
Betheln
Bruggen
Burgstemmen
Deilmissen
Yours
Dötzum
Dunsen
Boar woods
Eddinghausen
Eime
Eitzum
Elze , city
Esbeck
Gronau (Leine) , city
House Escherde
Heinsen , manor district
Heinum
Heinum-Wallenstedt, manor district
Heyersum
Honze
Mahlerten
Marienhagen
Flours
Möllensen
Nienstedt
Nordstemmen
Osterwald , forest district
sneak
Rheden
Schierenberg, manor district
Sehlde
Sibbesse
Tegge, forest district
Wallenstedt

Web links

literature

  • Iselin Gundermann, Walther Hubatsch : Outline of German administrative history 1815-1945 . Series A, Volume 10: Hanover . Herder Institute, Marburg (Lahn) 1981, ISBN 3-87969-125-8 .

Individual evidence

  1. a b Uli Schubert: German municipality register 1910. Retrieved on May 22, 2009 .
  2. ^ A b Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. alfeld.html. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  3. ^ District regulation for the province of Hanover (1884)