Ludwigslust district (1933–1952)
Basic data | |
---|---|
Inventory period | 1933-1952 |
Administrative headquarters | Ludwigslust |
Residents | 51,263 (1939) |
Communities | 99 (1939) |
Map of Mecklenburg | |
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The Ludwigslust district existed in Mecklenburg from 1933 to 1952 . The district seat was in Ludwigslust . The former district area is now part of the Ludwigslust-Parchim district in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania .
history
In 1925, the Ludwigslust office was formed from the old Grabow and Ludwigslust offices in Mecklenburg-Schwerin . In 1933 the Ludwigslust district became the Ludwigslust district . After Mecklenburg-Schwerin was united with Mecklenburg-Strelitz to form a state of Mecklenburg in 1934 , the name of the district was changed to Ludwigslust district in 1939 .
After the Second World War , the district belonged to the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania in the Soviet occupation zone . By dividing the occupation zones, the district gave its left Elbe community Kaltenhof to the Lüchow-Dannenberg district in the British zone. The name of the country was changed to Mecklenburg in 1947 . Since 1949 it belonged to the GDR .
On July 1, 1950, the community of Stolpe moved from the Parchim district to the Ludwigslust district. During the territorial reform of 1952 , a new district structure was created:
- The communities Drefahl, Dütschow , Herzfeld, Möllenbeck , Pampin, Stolpe and Ziegendorf moved from the eastern edge of the district to the Parchim district
- The communities of Brunow , Dambeck and Klüß also initially moved to the Parchim district, but joined the Perleberg district in the same year .
- The remaining part of the district continued to exist as the Ludwigslust district, enlarged by part of the dissolved Westprignitz district .
- The districts of Parchim, Perleberg and Ludwigslust were assigned to the Schwerin district .
Population development
Residents | 1925 (office) | 1933 | 1939 | 1946 |
---|---|---|---|---|
49,262 | 49,953 | 51,263 | 82,212 |
The population of the towns in the district in 1939:
Doemitz | 3,297 |
Grabow | 6,083 |
Ludwigslust | 9,107 |
Neustadt-Glewe | 4,971 |
politics
Landdroste
- 1926 : Karl von Bülow
Official governors / district administrators
- 1926–1945: Arthur Staecker
- 1945: Hermann Schuldt (KPD)
cities and communes
In 1939 the Ludwigslust district comprised four cities and 95 other municipalities:
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The community of Kiez was incorporated into the city of Neustadt-Glewe in 1936. The municipality of Rüterberg was called Wendisch Wehningen until 1938 .
Web links
- District Ludwigslust administrative history and the district administrators on the website territorial.de (Rolf Jehke), as of May 6, 2014.
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c d Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. ludwigslust.html. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
- ↑ The Ludwigslust district at gov.genealogy.net
- ↑ 1946 census