District of Lehe
coat of arms | |
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Basic data | |
Inventory period | 1885-1932 |
Prussian Province | Hanover |
Administrative district | Stade |
County seat | Lehe |
surface | 626.6 km² (1910) |
Residents | 58,685 (1910) |
Population density | 94 inhabitants / km² (1910) |
Communities | 41 (1910) |
License Plate | IS |
Location of the district in the province of Hanover (1905) | |
The district of Lehe was a district of the Prussian province of Hanover . The administrative headquarters were in Flecken Lehe , a current district of Bremerhaven .
history
After the annexation of the Kingdom of Hanover by Prussia , the district of Lehe was formed on April 1, 1885 as part of the reorganization of the districts in the province of Hanover from the Dorum office and the part of the Lehe office north of the Geeste . On April 1, 1920, the Lehe district was spun off after Lehe had received city rights. Since then, the district of Lehe has been known as the district of Lehe . In 1932 the districts of Lehe and Geestemünde were dissolved by an ordinance of the Prussian State Ministry and merged into the district of Wesermünde .
District administrators
- 1885–1918 Eduard Geiger
- 1918–1932 Theodor Pieschel
Population development
year | 1890 | 1900 | 1910 | 1925 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Residents | 32,135 | 43,040 | 58,685 | 23,739 |
Communities
The following list contains the municipalities of the Lehe district with the population as of December 1, 1910:
local community | Ew. 1910 |
---|---|
Alfstedt | 234 |
Altenwalde | 683 |
Ankelohe | 147 |
Bederkesa | 1,672 |
Cappel | 743 |
Cappel-Neufeld | 236 |
Debstedt | 472 |
End of the dike | 342 |
Dorum | 1,974 |
Drangstedt | 423 |
Elmlohe | 364 |
Fuck mills | 115 |
Fowling | 488 |
Grossenhain | 166 |
Hainmühlen | 120 |
Holßel | 489 |
Hymen village | 289 |
Imsum | 735 |
Coals | 662 |
Clutter | 228 |
Kührstedt | 380 |
Long | 1,037 |
Lavas | 69 |
Lehe 1) , spots | 37,457 |
Linty | 503 |
March Camp | 222 |
Meckelstedt | 288 |
Midlum | 839 |
Misselwarden | 542 |
Mulsum | 412 |
Neuenwalde | 816 |
Nordholz | 249 |
Padingbüttel | 549 |
Ringstedt | 488 |
Sievern | 625 |
Spaden | 956 |
Spieka | 771 |
Spieka-Neufeld | 296 |
Wanhöden | 118 |
Woes | 339 |
Wremen | 1,147 |
Wursterheide 2) | - |
- 1) Member of the district until April 1, 1920
- 2) Newly founded in 1924 from parts of other communities
bibliography
The former Lehe district , Oskar Kiecker (compiled), Osnabrück: Wenner, 1980 [reprint = The former Lehe district , Oskar Kiecker (compiled), Hanover: Provincial Administration Hanover, 1939, (= The art monuments of the Hanover province [1899–1941 ]; Vol. 25; = Vol. 5 'District Stade', No. 2 'The Art Monuments of the District of Wesermünde', Part 1)], (= Art Monuments Inventories of Lower Saxony, Vol. 43), published in addition. with the Lower Saxony State Administration Office / Institute for Monument Preservation, ISBN 3-87898-191-0 .
Web links
- District of Lehe administrative history and the district administrators on the website territorial.de (Rolf Jehke), as of April 21, 2014.
Individual evidence
- ^ District regulations for the province of Hanover (1884). In: Website Staatsbibliothek Berlin - Digitized Collections. Retrieved October 13, 2018.
- ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. Wesermünde district. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
- ↑ Ulrich Schubert: Community directory Germany 1900. Information from December 1, 1910. In: gemeindeververzeichnis.de. January 5, 2020, accessed August 25, 2020 .