Linden district

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Basic data
Prussian Province Hanover
Administrative district Hanover
County seat 1885–1920 Linden
1920–1932 Hanover
Inventory period 1885-1932
surface 286.57 km² (1910)
Residents: 43,357 (1910)
Population density : 151 inhabitants / km² (1910)
Communities 49 (1932)
License Plate IS
Location of the district in the province of Hanover (1905)
Location of the Linden district in the province of Hanover

The district of Linden was a district in the Prussian province of Hanover . The administrative seat was the city of Linden , which has been a district of Hanover since 1920 . The district essentially comprised the area of ​​the present-day communities Barsinghausen , Gehrden , Ronnenberg , Seelze and Wennigsen (Deister) as well as the present-day Hanover city districts of Ahlem-Badenstedt-Davenstedt , Linden-Limmer and Ricklingen .

history

The Linden district was formed in 1885 from the old Hanoverian offices of Linden and Wennigsen . The administrative seat was in the city of Linden, which left the district in 1886 and formed its own urban district . The district of Linden has since been called the district of Linden . The municipalities of Badenstedt , Bornum , Davenstedt and Limmer were incorporated in 1909 and the municipality of Ricklingen was incorporated into the independent city of Linden in 1913, which in turn was incorporated into the city of Hanover in 1920.

The district of Linden was dissolved in 1932 by an ordinance of the Prussian State Ministry and incorporated into the district of Hanover .

Population development

year 1890 1900 1910 1925
Residents 35,994 42,772 43,357 39,769

District administrators

cities and communes

The following table lists all cities and municipalities that belonged to the Linden district with their population from 1925:

local community Ew.
1925
Remarks
Ahlem 1,091
Almhorst 322
Argestorf 342
Badenstedt 1909 to the city of Linden ; 1,302 inhabitants in 1895
Bantorf 645
Barrigsen 176
Barsinghausen 4,732
Benthe 562
Bönnigsen 1928 to Degersen ; 69 inhabitants in 1910
Bornum 1909 to the city of Linden ; 830 inhabitants in 1895
Bredenbeck 1,370
Davenstedt 1909 to the city of Linden ; 260 inhabitants in 1895
Degersen 333
Ditterke 224
Döteberg 253
Potting soil 289
Egestorf 1.991
Empelde 980
Everloh 369
Evestorf 180
Gehrden , city 2,561
Göxe 166
Grandgoltern 425
Great Munzel 863
Gümmer 462
Harenberg 438
Hohenbostel 900
Holtensen near Wunstorf 536
Holtensen near Weetzen 233
Church Village 872
Church brigades 335
Landringhausen 419
Long-spoken 604
Lathwehren 229
Lemmie 319
Lenthe 381
Letter 2,299
Leveste 560
Limmer 1909 to the city of Linden ; 3,084 inhabitants in 1895
Linden , city since 1886 independent city; 25,570 inhabitants in 1885
Wages 720
North Goltern 401
Northen 314
Easter coin 349
Redderse 264
Ricklingen 1913 to the city of Linden ; 5,817 inhabitants in 1910
Ronnenberg 2,179
Seelze 3,340
Sorsum 237
To stem 461
Velber 389
Whet 842
Wennigsen (Deister) 2,460
Wettbergen 640
Wichtringhausen 408
Winninghausen 240

literature

  • Carl Wolff : The art monuments of the province of Hanover . Edited on behalf of the Provincial Commission for Research and Preservation of the Monuments in the Province of Hanover by Carl Wolff, Hanover 1899–1927

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ District regulation for the province of Hanover (1884)
  2. ^ A b Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. linden.html. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  3. ^ Municipal directory 1910: Linden district