List of the city leaders of Eckernförde
The list of city leaders of Eckernförde contains the well-known mayors of the city of Eckernförde (with different functions) and the city leaders with different names. Also included are the commanders of the British occupying forces responsible for the city after the Second World War. There are gaps in the list; Especially for the period up to around 1700 there is too little archive material with regard to the Eckernförde mayors, but there are also a number of uncertainty factors for the period after 1700.
In a document from 1502 there is a first reference to the mayor of Eckernförde. According to information, Eckernförde is said to have had two mayors up until the 17th century, who alternately chaired according to one mode. Later, people were appointed as mayors even though the office was still occupied (appointment for the eventuality).
list
Year (s) | Surname | Remarks |
---|---|---|
1551, 1553 * | Claues Bornsen | |
1553, 1558 * | Hynrich Holste | |
1561 * | Paul Kremer | |
1586, 1589, 1600 *
n / A. A .: 1586-1604 |
Jürgen Maes | first 2nd mayor |
1589, 1600, 1601, 1604, 1606 * | Jürgen Kremer | Last name also: Krämer |
1604, 1605, 1611 *
n / A. A .: 1598-1611 |
Peter Mandixen († 1611) | Last name also: Mandixßen, Mandixß; died in office |
1611, 1612, 1617, 1631, 1633 * | Melchior Witte (1591–1658) | Last name also Latinized: Albinus; also pastor in Satrup |
1612, 1613, 1614, 1615 *
n / A. A .: 1613-1615 |
Simon Christian († 1616) | |
1615, 1619, 1620 * | Heinrich Stadtlander († 1632) | Before 9/1/1632 he had "walked away with dead when there was a recent war unrest" |
1633, 1634 * | Joachim Thilbehr | |
1641, 1647 * | Simon Kruse | Last name also: Crusius |
1651 * | Christian Mechlenburg | |
1652 * | Hans Blanck | Last name also: Blancke |
1657, 1672, 1674 * | Jürgen Thielbehr | Last name also: Tylbehr |
1658, 1661, 1664, 1666, 1672 * | Joachim Wichmann | 1658, 1661, 1664, 1666, 1672 2nd mayor, 1672 also 1st mayor |
1659, 1683 * | Otto Witte († 1683) | died in office |
1661 * | Otto Thielbehr | possibly without a council mandate |
1682, 1692 * | Paul Hoekell († 1692) | died in office |
1691, 1693, 1701 * | Wilhelm B. Valentiner († 1706) | |
1696, 1705 * | Ewald Kistemacher († 1705) | died in office |
1701 - March 1711 | August Valentin Rhenius († 1725) | Name also: Anthon Rhenius ; installed by the duke; first term |
1705, 1707 * | Bendix Deichmann († 1708) | First name also: Benedict; was 2nd mayor |
1707, 1713 * | Johann Albrecht Semmelhak († 1713) | died in office; was previously (from?) city treasurer in 1684 |
March 1711 - February 1714 | Heinrich Claus Fick (baptized 1678, † 1750) | Name also u. a .: Heinrich Claus von Fick, Hinrich Fick; City Commissioner , appointed by the King. |
February 1714-1725 | August Valentin Rhenius († 1725) | appointed by the king; second term; died in office |
1726-1731 and January 1731-June 1756 | Detlev Julius Tamm (1696–1756) | Last name also: Thamm; was councilor before 1726; Dimission June 10, 1756;
Dividing the term of office into two makes sense if he was only provisionally in office until 1731, Pust only specifies the period 1731–1756, for which Tamm was appointed as mayor |
(June 1741-) 1756-1766 | Friedrich Wilhelm Otte (1715–1766) | had already been appointed mayor in case of contingency since 1741 and was adjunct of the mayor , in the office of mayor since 1756; died in office in 1766 |
(May 1756-) 1766-1786 | Thomas Hinrich Classen (1729–1786) | Last name also: Clausen; Lawyer; had already been appointed mayor in case of contingency since 1756 and was adjunct of the mayor, in the office of mayor since 1766; died in office |
March 1787-1815 | Johann Nicolaus Fürsen († 1815) | died in office |
1815-1828 | Nicolau Georg Ferdinand Suadicani (1786–1828) | called: "Nicolaus" Suadicani; initially provisional, from June 1817 (in Danish) appointed Mayor; from 1821 also city secretary (according to Royal Resolution); died in office |
December 1828 - August 1840 | Detlef Heinrich Christian Claudius (1780–1840) | Nephew of Matthias Claudius ; was previously assessor and actuary at the courts on Ærø ; was killed during an official act at Gottorf Castle by a gunfire at the salute for Christian VIII on August 19, 1840 |
September 1841-1853 | Caspar Conrad Langheim (1806–1864) | two appointments: 1. as mayor, 2. as bailiff and police master (according to Royal Resolution); was allowed to wear the police director's uniform of Copenhagen from October 1841 |
1853-1856 | Louis Hammerich (1830-1916) | Jurist; later u. a. Hardenvogt in the Bökingharde , judge in Niebüll , police master in Flensburg ; Lit .: |
1856-1859 | Count Ludwig Frederik Henrik Brockenhuus-Schack (1825–1906) | First name also: Ludvig ; possibly no constitutional Bgm .; Hardenvogt was also the Eckernförder Harde |
1859-1860 | Hans Rudolf Hiort-Lorenzen (1832–1917) | later Hardenvogt in Satrup and editor in Copenhagen |
1860 - February 1864 | Christoffer Leisner (1813–1868) | Judicial council; 1848–1851 municipality of Sonderburg , until 1860 municipality of Schleswig ; was chased out of the city on February 1, 1864 after Prussian troops occupied the city |
(1864-) 1866-1882 | Wilhelm Jahn | provisional from 1866 to 1870, before that de facto provisional as city secretary since 1864 , appointed mayor since 1870; The Bürgermeister-Jahn-Weg is named after him |
1882-1893 | H. Fürstenwerth | |
1894-1906 | Carl Felgenhauer | |
1906-1914 | Karl Heldmann (1872–1914) | was a lawyer; The Bürgermeister-Heldmann-Strasse is named after him ; also Mayor of Bad Salzuflen |
1916-1920 | Albers | Term of office actually until 1921; he left the city after the Kapp Putsch |
1920-1921 | Willers Jessen (1870-1949) | acting mayor; The Willers-Jessen School was named after him |
1921-1922
possibly only 1921, see: Pönitzsch |
Bruhn | Acting Mayor |
1922-1926
n / A. A .: 1921-1626 |
Dr. Curt Pönitzsch | First name also: Kurt ; Term of office actually until 1928, was suspended in 1926 |
September 1924–? | Hermann Aeissen (1873–1952) | Lawyer; Acting Mayor during a spa stay in Pönitzsch in Meran |
July – September 1926 | Wilhelm Kuhr | Acting Mayor |
1926-1931 | Dr. Walther Heinn | Acting Mayor at least initially; was also mayor of Wyk auf Föhr , Oranienburg |
1931-1933 | Dr. Wilhelm Sievers (1896–1966, NSDAP ) | Jurist; until 1927 was a regional authority in Visselhövede , from 1933 a regional authority. from Flensburg ; after the 2nd World War CDU- City President of Kiel |
1933-1938 | Dr. Helmut Lemke (1907–1990, NSDAP) | Jurist; was subsequently Mayor in Schleswig , after World War II a. a. CDU Prime Minister of Schleswig-Holstein (1963–1971) |
January 1938 - November 1943 (- 1945) | Friedrich Böhm (NSDAP) | official term of office until 1945, but transferred to Westerland in 1943 |
November 1943 - June 1945 | Heinz Loewer (NSDAP) | officially provisional; was a lawyer; the British occupation forces initially left him in office and temporarily assigned him the office of provisional district administrator of the Eckernförde district after Walter Mentzel was arrested |
BZ 1945–1948 | Ormsby | British city commander - The British Resistent |
June - August 1945 | Hans Ohm (1898–1981) | acting; Office transferred by Loewer on June 8; later mayor of Eckernfördes |
August 1945 - April 1946 | Ewald Wendenburg (1883–1959) | provisional, used by the British occupying forces; first term of office with the title of mayor and first as head of administration; was previously the mayor of Holtenau , Langeoog and Heringsdorf. |
April 1946 - September 1946 | Heinrich Schumacher ( KPD ) | Mayor ; According to the German municipal code of the military government introduced by the British, the mayor was the chairman of the council from April 1946 to April 1950 , while the head of administration was called the city director . |
April 1946 - April 1950 | Ewald Wendenburg (1883–1959, most recently CDU ) | City Director (see note under Schumacher); second term as head of administration |
September 1946 - April 1950 | Daniel Hinrichsen (CDU) | Mayor (see above) |
BZ 1948 - September 1949 | Dudley Smith | British District Commander (District Resistant) |
BZ September 1949 - April 1954 | Errol B. Daniell | British District Commander (District Resistant) |
April 1950 - September 1952 | Ewald Wendenburg (1883–1959, CDU) | second term under the title Mayor , third, as chief administrator (new Gemeindeordnung: henceforth the chief administrator is called again mayor presided the council has the citizens head held). |
1952-1966 | Werner Schmidt (1911–1990, GKG - then non-party - then FDP ) | jurist |
1966-1969 | Dr. Hans Wiedemann ( independent ) | |
1969-1987 | Kurt Schulz (1922–2017, SPD ) | At the beginning, he was the first city councilor for a short time . |
1987-1998 | Klaus Buß (* 1942, SPD) | Lawyer; was then Schleswig-Holstein Minister of Agriculture (1998–2000) and Minister of the Interior (2000–2005) |
1998-1999 | Ingrid Ehlers (SPD) | was the first city councilor acting mayor; first woman in office |
1999-2007 | Susanne Jeske-Paasch (* 1958, SPD) | Lawyer |
since 2007 | Jörg Sibbel (* 1965, independent, CDU from 2019) |
- * = Years of office which are considered occupied according to Borgmestre i Egernførde in Egernførde bys historie (applies to all specified years in a column)
- BZ = British commander responsible for Eckernförde
swell
- Borgmestre i Egernførde. In: Harald Jørgensen, OM Olesen, Frants Thygesen (Red.): Egernførde bys historie. Studieafdelingen ved Dansk Centralbibliotek for Sydslesvig, Flensburg 1980, ISBN 87-980393-5-0 , p. 279 ff.
- Dieter Pust: The first Eckernförde local elections 1832–1848. In: Heimatgemeinschaft Eckernförde : Yearbook 1975. P. 72 ff. And in Heimatgemeinschaft Eckernförde (Hrsg.): 700 years city of Eckernförde. Eckernförde 2001, ISBN 3-00-008372-3 , p. 231 ff.
- Heimatgemeinschaft Eckernförde e. V. and department for regional history of the Christian-Albrechts-Universität Kiel: Eckernförde-Lexikon. Husum- Druck- und Verlagsgesellschaft, Husum 2014, ISBN 978-3-89876-735-4 , especially p. 56 ff.
- Ilse Rathjen-Couscherung: Eckernförde under British occupation. Heimatgemeinschaft Eckernförde, 2008, ISBN 978-3-00-025744-5 .
References and comments
- ↑ Egernførde bys historie. P. 279.
- ↑ Thomas Thomsen: The Eckernförde church register from 1586. In: Heimatgemeinschaft des Kreis Eckernförde eV, yearbook of the Heimatgemeinschaft des Kreis Eckernförde , year 1967, p. 154 ff., 156
- ↑ Eckernförde Lexicon. 2014, p. 56.
- ↑ Eckernförde Lexicon. 2014, p. 56.
- ↑ Eckernförde Lexicon. 2014, p. 57.
- ↑ nd-gen.de , p. 4/35.
- ↑ Silke Spieler: Fick, H (e) inrich Claus (von). In: Biographical Lexicon for Schleswig-Holstein and Lübeck. Volume 6, Wachholtz, Neumünster 1982, ISBN 3-529-02646-8 , p. 94 "Successor of Rhenius"
- ↑ D. Pust: The first Eckernförde local elections 1832-1848. 1975/2001, p. 86.
- ↑ eckernfoerde.net
- ↑ D. Pust: The first Eckernförde local elections 1832-1848. 1975/2001, p. 86.
- ↑ denstoredanske.dk , hammerich.dk
- ↑ Eckernförde Lexicon. 2014, p. 51.
- ↑ Heinz Jürgen Karlisch: True to death - memory of the fallen of the First World War in Eckernförde. In: Heimatgemeinschaft Eckernförde eV: Yearbook 2017. P. 355 ff., 366
- ↑ Stefan Deiters: Turbulence in the town hall. In: Kiel News. Issue Eckernförder Nachrichten. 20th September 2014.
- ^ Speyer City Archives
- ^ City of Oranienburg - territorial
- ↑ I. Rathjen Couscherung: Eckernförde under British occupation. 2008, p. 38.
- ↑ I. Rathjen Couscherung: Eckernförde under British occupation. 2008, p. 41 ff.
- ↑ I. Rathjen Couscherung: Eckernförde under British occupation. 2008, p. 38.
- ↑ Holtenau history
- ↑ Official Gazette of the Military Government No. 7 of April 1, 1946.
- ↑ Community of the war generation within the Schleswig-Holstein community of voters (SHWG)