Vienna municipal districts

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Politically, Vienna is divided into 23  municipal districts ( city ​​districts ). The Viennese refer to the districts either with their names (such as "Hernals") or with their numbers ("17th District" or "The Seventeenth", in writing also "Vienna 17" or "Vienna XVII"). These numbers are located on every street sign in front of the street name (for example “17., Pezzlgasse”) and also form the second and third digits of the postcode (1010 for the 1st district to 1230 for the 23rd district; 1300 denotes the one not in the city area located Flughafen Wien , 1400, the post office of the Vienna International Center). In the dialect, instead of the term “district”, “Hieb” is sometimes used, or for districts with ..zehnte also ..teen “The Seventeen”.

Vienna municipal districts

Municipal district and district part (definitions)

The Viennese municipal district cannot be compared with the concept of the political district of the rest of the Austrian administrative structure , which represents an administrative area of ​​a district administration with several municipalities : As a statutory city, the municipality of Vienna (also) has the rank of a political district, the municipal districts are seen as comparable to a locality : Just as in some areas mayor may serve as local mayor, parish councils are run by district heads.

The districts are further subdivided into district parts; some of them have historical significance. In the inner districts (2–9) and in the 20th, it is the suburbs from which these districts were formed in 1850. In the outer districts, district parts are usually the places from which the districts emerged and are congruent with the cadastral communities in the land register. For newly created parts of the district, names were occasionally first used privately and later officially (see e.g. Nordbahnviertel , Quartier Belvedere , Sonnwendviertel , Seestadt Aspern ).

history

The city and its suburbs

The original city of Vienna consisted only of the area surrounded by the city ​​walls , today the majority of the 1st district, the inner city. To this day, when Viennese speak of “going into the city” in Vienna, they mean the 1st district. From the 15th century, there was more intensive settlement in front of the city wall. At the beginning of the Turkish siege in 1529, the medieval suburbs were burned down so as not to provide cover for the enemy. The modern suburbs that emerged later were legally subordinate to the respective manor . In 1683 the suburbs were again badly affected by the second Turkish siege. In 1704 the line wall was built to protect it in the area of ​​today's belt . (The term line comes from military fastening technology; in this specific case, it also referred to a sales tax limit.)

1850: Suburbs incorporated, suburbs independent

In 1848/49 the manorial rights were replaced and the localities became municipalities. Section 2 of the Provisional Municipal Act of 1849 stipulated: Suburbs have to form a single local municipality with the actual city. In 1850 the city and 34 suburbs were therefore merged; the city wall was not demolished until 1858. The former suburbs have been divided into districts 2 to 8. Subdivisions later created ten districts: In 1861, the 5th district was separated from the 4th district, thus districts 5-8 became districts 6-9. In 1874 the parts of the 4th and 5th district outside of the newly designed belt were combined to form the 10th district (which was expanded in 1892 and 1954).

Outside the line wall were the so-called suburbs, some of which - such as B. Währing  - had already grown into smaller towns. Since the line wall was a tax frontier where imports into the city and suburbs were subject to consumption tax, life in the suburbs was significantly cheaper. For this reason, and because some of the suburbs had long since become self-confident communities that certainly valued their autonomy, the negotiations on incorporation dragged on for around 20 years.

1890–1892, 1904–1906: suburbs incorporated

Street sign in Louis-Hafliger-Gasse in the 21st district

It was not until Emperor Franz Joseph, at the opening of the Türkenschanzpark in the municipality of Währing (today 18th district) in 1888, delivered a sensational speech, probably inspired by his kk Prime Minister and childhood friend Eduard Taaffe , about the hoped-for "elimination of the physical boundaries of the suburbs", the project was made ready for a decision: On December 19, 1890, the Lower Austrian provincial law on the incorporation of 34 suburbs and the division of the city into 19 districts was passed, on January 1, 1892, the municipal district offices of the new districts had 11 to 19 and the others adapted administrative structures to take effect. In 1900 the 20th district was separated from the 2nd. A state law passed at the end of 1904 , the large municipality of Floridsdorf , located on the eastern side of the Danube (on the left bank of the Danube), with five other municipalities and some parts of the municipality, became part of Vienna in 1905/1906 as the 21st district. The new district office for the 21st district started operations on January 1, 1906. Until then, Vienna had only extended to the left bank of the Danube in the 2nd district, which until 1938 extended to the former main arm of the river, the Old Danube .

1938: 97 municipalities incorporated

Map of Greater Vienna :
  • Urban area until 1938
  • 1954 area remaining near Vienna
  • Territory spun off in 1954
  • After the "Anschluss" in 1938, 97 Lower Austrian localities were incorporated by resolution of the Reich Government on October 1, 1938 with effect from October 15, 1938 . With an area of ​​1215 km² Vienna became the “largest German city”. The extent of the incorporation was valid until the territorial changes decided in 1946 came into force in 1954 and led to the designation Greater Vienna . This was divided into 26 districts. New districts were:

    The places Breitenfurt , Laab im Walde , Perchtoldsdorf , Vösendorf and Hennersdorf did not remain in the Mödling district, but were added to the 25th district, Liesing. The new outer districts were referred to as rural districts with the outlying parishes .

    After the end of the Second World War , it was constitutionally decided in June 1946 in Vienna, Lower Austria and in the National Council to reverse a large part of the incorporation, but the entry into force of the relevant laws failed due to the resistance of the Soviet representatives in the Control Council . This resulted in the following compromise: The citizens of these districts were allowed to elect mandataries for the Lower Austrian state parliament, but they had no voting rights there . On the other hand, the peripheral communities remained in Vienna and under Vienna administration, but had no representation in the Vienna City Council.

    1954: 80 parishes left

    In 1954, the Soviet representatives of the occupying powers also agreed to the reorganization of many peripheral communities; the laws passed in 1946 were promulgated and came into force on September 1, 1954. At that time, however, the citizens had often already got used to belonging to Vienna. Vienna itself also campaigned to remain in the city association. There were even unofficial referendums, as in Mödling and Klosterneuburg . The political decision already made in 1945/46 remained upright: only parts of the 22nd (today Donaustadt ) and 25th district (as the 23rd district) and a number of places on the outskirts (a total of 17 localities) remained with Vienna. 80 localities, now again autonomous communities, came back to Lower Austria ( Vienna-area district ). As a result, Vienna lost two thirds of its area, which was now 415 km².

    Relics from Greater Vienna are still visible today when it comes to electricity, gas and telephone. The power supply of the peripheral communities is largely still provided by Wien-Energie and not by EVN . Kledering , Mauerbach , Perchtoldsdorf , Schwechat , Vösendorf and other peripheral communities still form part of the Vienna telephone network with the area code 01 (or +43-1 from abroad).

    Districts and district parts

    Since today's urban area resulted from numerous incorporations of former suburbs and suburbs , you can still find their names and the names of former places on the city map. To this day, in some parts of the city there are structurally and mentally delimitable neighborhoods or residential areas, quarters or quarters, locally called Grätzl . This is particularly clear in the outskirts, where the traditional town centers (e.g. Kaiserebersdorf , Mauer , Hütteldorf , Grinzing ) have often been preserved.

    The districts 1 to 9 and 20 are considered internal districts (also within the belt area called, although this is not true for the 2nd, 20th and part of the 3rd district). All others, especially the districts 10 to 19, are referred to as outer districts . 21st, 22nd and 23rd districts are also referred to as peripheral districts .

    Over the decades, district boundaries weren't just changed in 1938. So came z. B. the part of Alservorstadt south of Alser Straße , in 1850 part of today's 9th district, in 1862 the 8th district. In 1905, in the districts on the western belt , the district boundaries that ran in parallel streets from the time of the line wall were moved to the belt. (For example, the Vienna Volksoper moved from the 18th to the 9th district.) The Schmelz parade ground , the remaining undeveloped part of which is now in the 15th district, was once one of three neighboring districts. The town of Albern an der Donau had to change its district in 1954 and 1956 for reasons of occupation law. The border between the 21st and 22nd districts was largely moved northward in 1954. In the last thirty years there have been minor border shifts in order to be able to assign infrastructure facilities such as the Naschmarkt (2009 for the 6th) to one instead of two districts.

    Although it has the fewest inhabitants, the 1st district has the most employees with 100,745 employees. The reason for this high job density is, on the one hand, tourism , which animates the shopping streets and alleys, and, on the other hand, good accessibility in the city center, an important location and prestige factor for many companies, especially in the service sector.

    The Danube city , the 22nd district, is the largest in area and second largest in terms of population. It covers 10,231 hectares and 165,265 inhabitants. Due to the large area, the Danube city is also one of the most sparsely populated districts. Only the 13th district in the west of the city, Hietzing , has an even lower population density with 1,348 people per km², because the almost uninhabited Lainzer Tiergarten (25 km²) belongs to the district.

    The smallest area is in the 8th district, Josefstadt. However, since 23,930 people live on just 1.09 km², this results in the city's second-highest population density. There is an even higher population density in the 5th district, Margareten . 53,071 people live there on two square kilometers, which at 26,390 people per km² exceeds all other districts of the city.

    List of districts of Vienna 2018 in descending order of area: 22nd (largest area), 21st, 13th, 14th, 23rd, 10th, 19th, 11th, 2nd, 17th, 16th, 12th, 3rd , 18th, 20th, 15th, 9th, 1st, 5th, 4th, 7th, 6th and 8th district (smallest area).

    When quoting district names in texts, it should be noted that the names of the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 8th, 20th and 22nd district are female and are mentioned with an article (e.g. "in der Leopoldstadt" , "Auf der Wieden", "die Josefstadt"), while the names of the 7th and 9th districts are male ("am Neubau", "der Alsergrund") and also have an article. All other district names are quoted without an article (e.g. "in Döbling").

    No. Parish coat of arms District parts Incorporation Area in ha Inhabitants
    (January 1, 2017)
    Inhabitants
    per km²
    Employees
    (2013)
    01 Inner city Inner city - 1850: District area outside the city wall 000000000000287.0000000000287 000000000016465.000000000016,465 000000000005737.00000000005,737 000000000110104.0000000000110.104
    02 Leopoldstadt Leopoldstadt Hunter line Jägerzeile Leopoldstadt intermediate bridges
    Leopoldstadt
    Intermediate bridges
    1850 including Brigittenau, 20th district since 1900, and Kaisermühlen, 21st district in 1938, 22nd district in 1954; 1954/1955 with Albern (see 11th district) 000000000001924.00000000001.924 000000000105003.0000000000105.003 000000000005458.00000000005,458 000000000069739.000000000069,739
    03 Country road Country road Country road Landstrasse Erdberg Weißgerberviertel
    Erdberg
    Weißgerber
    1850; since 1938 with Arsenal and Schweizergarten (previously 10th district) 000000000000740.0000000000740 000000000090183.000000000090.183 000000000012187.000000000012,187 000000000095793.000000000095,793
    04th Wieden Wieden Hungelbrunn Hungelbrunn Schaumburgergrund Wieden
    Schaumburgergrund
    Wieden
    1850 (until 1861 including Margareten, until 1874 including part of Favoriten) 000000000000178.0000000000178 000000000033035.000000000033,035 000000000018559.000000000018,559 000000000028237.000000000028,237
    05 Margareten Margareten Dog storm Hundsturm Laurenzergrund Margareten Matzleinsdorf Nikolsdorf Reinprechtsdorf
    AUT Laurenzergrund COA.png
    Margareten
    AUT Matzleinsdorf COA.png

    AUT Reinprechtsdorf COA.png
    1850 as part of Wiedens, 1861 district (until 1874 including part of Favoriten) 000000000000201.0000000000201 000000000055356.000000000055,356 000000000027540.000000000027,540 000000000019656.000000000019,656
    06th Mariahilf Mariahilf AUT Gumpendorf COA.png Gumpendorf Laimgrube Magdalenengrund Mariahilf Windmill
    AUT Laimgrube COA.png
    AUT Magdalenengrund COA.png
    AUT Mariahilf COA.png
    AUT windmill COA.png
    1850 (managed as the 5th district until 1861) 000000000000145.0000000000145 000000000031865.000000000031,865 000000000021825.000000000021,825 000000000028451.000000000028,451
    07th New building New building Altlerchenfeld Altlerchenfeld new building in Sankt Ulrich Schottenfeld Spittelberg
    Coat of arms of Neubau.svg
    Ortisei
    AUT Schottenfeld COA.png
    Spittelberg

    Small parts of the former suburbs of Mariahilf, Laimgrube and Altlerchenfeld are also part of the new building

    1850 (managed as the 6th district until 1861) 000000000000161.0000000000161 000000000032197.000000000032,197 000000000019998.000000000019,998 000000000035183.000000000035,183
    08th Josefstadt Josefstadt AUT Alservorstadt COA.png Alservorstadt Altlerchenfeld Breitenfeld Josefstadt Strozzigrund
    Altlerchenfeld
    Breitenfeld
    Josefstadt (district) Wappen.png
    Stroizzigrund
    1850 (listed as the 7th district until 1861); since 1862 with part of Alservorstadt (until then in the 9th district) 000000000000109.0000000000109 000000000025528.000000000025,528 000000000023420.000000000023,420 000000000016096.000000000016.096
    09 Alsergrund Alsergrund AUT Alservorstadt COA.png Alservorstadt Althangrund Himmelpfortgrund Lichtental Michelbeuern Rossau Thurygrund
    Althangrund
    AUT Himmelpfortgrund COA.png
    Lichtental
    AUT Michelbeuern COA.png
    Rossau
    Thurygrund
    1850 (listed as the 8th district until 1861); until 1862 Alservorstadt also south of Alser Straße , then to the 8th district 000000000000297.0000000000297 000000000042709.000000000042,709 000000000014380.000000000014,380 000000000050457.000000000050,457
    10 Favorites Favorites AUT favorites COA.png Favorites Inzersdorf-Stadt Oberlaa Rothneusiedl Unterlaa
    Inzersdorf city
    Oberlaa
    Rothneusiedl
    Unterlaa
    1850 northern part in the 4th, from 1861 also 5th district; 1874 10th district, 1892 to the Donauländebahn ; 1938: Arsenal to the 3rd district; Rothneusiedl, Oberlaa, Unterlaa incorporated (23rd district, Schwechat ), since 1954 in the 10th district 000000000003182.00000000003,182 000000000198083.0000000000198.083 000000000006225.00000000006.225 000000000063907.000000000063.907
    11 Simmering Simmering Silly Albern Kaiserebersdorf Simmering
    Kaiserebersdorf
    Simmering
    1892, 1938 (Albern 1938–1954 in the 23rd district, Schwechat , 1954–1955 in the 2nd district) 000000000002326.00000000002,326 000000000100137.0000000000100.137 000000000004305.00000000004,305 000000000034667.000000000034,667
    12 Meidling Meidling Altmannsdorf Altmannsdorf Gaudenzdorf Hetzendorf Obermeidling Untermeidling
    AUT Gaudenzdorf COA.png
    Hetzendorf
    Coat of arms of Obermeidling.svg
    Untermeidling Wappen.png
    1892 000000000000810.0000000000810 000000000095955.000000000095,955 000000000011846.000000000011,846 000000000035755.000000000035,755
    13 Hietzing Hietzing Hietzing Hietzing Unter-St.-Veit Ober-St.-Veit Hacking Lainz Speising
    Unter-St.-Vitus
    Ober-St.-Veit
    Hacking
    Lainz
    AUT Speising COA.png
    1892; until 1938 with Baumgarten, Breitensee, Hütteldorf, Penzing; since 1938 with Friedensstadt , settlement Auhofer Trennstück and neighboring settlements ; Lainzer Tiergarten incorporated in 1938 (then 25th district, 1954 23rd district; since 1956 in the 13th district) 000000000003772.00000000003,772 000000000054171.000000000054,171 000000000001436.00000000001,436 000000000025791.000000000025,791
    14th Penzing Penzing Baumgarten Baumgarten Breitensee Hadersdorf-Weidlingau Hütteldorf Penzing
    Breitensee
    Hadersdorf-Weidlingau
    Hütteldorf
    Penzing
    1892 Baumgarten, Breitensee, Hütteldorf, Penzing parts of the 13th district, 1938 14th district with Hadersdorf-Weidlingau 000000000003376.00000000003,376 000000000092337.000000000092,337 000000000002735.00000000002,735 000000000028651.000000000028,651
    15th Rudolfsheim-Fünfhaus Rudolfsheim-Fünfhaus Rudolfsheim Rudolfsheim Fünfhaus Sechshaus
    Five house
    Six house
    1892 (until 1938: 14., Rudolfsheim; 15., Fünfhaus, then until 1957 district name Fünfhaus) 000000000000392.0000000000392 000000000078999.000000000078,999 000000000020153.000000000020,153 000000000028808.000000000028,808
    16 Ottakring Ottakring Neulerchenfeld Neulerchenfeld Ottakring
    Ottakring
    1892 000000000000867.0000000000867 000000000104323.0000000000104,323 000000000012033.000000000012,033 000000000029492.000000000029,492
    17th Hernals Hernals Hernals Hernals Dornbach Neuwaldegg
    Dornbach
    Neuwaldegg
    1892 000000000001139.00000000001,139 000000000057180.000000000057,180 000000000005020.00000000005,020 000000000014323.000000000014,323
    18th Currency ring Currency ring Gerstdorf Gersthof Pötzleinsdorf Währing wine house
    Pötzleinsdorf
    Currency ring
    wine House
    1892 (until 1938 with Neustift am Walde and Salmannsdorf ) 000000000000635.0000000000635 000000000051128.000000000051,128 000000000008052.00000000008,052 000000000014407.000000000014,407
    19th Dobling Dobling Grinzing Grinzing Heiligenstadt Josefsdorf Kahlenbergerdorf Neustift am Walde Nussdorf Oberdöbling Salmannsdorf Sievering Unterdöbling
    Heiligenstadt
    Coat of arms is missing
    Kahlenbergerdorf
    Neustift am Walde
    Nussdorf
    Oberdöbling
    Salmannsdorf
    Sievering
    Unterdöbling
    1892, Kuchelauer Hafen 1938; since 1938 with Neustift am Walde and Salmannsdorf (until then 18th district) 000000000002494.00000000002,494 000000000072107.000000000072.107 000000000002891.00000000002,891 000000000030341.000000000030,341
    20th Brigittenau Brigittenau BrigittenauBrigittenau intermediate bridges
    Intermediate bridges
    1850 as part of the 2nd district, separated from this in 1900 000000000000571.0000000000571 000000000086868.000000000086,868 000000000015213.000000000015,213 000000000028389.000000000028,389
    21st Floridsdorf Floridsdorf Donaufeld Donaufeld Floridsdorf Großjedlersdorf Jedlesee Leopoldau Stammersdorf Strebersdorf
    Floridsdorf
    Großjedlersdorf
    Every lake
    Leopoldau
    Stammersdorf
    Strebersdorf
    1905, 1911 (Strebersdorf), 1905–1938 with Aspern, Hirschstetten, Lobau, Stadlau, from 1938 with Stammersdorf, 1905–1954 with Kagran, 1938–1954 with Kaisermühlen 000000000004444.00000000004,444 000000000158712.0000000000158.712 000000000003571.00000000003,571 000000000053911.000000000053,911
    22nd Danube city Danube city Aspern Aspern Breitenlee Essling Hirschstetten Kagran Kaisermühlen Stadlau Süßenbrunn
    Breitenlee
    Essling
    Hirschstetten
    Kagran
    Kaisermühlen
    Stadlau
    Süßenbrunn
    1905–1938 Aspern, Hirschstetten, Lobau, Stadlau in the 21st district; 1938 22nd district, Groß-Enzersdorf , with Breitenlee, Essling, Süßenbrunn; 1954 Kagran, Kaisermühlen from the 21st district, Groß-Enzersdorf u. a. to Lower Austria 000000000010231.000000000010,231 000000000184188.0000000000184.188 000000000001800.00000000001,800 000000000059616.000000000059,616
    23 Liesing Vienna - Liesing district, Wappen.svg Atzgersdorf Atzgersdorf Erlaa Inzersdorf Kalksburg Liesing Wall Rodaun Siebenhirten
    Erlaa
    Inzersdorf
    Kalksburg
    Liesing
    Wall
    Rodaun
    Seven Shepherds
    1938 25th district (with larger extent), 1954 23rd district, 1956 Lainzer Tiergarten to the 13th district 000000000003207.00000000003,207 000000000101053.0000000000101.053 000000000003151.00000000003.151 000000000054065.000000000054.065
    City vienna Vienna - - 000000000041487.000000000041,487 000000001867582.00000000001,867,582 000000000004502.00000000004,502 000000000955839.0000000000955.839

    politics

    The “district parliament ” of each district is the district council whose elections (with a separate ballot) take place at the same time as the municipal council elections; its individual member is referred to as the district council. Since 1995, citizens of other EU member states who live in Vienna have been entitled to vote in the district council elections.

    The elected district chairman is the representative of a district . He is always the most votes in the district council elections party found one of his two deputies as well. The second deputy belongs to the second largest party in the district. Currently the FPÖ provides the district head in the 11th district, the Greens the district head in the 2nd, 7th and 18th district, the ÖVP in the bourgeois inner districts 1 and 8 as well as in the districts 13 and 19, which are largely comprised of villa quarters in other 15 districts the district head is provided by the SPÖ (all information based on the results of the municipal elections in Vienna ).

    District representatives and district heads each have their seat in an official building in the district.

    The magistrate district offices ( MBAs ) are also located in the district for which they are responsible; Exceptions are the 4th, 6th, 8th, 9th, 14th and 19th districts, which have a common district office with another district: the 4th with the 5th, the 6th with the 7th, the 8th with the 1st, the 9th with the 17th, the 14th with the 13th, and the 19th with the 18th district. The MBAs are not subordinate to the district politicians, but to the municipal director, as they function as a "branch" of the municipal authorities of the City of Vienna or the office of the Vienna provincial government.

    In 2002 the Vienna State Parliament extended the right to vote in the district elections to non-EU citizens who have been resident in Vienna for at least five years. However, this regulation was repealed by the Constitutional Court in 2004 due to a complaint by the FPÖ and the ÖVP before it could have been applied.

    The municipal council (the same person as the Vienna Landtag) has allocated funds to the districts in the sense of decentralization for autonomous use, for example to maintain compulsory schools, traffic areas (if these do not belong to the higher-ranking road network) and parks. Furthermore, the districts are involved in important urban planning, traffic organization and construction processes. The district council or the committee commissioned by it has to make decisions on this. The municipal council or the responsible city council acts as a second instance.

    District Boards:

    Parish image address annotation
    1., Inner City Vienna-AltesRathaus-1.jpg Wipplingerstraße 6–8 ( Old Town Hall )
    Building under monument protection
    2., Leopoldstadt Vienna 02 Karmelitergasse 9 a.jpg Karmelitergasse 9 Listed building
    3rd, country road Amtshaus3.jpg Karl-Borromäus-Platz 3 Listed building
    4th, Wieden Keinfoto.svg Favoritenstrasse 18
    5th, Margareten Amtshaus-Margareten.jpg Schönbrunner Strasse 54
    6., Mariahilf Amerlingstr. 11 914.JPG Amerlingstrasse 11 Listed building
    7th, new building Office building Hermanngasse02.JPG Hermanngasse 24-26 Listed building
    8th, Josefstadt District Office Josefstadt I.jpg Schlesingerplatz 4 Listed building
    9., Alsergrund Alsergrund District Museum.JPG Währinger Strasse 43 Listed building
    10. Favorites Keplerplatz 24.JPG Keplerplatz 5 Listed building
    11th, Simmering Office building and district museum Simmering.jpg Enkplatz 2 Listed building
    12. Meidling Wien12 SMeidlingerHauptstrasse002 2011-12-31 GuentherZ 0128.JPG Schönbrunner Strasse 259
    13th, Hietzing Amtshaushietzingbadhaussteg.jpg Hietzinger quay 1–3 Listed building
    14., Penzing Geriatric Center Baumgarten.jpg Hütteldorfer Strasse 188 (Former Baumgarten geriatric center )
    Building under monument protection
    15th, Rudolfsheim-Fünfhaus District Office XV.JPG Gasgasse 8-10 Listed building
    16., Ottakring GuentherZ 2011-04-02 0015 Vienna16 Richard-Wagner-Platz Amtshaus.jpg Richard-Wagner-Platz 19 Listed building
    17th, Hernals Office building Vienna Hernals.jpg Elterleinplatz 14 Listed building
    18th, Währing District Office Währing Vienna Sept 2006.jpg Martinstrasse 100 Listed building
    19., Dobling Neuesamtshausdoeblinggrinzingerallee6.jpg Grinzinger Allee 6
    20th, Brigittenau Brigittaplatz, office building for the 20th district 1.jpg Brigittaplatz 10 Listed building
    21., Floridsdorf Office building Floridsdorf.jpg At the Spitz 1 Listed building
    22., Donaustadt Amtshaus Donaustadt, Schrödingerplatz 1, view 2.jpg Schrödingerplatz 1
    23rd, Liesing Office building Liesing21.jpg Perchtoldsdorfer Strasse 2 Listed building

    literature

    • Felix Czeike (Ed.): Historisches Lexikon Wien. 5 volumes, Kremayr & Scheriau, Vienna 1992–1997.
    • Peter Diem , Michael Göbl, Eva Saibel: The Viennese districts. Their history, their personality, their coat of arms . Pearl series , Vienna 2002.
    • The provisional municipal law of March 6, 1850 with its supplementary provisions [until November 6, 1866] in: Report of the commission appointed by the Vienna City Council to revise the municipal statute. First volume. = Templates for the revision of the provisional Vienna Municipal Code of March 6, 1850 , self-published by Vienna Municipal Council, Vienna 1868, p. 137 ( online version at Google Books)

    Web links

    Commons : Vienna municipal districts  - collection of images, videos and audio files

    Individual evidence

    1. ^ Hieb, the district (in Vienna). ostarrichi.org, accessed August 2, 2012 .
    2. RGBl. No. 17 of March 17, 1849 (= p. 203 f.)
    3. LGBl. F. Lower Austria. No. 45/1890 (= p. 55)
    4. ^ Announcement by the Imperial and Royal Governor of December 9, 1891, LGBl. F. Lower Austria. No. 60/1891 (= p. 235)
    5. LGBl. F. Lower Austria. No. 1/1905 (= p. 1)
    6. ^ Announcement of the kk governor of December 28, 1905, LGBl. F. Lower Austria. No. 169/1905 (= p. 222)
    7. ^ Law on Territorial Changes in the Land of Austria of October 1, 1938 , Law Gazette for the Land of Austria No. 443 of October 6, 1938, p. 2227 ff.
    8. Gerhard Botz: National Socialism in Vienna - takeover of power, securing rule, radicalization, war preparation 1938/39 . In: Historical magazine . Mandelbaum, August 5, 2019, ISSN  2196-680X , p. 392 , doi : 10.1515 / hzhz-2019-1335 .
    9. Territorial Change Act, Federal Law Gazette 110/1954
    10. ^ Announcement by the Imperial and Royal Governor in the Archduchy of Austria under the Enns from June 7, 1905 , LGBl. For Lower Austria. No. 101/1905 (= p. 87)
    11. Urban area according to usage classes and municipal districts, 2012 . Retrieved February 8, 2014.
    12. Population on 1.1.2017 by nationality or country of birth and municipalities . Statistics Austria. Retrieved May 25, 2017.
    13. Employees at the place of work by district in 2013 . Retrieved April 26, 2016.