Malchin County

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Basic data
Inventory period 1933-1952
Administrative headquarters Malchin
Residents 58,423 (1939)
Communities 144 (1939)
Map of Mecklenburg
Mecklenburg 1905.png

The Malchin district was a district in Mecklenburg from 1933 to 1952 . The district seat was in Malchin . Today the district belongs to the districts of Rostock and Mecklenburg Lake District in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania .

history

The Malchin Office was formed in Mecklenburg-Schwerin in 1925 from the old Malchin Office and the Dargun and Stavenhagen offices. In 1933 the Malchin district became the Malchin district . After Mecklenburg-Schwerin was united with Mecklenburg-Strelitz in 1934 to form a state of Mecklenburg , in 1939 the name of the district was changed to the district of Malchin .

On April 1, 1937, the exclave of the Prussian Demmin district, consisting of the communities of Pinnow, Rottmannshagen and Zettemin , was reclassified to the Malchin district.

After the Second World War , the district initially belonged to the state of Mecklenburg- West Pomerania in the Soviet occupation zone . The name of the country was changed to Mecklenburg in 1947 . Since 1949 it belonged to the GDR .

The first change in the district boundaries occurred on December 1, 1948, when the communities of Kummerow and Leuschentin from the Demmin district changed to the Malchin district. The first district reform in the GDR on July 1, 1950 saw further changes in the area :

During the regional reform on July 25, 1952 , the state of Mecklenburg was dissolved and the district of Malchin was divided:

politics

Landdroste

1926 -9999Johannes Bornhöft

Official governors / district administrators

1926–1945 Willy Burmeister

Population development

Residents 1925 (office) 1933 1939 1946
57,650 58.024 58,423 98,792

The population of the towns in the district in 1939:

Dargun 2,311
Gnoien 3,757
Malchin 7.204
Recalculation 2,070
Stavenhagen 4.177
Teterow 7,816

cities and communes

In 1939 the Malchin district comprised six cities and 138 other municipalities:

Several incorporations took place in the 1930s:

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. malchin.html. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  2. ^ GenWiki: The district of Demmin and its communities
  3. The Malchin district at gov.genealogy.net
  4. 1946 census