Zusmarshausen District Court

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Zusmarshausen Castle, former district court building

The district court of Zusmarshausen was a Bavarian district court of the older order that existed from 1804 to 1879 and was based in Zusmarshausen . 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 the regional court of Zusmarshausen was established as part of the administrative restructuring of Bavaria . It predominantly comprised the areas of the former high estates' care office in Zusmarshausen, the three cathedral capital offices Dinkelscherben, Anhausen and Breitenbrunn, the monastery office Oberschönenfeld , as well as scattered possessions of abolished Augsburg monasteries and monasteries such as St. Ulrich , St. Moritz and Heilig-Kreuz . In 1804 the regional court owned two rent offices in Zusmarshausen and Oberschönenfeld. From 1808 it belonged to the Lechkreis , from 1810 to the Oberdonaukreis and from 1838 to the Schwaben and Neuburg district, the later administrative district of Swabia .

The district office of Zusmarshausen was formed as part of the Bavarian administrative reform of 1862 . 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 name was changed to the District Court of Zusmarshausen .

Communities

After the community was formed in 1818, the regional court was responsible for the following communities with districts, which were divided into tax districts : Adelsried with Engelshof and Kruichen , Agawang with Obernerfsried and Untersterfsried, Anried with Engertshofen , Aretsried with Heimberg , Auerbach with Lindgraben , Biburg with Kreppen and Neudeck , Bonstetten , Breitenbronn with Holzara , Buch with Boschhorn , Deubach , Dinkelscherben with Au and Zusameck , Ettelried with Tirolerhof, Fischach , Fleinhausen with Elmischwang , Gabelbach with Kleinried and Rücklenmühle , Gabelbachergreut , Grünenbaindt , Häder with Neuhäder and Schempach , Horgau with Bieselbach , Herpfenried and Schäfstoß , Horgauergreut , Kutzenhausen with Brunnenmühle and Katzenlohe , Lindach , Neumünster with Asbachhof and Violau , upper Schöneberg with Reischenau , Saulach , Siefenwang and Stadel , Reitenbuch with Maingründel , Reutern , Ried with Kühbach , Rommelsried , Schönebach , stone church with Wolfsberg , Streitheim with Ehgatten , Ventilation berg and Weilerhof , Ustersbach with Baschenegg , Mödishofen and Osterkühbach , Unterschöneberg with Stuhlenmühle , Uttenhofen , Vallried , Welden , Willishausen with Hausen and Oggenhof , Willmatshofen , Wollbach , Wollmetshofen , Wörleschwang , Zusmarshausen with Salenbach .

District judge

  • until 1850: Ernst August Christian Friedrich Sondermann
  • until 1855: Adolph Henne
  • from 1855: Johann Baptist Rupprecht
  • from 1862: Georg Friedrich Rothenhöfer
  • until 1878: Wilhelm Enzensberger

See also

literature

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. Royal Highest Ordinance of April 2, 1879, concerning the determination of the court seats and the formation of the court districts ( GVBl. P. 389 )
  3. 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 on October 13, 2019]).
  4. ^ Annual report of the historical association in the Oberdonau district . Lauter, 1837 ( google.de [accessed October 19, 2019]).
  5. Bavaria: Government Gazette for the Kingdom of Bavaria: 1855 . 1855 ( google.de [accessed October 19, 2019]).
  6. ^ A b Government Gazette for the Kingdom of Bavaria: 1862 . 1862 ( google.de [accessed October 19, 2019]).
  7. Schwaben and Neuburg: Intelligence Journal of the Royal Government of Swabia and Neuburg: 1849 . 1849 ( google.de [accessed October 19, 2019]).
  8. ^ Justice Ministerial Gazette for the Free State of Bavaria . Wolf, 1878 ( google.de [accessed October 19, 2019]).