Naabkreis
The Naabkreis (in an alternative, mostly older spelling, Nabkreis ) with the capital Amberg was one of the districts of the Kingdom of Bavaria, founded in 1806 .
In the years 1806 to 1808 the Kingdom of Bavaria was divided into 15 (state) districts whose names were based on rivers: Mainkreis ( Bamberg ), Pegnitzkreis ( Nuremberg ), Rezatkreis ( Ansbach ), Na (a) bkreis ( Amberg ), Regenkreis ( Regensburg and Straubing ), Altmühlkreis ( Eichstätt ), Oberdonaukreis ( Ulm ), Lechkreis ( Augsburg ), Isarkreis ( Munich ), Salzachkreis ( Burghausen ), Unterdonaukreis ( Passau ), Illerkreis ( Kempten with Vorarlberg ), Innkreis ( Innsbruck ), Eisackkreis ( Brixen and Bozen ) and the Etschkreis ( Trient ). This was determined by a very high ordinance for the territorial division of the kingdom of June 21, 1808.
The Naab district with the capital Amberg comprised 12 regional courts and, since 1809, the district- direct city of Amberg. It was dissolved as early as 1810 , the northern part was assigned to the Mainkreis and the southern part to the Regenkreis .
City in the immediate vicinity
On the mountain
Regional courts
Amberg - Eschenbach - Kastl - Kemnath - Nabburg - Neunburg vorm Wald - Neustadt adWaldnaab - Pfaffenhofen - Sulzbach - Tirschenreuth - Treswitz - Vohenstrauß - Waldmünchen - Waldsassen
literature
- Richard Bauer, Reinhard Heydenreuter, Gerhard Heyl, Emma Mages, Max Piendl, August Scherl, Bernhard Zettel: Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . Ed .: Wilhelm Volkert. CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 .