District of Duisburg
The county Duisburg was from 1823 to 1874, a district on the right Lower Rhine between Anger and lip in Region of Dusseldorf in the Prussian Rhine Province . District town was Duisburg .
Administrative history
The Duisburg district was created in 1823 through the merging of the Dinslaken and Essen districts founded in 1816 . It initially comprised the 13 mayorships of Altenessen, Borbeck , Dinslaken, Duisburg, Essen, Gahlen, Götterswickerhamm, Holten, Kettwig, Mülheim, Ruhrort, Steele and Werden, which were founded in the French era . In 1845, the municipal code for the Rhine Province gave all places that had their own households the status of a municipality. The eight cities of Dinslaken, Duisburg, Essen, Kettwig, Mülheim, Ruhrort, Steele and Werden were given the Rhenish City Code in 1856/57 . The circle was then structured as follows:
Mayorry | Cities and Towns (1858) | Today's city / today's district |
---|---|---|
Elderly food | Altenessen , Frillendorf , Huttrop , Karnap , Katernberg , Kray , Leithe , Rotthausen , Rüttenscheid , Schonnebeck , Stoppenberg | eat |
Borbeck | Altendorf , Borbeck | eat |
Dinslaken Land | Hiesfeld , Walsum | Hiesfeld: Dinslaken / Wesel district , Walsum: Duisburg |
Dinslaken city | Dinslaken (city) | Dinslaken / Wesel district |
Duisburg city | Duisburg (city) | Duisburg |
Duisburg country | Wanheim-Angerhausen | Duisburg |
eat | Food (city) | eat |
Gahlen | Hünxe , Bruckhausen , Bucholtwelmen , Gartrop-Bühl , Gahlen | Hünxe / Wesel District, Gahlen: Gahlen / Schermbeck District |
Götterswickerhamm | Götterswickerhamm , Löhnen , Mehrum , Möllen , Spellen , Voerde | Voerde / Wesel district |
Holten | Beeck , Hamborn , Holten , Amt Holten (Biefang) , Sterkrade | Beeck, Hamborn: Duisburg, Holten, Biefang, Sterkrade: Oberhausen |
Kettwig city | Kettwig (city) | eat |
Kettwig country | Heisingen , circumstance , four-way relationships | eat |
Mülheim city | Mülheim an der Ruhr (city) | Mülheim an der Ruhr |
Mülheim-Land | Alstaden , Broich , Dümpten , Eppinghofen , Haarzopf , Heißen , Holthausen , Mellinghofen , Menden , Raadt , Saarn , Speldorf , Styrum | Alstaden, parts of Styrum, parts of Dümpten, parts of Mellinghofen: Oberhausen, rest: Mülheim an der Ruhr |
Ruhrort-Land | Meiderich | Duisburg |
Ruhrort city | Ruhrort (city) | Duisburg |
Steele City | Steele (city) | eat |
Steele-Land | Rellinghausen , Überruhr | eat |
Becoming city | Becoming (city) | eat |
Becoming country | Byfang , Seven Sons | eat |
By cabinet order of August 10, 1857, the Essen district was separated from the Duisburg district in 1859 and reorganized, but now without the mayor offices of Mülheim / Ruhr-Stadt and -Land. In 1862, parts of the Borbeck, Holten and Mülheim-Land mayor's offices were used to build the new Oberhausen mayor's office . The city of Duisburg left the Duisburg district in 1874 and became a separate urban district. The Mülheim an der Ruhr district with its seat in the city of Mülheim an der Ruhr was formed from the remaining parts of the Duisburg district . On July 1, 1887, the cities of Ruhrort and Dinslaken as well as the mayorships of Beeck, Dinslaken-Land, Duisburg-Land, Gahlen, Götterswickerhamm, Meiderich and Sterkrade left the Mülheim an der Ruhr district, the remainder of the old area after Duisburg and Essen had left District of Duisburg and formed the new Ruhrort district. Meanwhile, the district of Mülheim an der Ruhr consisted only of the mayorships Broich, Heißen, Mülheim an der Ruhr, Styrum and Oberhausen.
Population development
year | Residents |
---|---|
1825 | 68,437 |
1835 | 80.601 |
1871 | 137,495 |
District administrators
- 1823–1827: Julius von Buggenhagen
- 1827–1828: Anton Coutelle
- 1828–1829: Alexander von Windthorst-Sonsfeld
- 1829–1846: Anton Devens
- 1846–1847: Ludwig Hammers (1822–1902) (by order)
- 1847–1848: Gustav von Wrangel (1807–1859) (by order)
- 1848–1849: Gustav Dittmer (by order)
- 1849 Wilhelm von Arnim (1814–1890) (by order) :
- 1849–1851: Gustav Dittmer
- 1851–1870: Anton Kessler
- 1870–1874: Justus von Rosenberg-Gruszczynski (1837–1900)
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ Johann Georg von Viebahn: Statistics and topography of the government district of Düsseldorf. 1836, p. 83 ff. , Accessed on May 5, 2014 (digitized version).
- ↑ Municipal Code for the Rhine Province 1845, §1
- ^ A b Johann Georg von Viebahn: Statistics and topography of the government district of Düsseldorf. 1836, p. 109 , accessed on May 5, 2014 (digitized version).
- ^ Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia 1885