District Court of Göggingen

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The former regional court building in Augsburg-Göggingen, originally built in 1790 as a retirement home for priests

The district court Göggingen was a Bavarian district court of the older order that existed from 1804 to 1879 and was based in what is now the Augsburg-Göggingen district . In the Kingdom of Bavaria , the regional courts were judicial and administrative authorities, which were replaced in administrative matters by the district offices in 1862 and in legal matters by the local courts in 1879.

history

In 1804, in the course of the administrative restructuring of Bavaria, the district court of Göggingen was established. It predominantly comprised the areas of the former Göggingen high estates administration office, the former cathedral capital offices of Gersthofen, Radau and Stadtbergen, as well as smaller holdings of abolished Augsburg monasteries and monasteries such as St. Ulrich and Heilig-Kreuz . From 1808 the district court belonged to the Lechkreis , from 1810 to the Oberdonaukreis and from 1838 to the Schwaben and Neuburg district, the later administrative district of Swabia .

After the community was formed in 1818, the regional court was responsible for the following communities with districts that were grouped into tax districts : Achsheim with Eggelhof , Anhausen , Aystetten with Luisenruh , Batzenhofen , Bergheim with Bannacker and Wellenburg , Deuringen , Diedorf , Döpshofen with Scheppach , Edenbergen with Gailenbach , Gablingen with wood Hausen , Gersthofen , Gessertshausen with Dietkirch and Engelshof , Oberschönenfeld with Weiherhof , Goeggingen with wheel , Hainhofen , mutton , Haunstetten , Hirblingen , Inningen , Langweid , Leitershofen with Radegundis , Lützelburg with Muttershofen , Margetshausen , Neusaess , Ottmarshausen , Reinhartshausen with Burgwalden , Rettenbergen with Peterhof , Schlipsheim , Steppach , Stettenhofen , Täfertingen , Waldberg , Westheim with Kobel .

On July 1, 1862, the district offices in Bavaria were established and the administration of justice and administration were separated. As a result, the district office of Augsburg was formed through the merger of the older regional courts, Göggingen and Schwabmünchen , and the seat was moved to Augsburg . The institutions for the administration of justice retained the name of the district court. On the occasion of the introduction of the Courts Constitution Act of October 1, 1879, the Augsburg District Court was created from the former city and regional court districts of Augsburg .

See also

literature

Wilhelm Volkert (Ed.): Handbook of Bavarian Offices, Municipalities and Courts 1799–1980 CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 434

Individual evidence

  1. Georg Karl ¬von Mayr: General index on all state regulations, which are promulgirted by the royal Bavarian government sheets of Bavaria in Munich, of the Upper Palatinate in Amberg, of Franconia in Bamberg, and of Swabia in Ulm ... have been announced: From the years 1802, 1803, 1804, and 1805. 1 . Zängl, 1806 ( google.de [accessed October 13, 2019]).
  2. Topographical-historical manual for the administrative district of Swabia and Neuburg, with the coats of arms images of all places in this district entitled to coat of arms: edited according to official sources . Self-rel. des author, 1841 ( google.de [accessed October 12, 2019]).
  3. ^ Joachim Jahn: Augsburg Land . Commission for Bavarian State History, 1984, ISBN 978-3-7696-9924-1 ( google.de [accessed on October 12, 2019]).
  4. ^ Digital Library - Munich Digitization Center. Retrieved October 12, 2019 .
  5. Royal Highest Ordinance of April 2, 1879, concerning the determination of the court seats and the formation of the court districts ( GVBl. P. 387 f. )