Rain District Court

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The Rain Regional Court was an older Bavarian regional court that existed from 1803 to 1879 and was based in Rain in what is now the Donau-Ries 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 1803, the Rain Regional Court was established in the course of the administrative restructuring of Bavaria . This came in 1808 to the newly founded Altmühlkreis with the capital Eichstätt , in 1810 it moved to the Oberdonaukreis with its seat in Ulm or from 1817 (merging with two other districts) in Augsburg and came to Upper Bavaria in 1837 . With the allocation to the district office of Neuburg, the judicial district Rain came to the district of Swabia and Neuburg in 1879 .

When organizing the district offices, the Rain Regional Court with its 42 communities was assigned to the Aichach district office in 1862. In 1879 the court district Rain - with the exception of Ebenried, Immendorf, Osterzhausen and Pöttmes - was assigned to the Neuburg district office.

At the same time the was in the introduction of Judicature Act that on October 1, 1879 Local Court Rain set, whose district was composed of the other 38 municipalities of the former district court district Rain: Bayerdilling , mountain village , Bonsai , book , Echsheim , Etting , Feldheim , Gempfing , Haselbach , Heimpersdorf , Holzheim , Illdorf , Kühnhausen , Kunding , Mittelstetten , Münster , Neukirchen , Niederschönenfeld , Oberbaar , Oberpeiching , Pessenburgheim , Rain, Reicherstein , Riedheim , Sallach , Schöneberg , Schorn , Stadel , Staudheim , Thierhaupten , Unterbaar , Unterpeiching , Wächtering , Walda , Wallerdorf , Weidorf , Wengen and Wiesenbach .

See also

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Royal Highest Ordinance of April 2, 1879, concerning the determination of the court seats and the formation of the court districts ( GVBl. P. 400 )
  2. Rain Regional Court. In: Royal. Bayer. Statistical Bureau (ed.): Complete list of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria. Ackermann, Munich 1877, col. 13-18.