Eger administrative region
The administrative district of Eger in the Reichsgau Sudetenland on the territory of today's Czech Republic was established as a result of the Munich Agreement . It existed from 1939 to 1945, and its seat was in Karlsbad .
history
After the end of the war, the area became part of Czechoslovakia again , the Germans were expropriated due to the Benesch decrees in the course of the expulsion of the Germans from Czechoslovakia and forced to leave the area.
Head of Civil Administration (CdZ)
- 1938 Harald Turner (1891–1947) :
District President
- 1938–1940: Wilhelm Sebekovsky (1906–1981)
- 1940–1945: Karl Müller
Administrative division
designation | District name | Area in km² | Population (May 17, 1939) |
---|---|---|---|
Reg.-Bez. | Eger | 7,466.79 | 832.207 |
Urban district | Eger | 24.41 | 35,507 |
Urban district | Carlsbad | 46.12 | 53,311 |
district | Ash | 141.83 | 44,690 |
district | Bischofteinitz | 502.72 | 35,484 |
district | Eger | 430.90 | 43,270 |
district | Elbow | 207.61 | 37,393 |
district | Falkenau | 291.58 | 58,559 |
district | Graslitz | 171.65 | 35,484 |
district | Kaaden | 560.69 | 50,257 |
district | Carlsbad | 196.81 | 34,068 |
district | Luditz | 617.75 | 30,157 |
district | Marienbad | 329.09 | 33,692 |
district | bad | 891.04 | 68,513 |
district | Neudek | 242.32 | 36.001 |
district | Podersam | 579.51 | 39.903 |
district | Pressnitz | 26,907 | |
district | Saaz | 409.45 | 44,286 |
district | St. Joachimsthal | 258.60 | 32,242 |
district | Tachau | 903.20 | 56,490 |
district | Tepl | 661.51 | 35,993 |
See also
- Germans in the First Czechoslovak Republic An overview of the political events surrounding the Germans in the countries of the Bohemian Crown and their successor states ( German Austria , Czechoslovak Republic) from 1848 to 1938
Web links
- Eger administrative district Administrative history and the regional presidents on the website territorial.de (Rolf Jehke), as of August 26, 2013.
Individual evidence
- ↑ Jörg Osterloh: National Socialist Persecution of Jews in the Reichsgau Sudetenland: 1938–1945 , p. 236. ( limited preview on Google Book Search ).
- ↑ Heribert Sturm , Ferdinand Seibt , Hans Lemberg , Helmut Slapnicka: Biographical lexicon for the history of the Bohemian countries: Scip site . Volume 4 ( limited preview on Google Book Search ).
- ↑ Volker Zimmermann: Die Sudetendeutschen im NS-Staat , Klartext, 1999, p. 151. ( limited preview on Google Book Search ).
- ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. The Reichsgau Sudetenland. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).