District Court Neuburg an der Donau

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Under the name of the District Court of Neuburg an der Donau , there was an older Bavarian district court from 1803 to 1879 with its seat in Neuburg an der Donau . After the Courts Constitution Act came into force , there was a district court in Neuburg an der Donau from 1879 to 1932 in the current sense. The older regional courts were judicial and administrative authorities in the Kingdom of Bavaria , which were replaced in their function as administrative authorities by the district offices in 1862 and in their function as courts by the local courts in 1879 .

history

District court of the older order

In 1803 the district court Neuburg an der Donau was established in the course of the administrative restructuring of Bavaria . This came to the newly founded Altmühlkreis with the capital Eichstätt . The Moosgericht, also founded in 1803 and based in Karlskron , was assigned to the Neuburg Regional Court at the end of 1808. The Altmühlkreis was dissolved again in 1810. Its area was mainly assigned to the Upper Danube District, renamed in 1837 as the administrative district of Swabia and Neuburg .

On the occasion of the complete separation of jurisdiction and administration in the right bank of the Rhine region of the Kingdom of Bavaria, which came into force on July 1, 1862, the former district court of Neuburg an der Donau became a city and district court with jurisdiction only. The district of this court consisted of the city of Neuburg, the markets of Burgheim and Reichertshofen and the rural communities of Ambach , Attenfeld , Baar , Ballersdorf , Bergen , Bergheim , Bittenbrunn , Bruck , Dezenacker , Dinkelshausen , Ebenhausen , Ehekirchen , Feldkirchen , Fernmittenhausen , Grasheim , Hagau , Heinrichsheim , Hollenbach , Hütting , Joshofen , Karlshuld , Karlskron , Klingsmoos , Leidling , Lichtenau , Ludwigsmoos , Manching , Moos , Niederstimm , Oberhausen , Oberstimm , Ortlfing , Pichl , Ried , Riedensheim , Rohrenfels , Seiboldsdorf , Sinning , Stepperg , Straß , Unterhausen , Untermaxfeld , Unterstall , Wagenhofen , Weichering , Winden , Zell and Zuchering .

District Court under the Courts Constitution Act of 1879

When a court organization was introduced in Bavaria in accordance with the Judicial Constitution Act of the German Empire in 1879 , the old regional court was replaced by a district court. At the same time, a new district court in Neuburg an der Donau was established, whose district included the district courts of Dillingen , Donauwörth , Geisenfeld , Höchstädt an der Donau , Lauingen , Neuburg an der Donau , Nördlingen , Oettingen and Pfaffenhofen . The district court of Neuburg an der Donau was dissolved in the course of measures to simplify state administration in Bavaria during the Weimar Republic in 1932.

See also

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Royal Highest Ordinance of February 24, 1862 for the implementation of the law of November 10, 1861, the judicial constitution regarding ( RBl. Sp. 369 )
  2. ^ Formation of the district courts, the city courts, then the city and regional courts, and the regional courts in the regions on this side of the Rhine. ( Enclosure of the very highest ordinance of February 24, 1862 for the implementation of the law of November 10, 1861, concerning the court system. )
  3. district office Neuburg a./DI country district of the city and district court Neuburg a./D. (District Court of Donauwörth). In: K. Statistisches Bureau (Ed.): Directory of the municipalities of the Kingdom of Bavaria with their population in December 1861, arranged according to districts, administrative districts and court districts, including the relevant tax offices, forest offices and building authorities, together with an alphabetical index. Munich 1863, p. 190 f.
  4. Royal Highest Ordinance on the determination of the seat of the court and the formation of the court districts, dated April 2, 1879, Bavarian Law and Ordinance Gazette p. 355, 397 ff.
  5. ^ Michael Unger: Simplification of State Administration (Weimar Republic) , published on June 8, 2006; in: Historisches Lexikon Bayerns ( Online ), accessed on August 14, 2020.