Parchim district (1933–1952)
Basic data | |
---|---|
Inventory period | 1933-1952 |
Administrative headquarters | Parchim |
Residents | 54,942 (1939) |
Communities | 125 (1939) |
Map of Mecklenburg | |
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The Parchim district existed in Mecklenburg from 1933 to 1952 . The district seat was in Parchim . The former district area is now part of the Ludwigslust-Parchim district in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania .
history
In 1925, the Parchim office was formed from the old Parchim and Lübz offices in Mecklenburg-Schwerin as one of ten new offices in Mecklenburg. The cities of Goldberg, Lübz, Parchim and Plau, as well as 135 other communities belonged to the 131,903.1 hectare area. Parchim was the official seat. In 1933 the Parchim District became Parchim 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 Parchim district in 1939 . On April 1, 1938, the Hohen Pritz community moved from the Wismar district to the Parchim district.
After the Second World War , the district belonged to the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania in the Soviet occupation zone . The name of the country was changed to Mecklenburg in 1947 . Since 1949 it belonged to the GDR .
With the law on changing the borders of the federal states of June 28, 1950, an exchange of territory between the federal states of Brandenburg and Mecklenburg took place . The communities of Drenkow and Suckow from the Ostprignitz district were reclassified into the Parchim district and merged with their twin communities of the same name there. In return, the Mecklenburg part of Porep moved from the Parchim district to the Ostprignitz district and was united with Porep in Brandenburg. At the same time, the community of Stolpe moved from the district of Parchim to the district of Ludwigslust and the community of Hohen Pritz from the district of Parchim to the district of Wismar .
During the regional reform of July 25, 1952 , a new district structure was created:
- The eastern part of the district with the cities of Goldberg , Lübz and Plau am See formed the new district of Lübz .
- The western part of the district with the city of Parchim continued as Parchim district .
- The districts of Lübz and Parchim were assigned to the district of Schwerin .
politics
Landdroste
- 1926 : Walter Studemund
Official governors / district administrators
- 1926–1933: Walter Rieck
- 1933–1935: Max Zeitler
- 1935–1945: Friedrich Roschlaub
Population development
Residents | 1925 (office) | 1933 | 1939 | 1946 |
---|---|---|---|---|
55,381 | 54,306 | 54,942 | 100.005 |
The population of the towns in the district in 1939:
Goldberg | 3,311 |
Luebz | 4,324 |
Parchim | 14,331 |
Plau am See | 4,832 |
cities and communes
In 1939 the Parchim district comprised four towns and 121 other municipalities:
The municipality of Tessenow was called Kummin until 1935 and the municipality of Altenlinden was called Hof Malchow until 1939 .
In 1937 several incorporations took place:
- Construction yard , to Lübz
- Damerow b. Karow , too big and new poserin
- Friedrichsruhe , Hof, to Friedrichsruhe
- Princely Poltnitz , to Poltnitz
- Groß Niendorf , settlement, to Groß Niendorf
- Hof Hagen , to Langenhagen
- Karbow , yard, to Karbow
- Glue to Lalchow
- Circle , yard, circle
- Leppin , to Marnitz
- Poitendorf , to Poltnitz
- Quasslin , to Wahlstorf
- Retzow , good, to Retzow
- Ruhn , to Marnitz
- Tannenhof , to Benthen
- Zachow , to Tessenow
Web links
- District Parchim 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. parchim.html. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
- ↑ Wolfgang Blöß: Borders and reforms in a society in transition . From the state of Brandenburg to the districts 1945–1952. Berliner Wissenschafts-Verlag, Berlin 2014 ( [1] ).
- ↑ The Parchim district at gov.genealogy.net
- ↑ 1946 census