District of Zell (Mosel)

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coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the district of Zell (Mosel)
District of Zell (Mosel)
Map of Germany, position of the district of Zell (Mosel) highlighted

Coordinates: 50 ° 2 ′  N , 7 ° 11 ′  E

Basic data (as of 1969)
Existing period: 1816-1969
State : Rhineland-Palatinate
Administrative region : Koblenz
Administrative headquarters : Zell (Moselle)
Area : 372.66 km 2
Residents: 35,015 (Jun 30, 1968)
Population density : 94 inhabitants per km 2
License plate : ZEL
Circle key : 07 1 41
Circle structure: 52 municipalities
District Administrator : Johann Steffen ( CDU )
Seal mark of the royal district councilor of Zell (Mosel)

The district of Zell (Mosel) based in Zell (Mosel) existed until 1969.

geography

The district bordered in a clockwise direction in the northwest on the districts of Cochem , Simmern , Bernkastel and Wittlich .

history

After the Kingdom of Prussia was awarded the Rhineland at the Congress of Vienna in 1815, the subdivision of the administrative district of Koblenz into 16 districts was published on May 14, 1816 in the official gazette of the district government of Coblenz , one of which was the district of Zell . From 1822 on, the Koblenz administrative district and the Zell district belonged to the newly created Rhine province .

During the district reform in Rhineland-Palatinate on June 7, 1969, the district of Zell was dissolved:

Population development

year Residents source
1816 21.304
1838 27,424
1871 29,090
1885 30,281
1900 32,350
1910 33,555
1925 32,296
1939 32,719
1950 35,705
1960 36,300
1968 35,015

District administrators

cities and communes

At the time of its dissolution in 1969, the district of Zell had two towns and 50 local communities:

  1. Aldegund , today: Sankt Aldegund
  2. Alf
  3. Altlay
  4. Altstrimmed
  5. Bärenbach
  6. Beilstein
  7. Belg
  8. Beuren , to Irmenach today
  9. Blankenrath
  10. Briedel
  11. Briedern
  12. Büchenbeuren
  13. Bullay
  14. Castle
  15. Enkirch
  16. Forest
  17. Grenderich
  18. Rooster
  1. Haserich
  2. Hesweiler
  3. Hirschfeld
  4. Irmenach
  5. Lautzenhausen
  6. Liesenich
  7. Öffelscheid , today at Peterswald -akenöffelscheid
  8. Lötzbeuren
  9. Mastershausen
  10. Merl , to Zell today
  11. Mesenich
  12. Medium-bodied
  13. Moritzheim
  14. Neef
  15. Low ears
  16. Niederweiler
  17. Panzweiler
  1. Peterswald , today at Peterswald -akenöffelscheid
  2. Pünderich
  3. Raversbeuren
  4. Reidenhausen
  5. Rödelhausen
  6. Showers
  7. Senheim
  8. Sohren
  9. Sosberg
  10. Starkenburg
  11. Tellig
  12. Thalkleinich , to Kleinich today
  13. Traben-Trarbach , city
  14. Wahlenau
  15. Walhausen
  16. Würrich
  17. Zell (Mosel) , city

The municipality of Traben and the city of Trarbach were merged in 1904 to form the city of Traben-Trarbach. The municipality of Kaimt was incorporated into the city of Zell in 1950.

License Plate

On July 1, 1956, the district was assigned the distinctive sign ZEL when the vehicle registration number that is still valid today was introduced . It was issued until June 6, 1969. It has been available in the Cochem-Zell district since November 15, 2012.

literature

  • Ludwig Follmann: The Zell district in the territorial administrative reform in 1969. Review after 20 years. In: Heimatjahrbuch Kreis Cochem-Zell 1989, pp. 11–24.
  • Klaus Bremm: "Just because you were so small you had to die". Dissolution of the district / Zell Mosel . In: Heimatjahrbuch Kreis Cochem-Zell 1989, pp. 25-27.
  • Severin Bartos: The dissolution of the districts of Cochem and Zell 20 years ago. Memories of the then incumbent district administrator. In: Heimatjahrbuch Kreis Cochem-Zell 1989, pp. 7-10.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Alfred Oppenhoff: 175 years ago the Prussians came in the 1991 home yearbook of the Ahrweiler district
  2. Official municipality directory 2006 ( Memento from December 22, 2017 in the Internet Archive ) (= State Statistical Office Rhineland-Palatinate [Hrsg.]: Statistical volumes . Volume 393 ). Bad Ems March 2006, p. 161 (PDF; 2.6 MB). Info: An up-to-date directory ( 2016 ) is available, but in the section "Territorial changes - Territorial administrative reform" it does not give any population figures.  
  3. ^ Contributions to the statistics of the Königl. Prussian Rhineland. 1829, p. 20 , accessed November 11, 2017 .
  4. ^ The Rhine Province under Prussia. Willemsen, 1842.
  5. a b Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia 1885
  6. a b c d e f Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. District of Zell (Mosel). (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).

Web links

Commons : Landkreis Zell  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files