Nebra district

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Basic data
District of the GDR Hall
County seat Nebra
surface 307 km² (1989)
Residents 29,928 (1989)
Population density 97 inhabitants / km² (1989)
License Plate K and V (1953–1990)
KS and VS (1974–1990)
NEB (1991–1994)
Bezirk Cottbus Bezirk Dresden Bezirk Erfurt Bezirk Frankfurt (Oder) Bezirk Gera Bezirk Karl-Marx-Stadt Bezirk Leipzig Bezirk Magdeburg Bezirk Neubrandenburg Berlin Bezirk Potsdam Bezirk Rostock Bezirk Schwerin Bezirk Suhl Kreis Artern Kreis Aschersleben Kreis Bernburg Kreis Bitterfeld Dessau Kreis Eisleben Kreis Gräfenhainichen Halle (Saale) und Halle Neustadt (ab 1967 eigener Stadtkreis) Kreis Hettstedt Kreis Hohenmölsen Kreis Köthen Kreis Naumburg Kreis Nebra Kreis Quedlinburg Kreis Querfurt Kreis Roßlau Saalkreis (Bezirk Halle) Kreis Sangerhausen Kreis Weißenfels Kreis Wittenberg Kreis Zeitz Kreis MerseburgDDR-Bezirk-Halle-Kreis-Nebra.png
About this picture
The Nebra district in the Halle district
(clickable map)

The Nebra district was a district in the Halle district of the GDR . From 1990 to 1994 it existed as the district of Nebra in the state of Saxony-Anhalt . Today his area belongs to the Burgenland district in Saxony-Anhalt. The seat of the district administration was in Nebra .

geography

Neighboring areas

The Nebra district bordered clockwise to the north, beginning with the Querfurt , Merseburg , Weißenfels , Naumburg , Sömmerda and Artern districts .

history

Territorial predecessors of the district were the district of Querfurt and the district of Kölleda and the district of Eckartsberga . In 1944 the designated area became part of the newly created province of Halle-Merseburg instead of the administrative district . After the Second World War, the area formed part of Saxony-Anhalt , and between 1952 and 1990 it was part of the Halle district .

On July 25, 1952, the Kölleda district was dissolved , which shortly before had to give up its historical name Eckartsberga district . The municipalities Bad Bibra, Billroda, Bucha, Kahlwinkel, Lossa, Memleben, Saubach, Steinburg and Wohlmirstedt came to the new Nebra district. In addition, parts of the then Querfurt district were added.

On May 17, 1990, the district was renamed Nebra District. On July 1, 1994 he became part of the newly founded Burgenland district with the district seat in Naumburg (Saale) :

Communities

When it was dissolved, the Nebra district comprised the following 28 municipalities:

Territory changes

When the district of Nebra was founded, there were still 37 parishes in its area, the number of which was reduced due to some incorporations.

  • Dissolution of the Wendelstein community - incorporation into Memleben (January 1, 1956)
  • Dissolution of the communities of Wennungen and Wetzendorf - incorporation into Karsdorf (April 1, 1956)
  • Dissolution of the Nißmitz community - incorporation into Freyburg (Unstrut) (January 1, 1957)
  • Dissolution of the community of Tröbsdorf - incorporation after Burgscheidungen (January 1, 1957)
  • Dissolution of the community of Plößnitz - incorporation into Laucha an der Unstrut (April 1, 1959)
  • Dissolution of the Müncheroda community - incorporation into Gleina (August 1, 1961)
  • Dissolution of the Krawinkel community - incorporation into Golzen (May 1, 1974)
  • Dissolution of the community of Zscheiplitz - incorporation into Gleina (May 1, 1974)
  • Reclassification of the district of Zscheiplitz from the municipality of Gleina to the city of Freyburg (Unstrut) (July 1, 1991)

Note: The Wendelstein community originally belonged to the Artern district and only became part of the Nebra district through this incorporation.

Today's churches

In relation to today's parishes, the county comprised Nebra

License Plate

Motor vehicles (with the exception of motorcycles) and trailers were assigned three-letter distinguishing signs from around 1974 to the end of 1990 , beginning with the letter pairs KS and VS. The last number plate series used for motorcycles was VT 00-01 to VT 50-00 .

At the beginning of 1991 the district received the distinctive sign NEB . It was issued until June 30, 1994. It has been available in the Burgenland district since November 27, 2012 .

See also

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Statistical yearbooks of the German Democratic Republic. In: DigiZeitschriften. Retrieved October 6, 2009 .
  2. a b c d Federal Statistical Office (Ed.): Municipalities 1994 and their changes since 01.01.1948 in the new federal states . Metzler-Poeschel, Stuttgart 1995, ISBN 3-8246-0321-7 .
  3. Law on the self-administration of municipalities and districts in the GDR (municipal constitution) of May 17, 1990
  4. Andreas Herzfeld: The history of the German license plate . 4th edition. German Flag Society V., Berlin 2010, ISBN 978-3-935131-11-7 , pp. 302 f .
  5. Andreas Herzfeld: The history of the German license plate . 4th edition. German Flag Society V., Berlin 2010, ISBN 978-3-935131-11-7 , pp. 520 .