Linden district
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) | |
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
- 1885–1894 Gustav von Heimburg (1828–1910)
- 1894–1901 Wilhelm Meister
- 1901–1904 Heinrich von Zedlitz and Neukirch (1863–1943)
- 1904–1920 Reinhard Roßmann
- 1920–1926 Hans Krüger (1884–1945)
- 1926–1928 Robert Scholz
- 1928–1931 Emil Neugebauer
- 1931–1932 Robert Onnen (1887–1968)
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
- Districts of Hanover and Linden , 1899.
Web links
- Linden district administrative history and the district administrators on the website territorial.de (Rolf Jehke), as of April 21, 2014.
Individual evidence
- ^ District regulation for the province of Hanover (1884)
- ^ 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).
- ^ Municipal directory 1910: Linden district