Zeven district
Basic data | |
---|---|
Prussian Province | Hanover |
Administrative district | Stade |
County seat | Zeven |
Inventory period | 1885-1932 |
Surface: | 661.4 km² |
Residents | 20,569 (1925) |
Population density | 31 inhabitants / km² (1925) |
Communities | 58 (1910) 56 (1932) |
License Plate | IS |
Location of the district in the province of Hanover (1905) | |
The Zeven district was a district in the Prussian province of Hanover from 1885 to 1932 . The administrative seat was the rural community (from 1929 city) Zeven .
history
With the introduction of the new district order for the province of Hanover on April 1, 1885, the district of Zeven was formed from the old Hanoverian office of Zeven . In 1932, the Zeven district was dissolved by a decree of the Prussian State Ministry and merged with the Bremervörde district. Today the area of the former Zeven district belongs to the Rotenburg (Wümme) district in Lower Saxony .
Population development
year | 1890 | 1900 | 1910 | 1925 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Residents | 14,060 | 15,318 | 17,825 | 20,569 |
District administrators
- 1885–1887 Gustav von Wick
- 1887–1895 Bernhard Häger
- 1895–1900 Ludwig Lessing
- 1900–1930 Karl von Hammerstein-Gesmold
- 1930–1932 Ludwig Hamann
District coat of arms
The district coat of arms combines the coat of arms of Bremen with the two Petri keys with the Zevens and the Hanover provincial coat of arms .
Communities
The municipalities of the Zeven district with their population from 1910:
local community | 1910 |
---|---|
Altenbülstedt 1 | 171 |
Badenstedt | 265 |
Bockel | 61 |
Boitzen | 184 |
Brauel | 133 |
Breddorf | 493 |
Brümmerhof | 88 |
Brüttendorf | 192 |
Buchholz | 174 |
Bülstedt 1 | |
Dipshorn | 115 |
Ehestorf | 106 |
Elsdorf | 533 |
Frankenbostel | 120 |
Freyersen 2 | 67 |
Glinstedt | 268 |
Godenstedt | 112 |
Groß Meckelsen | 244 |
Great Sittensen | 737 |
Gyhum | 304 |
Hamersen | 258 |
Hanstedt | 231 |
Rushed | 186 |
Heeslingen | 607 |
Hepstedt | 514 |
Hesedorf near Gyhum | 290 |
Ippensen | 185 |
Calf | 315 |
Karlshöfen | 643 |
Kirchtimke | 322 |
Klein Meckelsen | 339 |
Klein Sittensen | 220 |
Lengenbostel | 55 |
Meinstedt | 150 |
Nartum | 368 |
Neuenbülstedt 1 | 263 |
Oldendorf | 237 |
Ostereistedt | 366 |
Easter Timke | 208 |
Rhade | 395 |
Rhadereistedt | 279 |
Rockstedt | 228 |
Rüspel | 156 |
Steddorf | 207 |
Steinfeld | 123 |
Tarmstedt | 850 |
Tiste | 257 |
Vierden | 214 |
Volkensen | 109 |
Vorwerk | 226 |
Weertzen | 171 |
Wehldorf | 214 |
Wense | 252 |
Westertimke | 203 |
Wiersdorf | 157 |
Wilstedt | 731 |
Wistedt | 252 |
Resident | 429 |
Zeven 3 | 2,108 |
The two manor districts Burgsittensen and Kuhmühlen also existed in the Zeven district until they were dissolved in the 1920s .
Individual evidence
- ^ District regulation for the province of Hanover (1884)
- ↑ data on the district of Zeven at territorial.de
- ^ A b Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. bremervoerde.html. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
- ↑ Zeven municipality register 1910
- ↑ a b Community encyclopedia for the Free State of Prussia: Province of Hanover Verlag des Prussian State Statistical Office, 1930