Regierungsbezirk Frankfurt Explained

Frankfurt
Native Name:German: Regierungsbezirk Frankfurt
Native Name Lang:de
Settlement Type:German: [[Regierungsbezirk]]
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Prussia/German Empire
Subdivision Type1:Province/State
Subdivision Name1:Brandenburg/Prussia
Established Title:Established
Established Date:1815
Extinct Title:Disestablished
Extinct Date:1945
Seat Type:Region seat
Seat:Frankfurt (Oder)
Unit Pref:Metric
Area Total Km2:20,731
Population Total:1316590
Population As Of:1939
Population Density Km2:auto

The Frankfurt Region was a government region in the Prussian Province of Brandenburg between 1815 and 1945. Its administrative capital was Frankfurt (Oder). Today its western part is in the State of Brandenburg while the eastern part, following frontier changes agreed by the Soviet Union in 1945, is part of Poland, roughly corresponding to the Lubusz Voivodeship.

It was created in 1815, when Prussia reorganised its internal administration. It comprised the mostly rural eastern part of Brandenburg, including the New March and Lower Lusatia. From 1871 Prussia itself was part of the newly founded German Empire.

In 1938 the districts of Arnswalde and were disentangled from the Frankfurt Region and merged into the new government region called Frontier of Posen-West Prussia, which was incorporated into the Province of Pomerania. At the same time the districts of Meseritz and Schwerin (Warthe), were transferred out of what had previously been defined as the Province of Posen-West Prussia, now becoming part of the Frankfurt Region.

In aggregate these changes reduced the land area of the Frankfurt Region from 20,731 km2 to 18,390 km2.[1]

In 1945 the part of the region to the east of the Oder and Western Neisse rivers (the Oder–Neisse line) became part of Poland while the western part fell within the Soviet Zone of occupation in Germany. West of the Oder–Neisse line, the Land of Brandenburg, created in 1946, was not administratively subdivided into "government regions". Three years later, however, the newly evolving East German state undertook further administrative reforms in 1952 and the western areas of the former Frankfurt Region became part of the new Frankfurt Bezirk (district).

Demographics

According to the Prussian census of 1890, the Frankfurt Region had a population of 1,137,157, of which 1,090,794 (95.92%) spoke German, 36,720 (3.23%) spoke Sorbian, 4,813 (0.42%) spoke Polish, 413 (0.04%) spoke Czech, and 3,993 (0.35%) identified as bilingual (speaking German and another language).[2]

Administrative Districts

Urban districts (German: [[Stadtkreis]]e):
Rural districts (German: [[Districts of Prussia|Kreise]][3]):

Regional presidents (German: Regierungspräsidenten)

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Statistische Jahrbücher für das Deutsche Reich. https://archive.today/20120719005347/http://w3d.digizeitschriften.de/main/dms/toc/?IDDOC=532168. dead. 19 July 2012. DigiZeitschriften. 16 August 2009.
  2. Book: Belzyt, Leszek. Sprachliche Minderheiten im preussischen Staat: 1815 - 1914; die preußische Sprachenstatistik in Bearbeitung und Kommentar. 1998. Herder-Inst.. 978-3-87969-267-5. Marburg.
  3. As of 1939 Nazi centralism levelled terminological regional peculiarities and Prussian rural German: Kreise were — like their non-Prussian comparable administrative units — all uniformly termed as German: [[Landkreis]]e.