District of Prussian Eylau
The Preußisch Eylau district was a Prussian district in East Prussia that existed under different names from 1818 to 1945.
On January 1, 1945, the Preussisch Eylau district comprised the three cities
and 112 other communities with fewer than 2000 inhabitants and two manor districts (forests, military training area).
After the end of World War II , the southern part of the district was placed under Polish administration by the Soviet occupying power in the summer of 1945 in accordance with the Potsdam Agreement . The northern half is now in the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad , the southern half is in the Polish Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship .
The Lower Saxony district of Verden took over a sponsorship for the district of Preussisch Eylau in 1955 . From this a partnership developed in 1993 with the successor municipalities of the district in the Russian Rajon Bagrationowsk and in the Polish powiat Bartoszycki .
Population development
- 1871: 50.269
- 1885: 55.828
- 1933: 49.316
- 1939: 56.388
Religions
Denomination structure of the Preußisch-Eylau district in 1939:
Evangelical: 92.7% Catholic: 4.9% "Believing in God" : 0.6% Unbelieving: 0.0% Other: 1.8%
About 20 people were of Jewish faith.
Administrative history
Kingdom of Prussia
The Prussian administrative reforms which originated with the February 1, 1818 Circle Cross Castle in the administrative district of Kaliningrad in the province of East Prussia .
This included the parishes:
- Brandenburg ,
- Dexen ,
- Dollstädt ,
- Jesau ,
- Kreuzburg ,
- Lichtenhagen ,
- Dunning field ,
- Mulhouse ,
- Poerschken ,
- Prussian Eylau ,
- Schmoditten ,
- Tharau ,
- Uderwangen .
The district office was in Kreuzburg .
As early as April 1, 1819, the following changes were made to the district boundaries:
- Integration of the parishes of Albrechtsdorf, Borken, Buchholz, Canditten, Eichhorn, Gutenfeld, Landsberg, Peisten, Petershagen and Reddenau from the district of Zinten into the district of Kreuzburg ,
- Incorporation of the parish of Almenhausen / Abschwangen from the Friedland district into the Kreuzburg district ,
- Integration of the parishes of Brandenburg and Pörschken from the Kreuzburg district into the Zinten district,
- Incorporation of the parishes of Lichtenhagen and Mahnsfeld from the Kreuzburg district into the Königsberg i. Pr. .
At the same time the district name changed to Prussian Eylau . The district office also moved to Prussian Eylau.
From April 13, 1824, the district belonged to the new province of Prussia through the merger of the two Prussian provinces (Realunion from December 3, 1829).
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 new provinces of East Prussia and West Prussia, the district of Preussisch Eylau became part of East Prussia on April 1, 1878.
On February 16, 1878, the previously communal- free Vorwerk Banditten from the Preussisch Eylau district was incorporated into the Heiligenbeil district.
On October 23, 1886, the Dichtenwalde estate was transferred from the Königsberg district to the Preussisch Eylau district.
On September 30, 1929, a territorial reform took place in the Preußisch Eylau district, as in the rest of the Free State of Prussia , in which almost all previously independent manor districts were dissolved and assigned to neighboring rural communities. On the occasion of this general clean-up, the district boundary was changed slightly on November 1, 1928: On this day, the manor districts Bonschen, Glommen, Karolinenhof and Keegels moved from the Bartenstein district to the Preussisch Eylau district . Around 1933 the Preussisch-Eylau district had around 48,400 inhabitants with a total area of 1233 square kilometers.
During the East Prussian Operation (1945) the district was occupied by the Red Army and then largely came under Soviet administration. The German population remaining in the Polish-administered sub-area after the end of the war was subsequently expelled by the local Polish administrative authorities .
District administrators
- 1819 District Councilor Schoenemann
- 1820 Goswin Freiherr von Brederlow
- 1840 Karl von Heyden
- 1857 Friedrich-Wilhelm von Deutsch
- 1858 Willibald von Kalckstein
- 1876 Albrecht Oberg
- 1877 Bruno Fornet
- 1886 Oskar von Saucken
- 1896 Carl von Elern
- 1901 Gustav von Keudell
- 1915 Fritz Dunkelbeck (acting)
- 1917 Werner von Rappard
- 1922 Herbert Neumann
- 1938 Heinrich von Bünau (acting)
- 1939 Helmut Berendt
- 1941 Mayor and district deputy Görlitz (substitute)
- 1942 District leader of the NSDAP and district deputy Martin Neumann (substitute)
Local constitution
The Preußisch Eylau district was 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 Kreuzburg (Ostpr.) (Russian: Slawskoje (Славское)), Landsberg (Ostpr.) (Polish: Górowo Iławiecki) and Prussian Eylau (Russian: Bagrationowsk (Багратионовск)) now used 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 .
On April 1, 1938, the new Stablack manor district was created. This included the military training area of the same name for the Wehrmacht. Since January 1, 1939, it also formed an administrative district.
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 .
Districts
The 112 rural communities and two manor districts in the Preußisch Eylau district were distributed over 35 administrative districts until 1945 (in the following with the current name in association with the Bagrationovsk Rajon ( Preußisch Eylau district ) in the Russian Oblast of Kaliningrad and the Powiat Bartoszycki ( Bartenstein district ) in the Polish Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship ):
- Bagrationovsk Raion :
- Swinging down = Tischino (Тишино)
- Althof = Orechowo (Орехово)
- Arnsberg = Pobeda (Победа)
- Blankenau = Jerschowo (Ершово)
- Dexen = Nagornoje (Нагорное)
- Kilgis = Krasnoarmeiskoje (Красноармейское)
- Delete = Lavrowo (Лаврово)
- Moritten = Oktjabrskoje (Октябрьское)
- Mühlhausen = Gwardeiskoje (Гвардейское)
- Naunien = Berjosowka (Берёзовка)
- Rositten = Bogatowo (Богатово)
- Schrombhnen = Moskowskoje (Московское)
- Nod = Medowoje (Медовое)
- Stablack = Dolgorukowo (Долгоруково)
- Tharau = Vladimirovo (Владимирово)
- Uderwangen = Chekhovo (Чехово)
- Wackern = Jelanowka (Елановка)
- Wittenberg = Niwenskoje (Нивенское) (until 1930: Jesau = Juschny (Южный))
- Wogau = Lermontowo (Лермонтово)
- Powiat Bartoszycki :
- Albrechtsdorf = Wojciechy
- Alt Steegen = Stary Stegny
- Beisleiden = Bezledy
- Buchholz = Bukowiec
- Oak = dęby
- Eichhorn = Wiewiórki
- Glandau = Glądy
- Groß Peisten = Piasty Wielkie
- Nerfken = Nerwiki
- Perscheln = Piersele
- Reddenau = Rodnowo
- Tolks = Tolko
- Topprienen = Toprzyny
- Wildenhoff = Dzikowo Iławieckie
- Worienen = Woryny
Place names
Lawdt was renamed Groß Lauth in 1934.
Personalities
- Friedrich von Heyden - Nerfken (1789–1851), writer and senior government councilor
- Gustav von Deutsch (1825–1878), colonel in the Civil War
- Karl von Heyden-Nerfken (1796-1857), District Administrator in Preußisch Eylau (1840-1857)
- Wolfgang Kapp (1858–1922), administrative lawyer, putschist
literature
- Gustav Neumann : Geography of the Prussian State. 2nd edition, Volume 2, Berlin 1874, pp. 16-17, item 10.
- Adolf Schlott: Topographical-statistical overview of the government district of Königsberg, according to official sources . Hartung, Königsberg 1861, pp. 48-62.
- Prussian Ministry of Finance: The results of the property and building tax assessment in the Königsberg administrative district : Berlin 1966, Preußisch Eylau district, pp. 1–51.
- Leopold Krug : The Prussian Monarchy. Iopographically, statistically and economically represented. Division 1: Province of East Prussia. Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1833, pp. 544-610 .
- Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. East Prussia - Prussian Eylau district. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
- Horst Schulz: The Prussian-Eylau district. History and documentation of an East Prussian district. Two volumes. Verden / Aller 1983, illustrated book 1986.
Web links
- District community Preussisch Eylau Landsmannschaft East Prussia
- pr-eylau.ru (Russian)
- natangen.de Private website
- Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. East Prussia - Prussian Eylau district. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
- GenWiki: District of Preussisch Eylau
Individual evidence
- ↑ The Big Brockhaus . 15th edition, 15th volume, Leipzig 1933, p. 114.
- ↑ http://www.territorial.de/