List of all municipalities in North Rhine-Westphalia L – R
This list contains all municipalities in North Rhine-Westphalia with their territorial changes. The municipalities of the Lippe part of the state are only listed with their territorial changes once they belong to the state of North Rhine-Westphalia. The currently existing independent municipalities are highlighted in color. The areas that changed to the state of North Rhine-Westphalia are highlighted in green, those that left it are highlighted in red.
Abbreviations and explanations
Abbreviations
- A = resolution
- ÄB = change of affiliation to an administrative district
- Note: The change of affiliation from the administrative district of Minden-Lippe to the administrative district of Detmold (name change) is not indicated!
- AGS = Official municipality key
- ÄK = change of district membership
- ÄL = change of nationality
- ÄNr = change of the official municipality key number
- ÄS = change of nationality
- B = joining the state of North Rhine-Westphalia
- E = inclusion
- FB = forest district
- GA = exchange of territory
- GB = manor district
- GG = community-free area
- N = new formation
- NÄ = name change
- NÄK = change of name of the associated district (district)
- TA = outsourcing of a part (partial outsourcing)
- TE = integration of a part (part integration)
- TU = reclassification of a part (partial reclassification)
- U = reclassification
- grt = mostly
- t = partially
Superscript Roman numerals
If there are several municipalities with the same name, they are differentiated in the list using superscript Roman numerals.
Note on the official community key
The first two digits 05 of the state code for North Rhine-Westphalia are not specified in the tables .
Names of the districts and districts
- When the state of North Rhine-Westphalia was founded, the name was generally called the district (confirmed on October 1, 1953).
- From October 1, 1969, the uniform designation is circle .
- For districts / counties such as B. the Ennepe-Ruhr-Kreis remained the designation uniformly district .
Names of the independent cities and city districts
- Until September 30, 1953, it was an urban district .
- As of October 1, 1953, the designation is an independent city .
list
L.
La
Le
Li
Lo
Lu
M.
Ma
Me
Mg to Mo
Mu and My
N
So and no
Ni
No and Nu
O
If
Oc to Oe
Of to Ol
Op to Os
Ot and Ov
P
Q
| local community | AGS | date | District membership; measure |
|---|---|---|---|
| Quadrath-Ichendorf | 3 31 317 | 08/23/1946 | B; District, until 1969 district Bergheim (Erft) |
| 01/01/1975 | A> Bergheim II | ||
| Queckenberg | 3 32 616 | 08/23/1946 | B; District of Bonn |
| 08/01/1969 | A> Rheinbach | ||
| source | 7 31 216 | 08/23/1946 | B; District, from October 1st, 1969 district of Bielefeld |
| 01/01/1970 | A> Brackwede | ||
| Quernheim | 7 35 514 | 08/23/1946 | B; Herford district |
| 01/01/1969 | A> Kirchlengern | ||
| Quernheim, pen | → Quernheim Abbey | ||
| Quenching | 7 39 727 | 08/23/1946 | B; District, until 1969 Minden district |
| 01/01/1973 | A> Petershagen |
R.
Ra
re
Rh
Ri
Ro
Ru
Footnotes
- ↑ Langweiler: The place fell victim to the open-cast brown coal mine of the future .
- ↑ Laurenzberg: The place fell victim to the future brown coal opencast mine .
- ↑ Wages: The place fell victim to the lignite opencast mine of the future .
- ↑ Manheim: The place falls victim to the Hambach lignite mine .
- ↑ Morken-Harff: The places Morken and Harff fell victim to the Garzweiler I open-cast lignite mine .
- ↑ Morschenich: The place falls victim to the Hambach open-cast lignite mine .
- ↑ Nauholz: The community was flooded by the dammed water of the Obernau reservoir .
- ↑ Oberaußem-Fortuna: Fortuna fell victim to the Bergheim open-cast lignite mine .
- ↑ Obernau: The community was the pent-up waters of Obernaustausees flooded.
- ^ Oesterholz-Haustenbeck: The community Haustenbeck was formed on January 1, 1957 from large parts of the community Oesterholz . But as early as April 1, 1957, both communities were merged again, this time under the name Oesterholz-Haustenbeck . This means that Haustenbeck is the North Rhine-Westphalian municipality with the shortest lifespan of just three months or 90 days.
- ↑ Pattern: The place fell victim to the Inden open-cast lignite mine .
- ↑ Pier: The place fell victim to the Inden open-cast lignite mine .
See also
- List of all municipalities in North Rhine-Westphalia A – E
- List of all municipalities in North Rhine-Westphalia F – K
- List of all municipalities in North Rhine-Westphalia S – Z
literature
- Martin Bünermann: The municipalities of the first reorganization program in North Rhine-Westphalia. Deutscher Gemeindeverlag, Cologne 1970; without ISBN
- Martin Bünermann, Heinz Köstering: The communities and districts after the municipal territorial reform in North Rhine-Westphalia. Deutscher Gemeindeverlag, Cologne 1975; ISBN 3-555-30092-X
- Federal Statistical Office (Hrsg.): Historical municipality register for the Federal Republic of Germany. Name, border and key number changes in municipalities, counties and administrative districts from May 27, 1970 to December 31, 1982 . W. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart / Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 .