Weener district
Basic data | |
---|---|
Prussian Province | Hanover |
Administrative district | Aurich |
County seat | Weener |
Inventory period | 1885-1932 |
surface | 290.22 km² |
Residents | 21,329 (1925) |
Population density | 73 inhabitants / km² (1925) |
Communities | 31 |
License Plate | IS |
Location of the district in the province of Hanover (1905) | |
The Weener district was a district in the Prussian province of Hanover from 1885 to 1932 .
geography
The district included the entire Rheiderland . The Friesische Strasse , an old long-distance trade route between Emden and Münster , ran parallel to the west of the Ems .
In the north, the district bordered on what was then the district of Emden , in the east on the district of Leer , in the south on the district of Aschendorf and in the west on the Kingdom of the Netherlands .
The area of the Weener district is now divided between the communities of Bunde and Jemgum, the city of Weener and the district of Bingum in the city of Leer .
history
In 1867 the Kingdom of Hanover was annexed by Prussia and transformed into the Province of Hanover. As part of the introduction of the district order for the province, the district Weener was formed on April 1, 1885 from the old Hanoverian office of Weener . The county seat was the eponymous city of Weener . The district was assigned to the administrative district of Aurich .
In 1932, the Weener district was dissolved by an ordinance of the Prussian State Ministry and merged with the Leer district.
Population development
year | 1890 | 1900 | 1910 | 1925 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Residents | 20,431 | 20,525 | 20,537 | 21,329 |
Communities
The municipalities of the Weener district with the population from December 1, 1910 and June 16, 1925:
local community | Ew. 1910 | Ew. 1925 |
---|---|---|
Beschotenweg | 289 | 292 |
Bingum | 735 | 722 |
Gust | 417 | 455 |
Böhmerwold | 115 | 132 |
Bundles | 1811 | 1985 |
Bunderhammrich | 760 | 718 |
Bunderhee | 720 | 817 |
Federal territory | 166 | 165 |
Charlottenpolder | 118 | 115 |
Critzum | 285 | 315 |
Hallway | 611 | 616 |
Ditzum | 798 | 776 |
Ditzumerhammrich | 803 | 710 |
Hatzum | 351 | 334 |
Heinitzpolder | 101 | 183 |
Holtgaste | 293 | 343 |
Holthusen | 1653 | 1742 |
Jemgum | 1133 | 1073 |
Kirchborgum | 332 | 323 |
Landscape polder | 311 | 305 |
Marienchor | 111 | 112 |
Midlum | 307 | 320 |
Nendorp | 135 | 144 |
Oldendorp | 159 | 160 |
Pogum | 293 | 275 |
St. Georgiwold | 154 | 128 |
Pile bog | 1214 | 1276 |
Vellage | 260 | 235 |
Weener | 3923 | 4127 |
Weenermoor | 1101 | 1275 |
Wymeer | 1078 | 1156 |
District administrators
- 1885–1888 Matthias Knaus
- 1888–1893 Lümko Iderhoff (1856–1931)
- 1893–1904 Adolf Kriege
- 1904–1909 Karl Gosling (1868–1921)
- 1909–1927 Erich Bachmann
- 1927–1927 Hans von Oldershausen (1876–1956) (acting)
- 1927–1927 Emil Wehriede (acting)
- 1928–1932 Benno Eide Siebs (1891–1977)
Individual evidence
- ^ District regulation for the province of Hanover (1884)
- ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. Leer.html. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
- ^ Uli Schubert: German community register 1910. Accessed on May 22, 2011 .
- ^ Community encyclopedia for the Free State of Prussia: Province of Hanover. Publishing house of the Prussian State Statistical Office, 1930