Land rulership Bergedorf
The Mansion stem mountain village was formed in 1868 after the previous 400 years of Luebeck and Hamburg together ( "both urban") managed Amtsberge village had turned into sole possession of Hamburg. It was one of four landlords in what was then the state of Hamburg and comprised the cities of Bergedorf and Geesthacht as well as the so-called Vierlande (communities Altengamme , Curslack , Kirchwärder and Neuengamme including West- Krauel ).
Changes in territory inventory
On April 14, 1875 the village of Ost- Krauel was reclassified from the rulership of the marshland to the rulership of Bergedorf.
On January 2, 1924, the cities of Bergedorf and Geesthacht left the sovereignty.
In 1926 the four landlords were combined into a single landlordship in Hamburg .
According to the Greater Hamburg Act of April 1, 1937, Geesthacht was transferred to the then Prussian province of Schleswig-Holstein . The other communities were incorporated into the new Hamburg unified community on April 1, 1938 and are now part of the Bergedorf district .
literature
- Rainer Postel (arrangement): Hamburg . In: Thomas Klein (Ed.): Outline of German Administrative History 1815-1945 , Series B, Vol. 17. Marburg 1978 ISBN 3-87969-142-8 , pp. 61-135.
- Oliver Barghorn-Schmidt: The Landherrschaft Bergedorf 1873-1914 . In: Lichtwark-Heft No. 63. Ed. Lichtwark Committee, 1998 (see now: Verlag HB-Werbung, Hamburg-Bergedorf, 2003. ISSN 1862-3549 ).