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[[File:Siegelmarke Koeniglich Preussische Landrostei - Stade W0235984.jpg|thumb|Sealing stamp of the Stade Region, years from 1866 to 1885]]
[[File:Siegelmarke Koeniglich Preussische Landrostei - Stade W0235984.jpg|thumb|Sealing stamp of the Stade Region, years from 1866 to 1885]]

===The ''Stade Region'' as an administrative unit of Prussia (1866-1945/1947)===
===The ''Stade Region'' as an administrative unit of Prussia (1866-1945/1947)===
[[File:RB Stade in Hannover 1905.png|thumb|right|The ''Stade Region'' (brown), consisting of 14 counties within the Prussian ''Province of Hanover'' (beige), in 1905.]]
[[File:RB Stade in Hannover 1905.png|thumb|right|The ''Stade Region'' (brown), consisting of 14 counties within the Prussian ''Province of Hanover'' (beige), in 1905.]]
Line 154: Line 155:
In 1933 the Nazis seized the power in Germany ([[Machtergreifung]]). On the Reich's and the level of the states gradually all resistance was decapitated. Anti-Semitic discriminations were imposed onto Jewish Germans and Germans of Jewish descent. In 1932 [[Franz von Papen]]'s Reich's government had overthrown the last democratic [[Free State of Prussia|Prussia]]n government under [[Otto Braun]] ([[Preußenschlag|Prussian Coup]]). So the ''Governorate of Stade'', being a part of the [[Free State of Prussia]], one of the most stable and democratised German states, came fast under Nazi influence. The governor {{Interlanguage link multi|Hermann Rose|de|3=Hermann Rose (Politiker)}} resigned under pressure of Gauleiter [[Otto Telschow]]. The Nazis' rule enforcement was characterised by installing Nazi-loyal parallel structures, which would interfere with existing public administration and bring it to dictatorial lines. The ''Governorate of Stade'' came under ever increasing interference of the Nazi party's regional subsection [[Gau Eastern Hanover]] under Gauleiter [[Otto Telschow]], especially after 1935, when the Nazi-party Gaue replaced the functions of the streamlined [[States of Germany|German states]].
In 1933 the Nazis seized the power in Germany ([[Machtergreifung]]). On the Reich's and the level of the states gradually all resistance was decapitated. Anti-Semitic discriminations were imposed onto Jewish Germans and Germans of Jewish descent. In 1932 [[Franz von Papen]]'s Reich's government had overthrown the last democratic [[Free State of Prussia|Prussia]]n government under [[Otto Braun]] ([[Preußenschlag|Prussian Coup]]). So the ''Governorate of Stade'', being a part of the [[Free State of Prussia]], one of the most stable and democratised German states, came fast under Nazi influence. The governor {{Interlanguage link multi|Hermann Rose|de|3=Hermann Rose (Politiker)}} resigned under pressure of Gauleiter [[Otto Telschow]]. The Nazis' rule enforcement was characterised by installing Nazi-loyal parallel structures, which would interfere with existing public administration and bring it to dictatorial lines. The ''Governorate of Stade'' came under ever increasing interference of the Nazi party's regional subsection [[Gau Eastern Hanover]] under Gauleiter [[Otto Telschow]], especially after 1935, when the Nazi-party Gaue replaced the functions of the streamlined [[States of Germany|German states]].


The new Nazi Reich's government – "provisionally" ruling Prussia – had direct rule over the Prussian police, with police being an institution of the respective German states. The ordinary police had to guard together with [[Sturmabteilung|S.A.]] men, the Prussian ''Criminal Police Department'' in charge for the ''Governorate of Stade'' was seated in its biggest city [[Bremerhaven|Wesermünde]]. In March/April 1933 the ''Criminal Police'' was transformed into the new {{Interlanguage link multi|Wesermünde Department of the State Police|de|3=Staatspolizeistelle Wesermünde}}, directly subordinated to the new [[Gestapo|Geheime Staatspolizei]] (GeStapo, secret state police), circumventing all prior existing Prussian administrative structures, to which the former ''Criminal Police'' had been subjected and reporting before. At first Wesermünde's ''Stapo Department'' persecuted all political enemies of Nazism and later persons involved in all kinds of disobediences, such as strikes, absenteeism, black marketing, circumventions of ordered dues to be delivered, which all became an ever growing phenomenon with the increasing weariness in the long duration of the war. The ''Stapo'' had its special eye on forced labourers in the governorate, abducted from all over German occupied Europe.
The new Nazi Reich's government – "provisionally" ruling Prussia – had direct rule over the Prussian police, with police being an institution of the respective German states. The ordinary police had to guard together with [[Sturmabteilung|S.A.]] men, the Prussian ''Criminal Police Department'' in charge for the ''Governorate of Stade'' was seated in its biggest city [[Bremerhaven|Wesermünde]]. In March/April 1933 the ''Criminal Police'' was transformed into the new {{Interlanguage link multi|Wesermünde Department of the State Police|de|3=Staatspolizeistelle Wesermünde}}, directly subordinated to the new [[Gestapo|Geheime Staatspolizei]] (GeStapo, secret state police), circumventing all prior existing Prussian administrative structures, to which the former ''Criminal Police'' had been subjected and reporting before. At first Wesermünde's ''Stapo Department'' persecuted all political enemies of Nazism and later persons involved in all kinds of disobediences, such as strikes, absenteeism, black marketing, circumventions of ordered dues to be delivered, which all became an ever-growing phenomenon with the increasing weariness in the long duration of the war. The ''Stapo'' had its special eye on forced labourers in the governorate, abducted from all over German occupied Europe.


In 1939 the Sandbostel camp, meanwhile usurped by the Nazi trade union [[Reichsarbeitsdienst]], was converted into the prisoner-of-war camp [[Stalag X-B]] and a camp of internment for civilian [[enemy aliens]]. Until 1945 about a million inmates passed through the camp, with about 46,000 perished.
In 1939 the Sandbostel camp, meanwhile usurped by the Nazi trade union [[Reichsarbeitsdienst]], was converted into the prisoner-of-war camp [[Stalag X-B]] and a camp of internment for civilian [[enemy aliens]]. Until 1945 about a million inmates passed through the camp, with about 46,000 perished.

Revision as of 15:23, 13 February 2017

High-Bailiwick of Stade (1823–1885)
Governorate of Stade (1885–1978)
Landdrostei Stade (1823–1885)
Regierungsbezirk Stade (1885–1978)
also Bezirk Stade
Region of
the Kingdom of Hanover (1823–1866)
the Kingdom of Prussia (1866–1918)
the Free State of Prussia (1918-1946/1947)
Lower Saxony (1946–1978)
1823–1978
CapitalStade
Area 
• 1823
7,025 km2 (2,712 sq mi)
• 1890
6,786 km2 (2,620 sq mi)
• 1969
6,850 km2 (2,640 sq mi)
Population 
• 1823
208,251
• 1890
338,225
• 1939
462,592
• 1969
627,000
Government
 • Typeregional administration
High-Bailiff (Template:Lang-de, 1823–1885), Governor (Regierungspräsident, 1885–1978) 
• 1823–1841
Engelbert Johann Marschalck [nds]
• 1863–1872
August Theodor Braun [de]
• 1922–1933
Hermann Rose [de]
• 1950–1954
Walter Harm [de]
• 1958–1959
Curt Miehe [de]
• 1959–1973
Helmut-Ernst Miericke [nds]
Legislatureno autonomous legislation, power only deriving from the state government
Historical era19th and 20th century
• annexed by Prussia
20 September 1866
• reorganisation acc.
    to Prussian standards
1 April
• merged into the
    Lunenburg Region
31 January 1978
Political subdivisionsbailiwicks (Amt/Ämter, sg./pl., 1823–1885), thereafter rural districts (Landkreis[e], sg.[pl.]) and urban districts (Geestemünde [de] 1913–24, Lehe [de] 1913–24, Wesermünde 1924–47, Cuxhaven 1937–77)
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Bremen-Verden
Lüneburg (region) Image missing

The Stade Region emerged in 1823 by an administrative reorganisation of the dominions of the Kingdom of Hanover, a sovereign state, whose then territory is almost completely part of today's German federal state of Lower Saxony.[1] Until 1837 the Kingdom of Hanover was ruled in personal union by the Kings of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.

The official title of the Region was High-Bailiwick of Stade (1823–1885; Template:Lang-de) and then Governorate of Stade (1885–1978; Template:Lang-de). The High-Bailiwick of Stade, being a mere administrative unit of the integrated Kingdom of Hanover, was named after and seated in Stade, Bremen-Verden's former capital, taking over its staff, installations and buildings. The territory of the Stade Region was combined by the territories of the Land of Hadeln, the Duchies of Bremen and Verden (German pronunciation: [ˈfɛːɐ̯dən]), all Hanoverian dominions, which were collectively administered. The territory belonging to the Stade Region covered about the triangular area between the mouths of the rivers Elbe and Weser to the North Sea and today's German federal states of Hamburg and Bremen.[2] This area included about today's Lower Saxon counties (Template:Lang-de) of Cuxhaven (southernly), Osterholz, Rotenburg upon Wümme, Stade and Verden as well as of the Bremian exclave of the city of Bremerhaven.

History

Before the establishment of the High-Bailiwick of Stade

The collectively administered Land of Hadeln, the Duchy of Bremen and the Duchy of Verden were therefore colloquially referred to as the Duchies of Bremen-Verden or simply Bremen-Verden. The latter two emerged in 1648 by the transformation of the Prince-Archbishopric of Bremen, then Duchy of Bremen, and the Prince-Bishopric of Verden, then Duchy of Verden.

Sketch map of the Electorate of Brunswick and Lunenburg (alias Electorate of Hanover), c.1720, and its neighbouring territories such as the Principality of Brunswick and Lunenburg-Wolfenbüttel (alias Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel), and the Prince-Bishopric of Osnabrück. George I Louis acquired Saxe-Lauenburg and Bremen-Verden for his electorate.

The Kingdom of Hanover's predecessor the Prince-Electorate of Brunswick and Lunenburg (or, colloquially called after its capital Electorate of Hanover; Template:Lang-de) purchased Bremen-Verden from its Danish occupants de facto in 1715 (and again from its legitimate owner Sweden in 1719 (Treaty of Stockholm) for rixdollars [Rtlr] 1 million). De jure this acquisition had to be legitimised by imperial feoffment. It took Elector George II Augustus until 1733 to get Charles VI to enfeoff him with the Duchy of Bremen and Verden.

In 1728 Emperor Charles VI enfeoffed Elector George II Augustus, who in 1727 had succeeded his father George I Louis, with the reverted fief of Saxe-Lauenburg. By a redeployment of Hanoverian territories in 1731 Bremen-Verden was conveyed the administration of the neighboured Land of Hadeln (at the Northern tip of Bremen-Verden), since 1180 an exclave, first of the younger Duchy of Saxony, from 1296 on of the Duchy of Saxe-Lauenburg, one of the former's successors.

At both feoffments George II Augustus swore that he would respect the existing privileges and constitutions of the Estates of Bremen-Verden and of Hadeln, thus confirming 400-year-old traditions of Estate participation in government. The small Land of Hadeln maintained until 1885 as to its legislation a certain level of internal autonomy (Estates of Hadeln [de][3]) but as to the executive power Hadeln was administered by neighboured Bremen-Verden's provincial government.

Being a Prince-Elector of the Holy Roman Empire and represented in its Diet by virtue of his Electorate of Hanover, George II Augustus didn't bother about Bremen-Verden's status of Imperial immediacy. Since Bremen-Verden had turned Hanoverian it never again sent its own representatives to a Diet .

The Stade Region as part of the state of Hanover in the years from 1813 to 1866

After the Napoleonic Wars, which brought changing occupations and annexations of the Duchies of Bremen and Verden (for more details see Bremen-Verden), Bremen-Verden was restored in 1813 to the Electorate of Hanover, which transformed into the Kingdom of Hanover in 1814. Even though Bremen-Verden's status as a territory of imperial immediacy had become void with the end of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806, the Duchies were not right away incorporated in real union into the Hanoverian state. Since the Hanoverian monarchs had moved to London, Hanover had become a state of very conservative and backwarded rule, with a local government recruited from local aristocrats adding up much to the preservation of outdated structures.

The real union with Hanover only followed in 1823, when an administrative reform united Bremen-Verden and Hadeln to form the High-Bailiwick of Stade, administered according to unitarian modern standards, thereby doing away with various traditional Bremian government forms. Hadeln kept part of its traditional autonomy until 1852, its Estates continued to function with restricted authority until 1884. In 1823 the high-bailiwick consisted of 7,025 square kilometres with 208,251 inhabitants.

On 1 May 1827 a small section of the lower Weser shore in the West of the High-Bailiwick of Stade, forming the nucleus of the future city of Bremerhaven, was transferred to the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen, as agreed upon earlier that year in a contract by the Hanoveran minister Friedrich Franz Dieterich von Bremer and Bremen's Burgomaster Johann Smidt. Bremerhaven (literally English: Bremian Harbour) was founded to be a haven for Bremen's merchant marine, with that city located upstream the Weser being more and more disconnected from the sea, due to that river's silting up. Bremerhaven also became the home port of the German Confederation's Navy under Karl Rudolf Brommy.

Reorganisation of religious bodies in the Stade region

Two Lutheran consistories, one for the Land of Hadeln in Otterndorf (founded by Hadeln's Estates in 1535, integrated into Stade's consistory in 1885) and one in Stade (founded by Swedish Bremen-Verden's government in 1650) for the rest of the High-Bailiwick supervised the Lutheran cult and clergy. A general superintendent chaired each consistory. Lutherans made up by far the majority of the population. Among Lutherans revivalism played a major role in the 1850s. In 1848 the Lutheran parishes were democratised by the introduction of presbyteries (parish councils), elected by all major male parishioners and chairing each parish in co-operation with the pastor, being before the sole chairman. This introduction of presbyteries was somewhat revolutionary in the rather hierarchically structured Lutheran church.

The Lutheran church was the state church of the Kingdom of Hanover with the king being summus episcopus [de] (Supreme Governor of the Lutheran Church). In 1864 Carl Lichtenberg [de], Hanoverian minister of education, cultural and religious affairs (1862–1865), persuaded the Hanoverian parliament [de] to pass a new law as to the constitution of the Lutheran church. The constitution provided a state synod (parishioners' parliament, Template:Lang-de). But its first session only materialised in 1869, when after the Prussian annexation of the Kingdom of Hanover (1866) the Hanoverian Lutherans desired a representative body separate from Prussian rule, though it was restricted to Lutheran matters only.

After the Prussian conquest in 1866, on 19 September 1866, the day before the official Prussian annexation took place and with the last king, George V of Hanover, in exile, the Kingdom's six consistories joined to form the still existing Lutheran State Church of Hanover. An all-Hanoverian consistory, the Landeskonsistorium (state consistory), was formed with representatives from the regional consistories.[4] The Lutheran state church became a stronghold of Hanoverian separatism and therefore somewhat politicised. It opposed the Evangelical State Church in Prussia, comprising the Protestant parishes in the Prussian territory prior the 1866 annexations, not only for its being a stronghold of Prussian patriotism, but for being a united church of formerly Lutheran and Calvinist parishes, with a preponderance of Calvinism because the Calvinist Hohenzollern dynasty wielded its influence in the unification of Lutherans and Calvinists in then Prussia in 1817. The Hanoverian Lutherans managed to maintain their independence and the Evangelical State Church in Prussia stayed abreast of the changes and renamed in 1875 into Evangelical State Church of Prussia's older Provinces.

The Calvinist communities were in a somewhat sorry state. They emerged in the 1590s, when the Calvinist city of Bremen actually possessed some area around Bederkesa and Lehe (a part of today's Bremerhaven) at the lower Weser stream. In 1654, after the First Bremian War, the city ceded the area to Swedish Bremen-Verden, which subjected the Calvinists there to supervision by the Lutheran consistory. Under Lutheran pressure only six congregations stood fast to Calvinism.[5] In the municipalities, where they were located, Calvinists made up the majority of the population, later Lutheran migration outweighed the Calvinist preponderance. The rest of the Stade Region was and is a Calvinist diaspora.

In 1848 Hanoverian law also provided for presbyteries in the Calvinist parishes in the Stade Region, which exactly fit the presbyterian structure of Calvinism. But only in 1882 – long after the Prussian annexation of Hanover – the inappropriate supervision by Lutheran consistorials ended, when King William I of Prussia decreed the creation of the Evangelical Reformed Church of the Province of Hanover comprising all the Calvinist communities in the prevailingly Lutheran Province of Hanover. The simultaneously Lutheran and Calvinist consistory in Aurich was made the consistory of that church body, becoming an exclusively Calvinist body only in 1922, following the constitutional reorganisation of the church bodies after the Weimar Constitution had decreed the separation of church and state in 1919.

After the forcefully wielded attempts of reCatholicisation in 1628–1632, which ended with the reconquest by the legitimate Lutheran Administrator regnant of the Prince-Archbishopric of Bremen, John Frederick, no Catholic communities existed and missionary and pastoral activities were supervised by the Roman Catholic Vicariate Apostolic of the Nordic Missions, but widely hindered by Bremen-Verden's government. By annexations after the Napoléonic Wars, the Kingdom of Hanover had become a state of three Christian denominations. In 1824 Hanover and the Holy See thus agreed upon to integrate the territory comprising the Stade Region into the neighboured Roman Catholic Diocese of Hildesheim, with the Vicariate Apostolic's competence ending there. In 1859 (in Blumenthal [de], 170 Catholics) and in 1872 (in Verden upon Aller) the first Catholic parishes were founded (after 1632), with all the Stade Region being a Catholic diaspora.[6]

Jews left scarce archival traces in the mediaeval Prince-Archbishopric of Bremen. In 1611 the city of Stade signed a contract with Sephardic Jews, allowing the foundation of a community. In 1613 Administrator John Frederick followed by settling Ashkenazzi Jews in the city, but during the turmoil of Catholic conquest and Lutheran reconquest the last archival traces of Jews date from 1630. Only by the end of the 17th century Jews reappear in Bremen-Verden. At the beginning of the 19th century some 30 Jewish families lived dispersedly over the region, under precarious legal status, and without Jewish institutions. By the Westphalian and French annexations in 1807 and 1810 the Jews in the Stade Region had been emancipated and thus naturalised, only to lose their French citizenship again by France's defeat in 1813, falling back into a status of toleration or mere indigenousness without political rights in restituted Bremen-Verden.

In 1842 the Kingdom of Hanover granted equal rights to Jews and promoted to build up Jewish communities and a regional superstructure (Rabbinate) within a nationwide scope. The Jews in the Stade Region regarded this a progress and a burden alike, because prior they hadn't employed any rabbi and religion teacher, opened hardly a synagogue or school due to the implied financial burden. In 1845 – according to the new law – a land-rabbinate for the whole Stade Region [nds], under land-rabbi Joseph Heilbut, was established, serving 16 Jewish communities, which were founded over the years, with altogether 1,250 Jews in 1864 (highest number ever reached). The local authorities now requested, that the Jewish communities establish synagogues and Jewish education for the pupils. Synagogues existed in Neuhaus upon Oste and in Osten (both early 19th century), in Horneburg (opened 1831) and in Stade (opened 1849, closed due to financial restrictions in 1908). And a teacher for Jewish religion and Hebrew was employed (after 1890 Stade's community couldn't afford a teacher any more). From 1903 on the Jewish community of Stade was granted public subsidies to continue functioning. The land-rabbins simultaneously fulfilled religious and state functions, like supervising Jewish elementary schools and the teaching of Jewish religion in all schools. The Kingdom of Hanover was thus one of the few states within the German Confederation, where rabbis held a similar semi-state authoritative position as to Jews as did, e.g., Lutheran clergy towards Lutherans.

After the Prussian annexation the constitution of Hanover's four land-rabbinates came under threat to be abolished, because in Prussia proper the government hindered as much as possible the establishment of nationwide Jewish organisations, let alone such which it would grant official recognition. In the end Prussia respected the existing Hanoverian land-rabbinate constitution, which continued to exist – modified according to the separation of state and religion in 1919 by the Weimar constitution – until the Nazi Reich's government de facto abolished the constitution in 1938. The communities in urban Lehe (28 families, after 1924 part of Wesermünde: 300 community members in 1928), Scharmbeck (20 families) and Verden upon Aller were the biggest by membership, while rural communities vanished. The Stade Region stayed a Jewish diaspora, and from 1860 on Stade's land-rabbinate was never staffed again, but served alternately by one of the other three Hanoverian land-rabbinates. Labour migration and emigration[7] to urban centres outside the Stade Region and Jewish demography rather lead to a reduction of the number of Jews in the Stade Region (786 in 1913, 716 in 1928).[8]

Sealing stamp of the Stade Region, years from 1866 to 1885

The Stade Region as an administrative unit of Prussia (1866-1945/1947)

The Stade Region (brown), consisting of 14 counties within the Prussian Province of Hanover (beige), in 1905.

After the Prussian annexation of the Kingdom of Hanover in 1866, the kingdom was transformed into the Prussian Province of Hanover. The adaptation to other Prussian administrative structures took only place in 1885, when the high-bailiwick was redesigned according to Prussian law as the Governorate of Stade (Template:Lang-de). The Hanoverian subsections of a high-bailiwick (Template:Lang-de), were redeployed into 14 bigger Prussian style counties (Template:Lang-de). At the time of its redeployment the high-bailiwick's population amounted to 300,000.[9] In 1905 the population amounted to 403,302 with an area of 6,786 square kilometres (2,620 sq mi), which made up a density of 59 persons per square kilometre. The Governorate of Stade weathered the following wars and constitutional changes.

Sealing stamp of the Stade Region, Weimar period

Bremerhaven was several times enlarged at the expense of the Governorate of Stade´s territory. But on the latter's territory several suburbs grew and in 1924 were united to form the urban county of Wesermünde. In 1932 by an administrative reform the number of the governorate's 13 rural counties was reduced to a mere seven.[10] In 1932 in the Great Depression the Lutheran Church of the State of Hanover opened a camp for formerly workless singles, employed in public works (roadworks, amelioration) in Sandbostel.

In 1933 the Nazis seized the power in Germany (Machtergreifung). On the Reich's and the level of the states gradually all resistance was decapitated. Anti-Semitic discriminations were imposed onto Jewish Germans and Germans of Jewish descent. In 1932 Franz von Papen's Reich's government had overthrown the last democratic Prussian government under Otto Braun (Prussian Coup). So the Governorate of Stade, being a part of the Free State of Prussia, one of the most stable and democratised German states, came fast under Nazi influence. The governor Hermann Rose [de] resigned under pressure of Gauleiter Otto Telschow. The Nazis' rule enforcement was characterised by installing Nazi-loyal parallel structures, which would interfere with existing public administration and bring it to dictatorial lines. The Governorate of Stade came under ever increasing interference of the Nazi party's regional subsection Gau Eastern Hanover under Gauleiter Otto Telschow, especially after 1935, when the Nazi-party Gaue replaced the functions of the streamlined German states.

The new Nazi Reich's government – "provisionally" ruling Prussia – had direct rule over the Prussian police, with police being an institution of the respective German states. The ordinary police had to guard together with S.A. men, the Prussian Criminal Police Department in charge for the Governorate of Stade was seated in its biggest city Wesermünde. In March/April 1933 the Criminal Police was transformed into the new Wesermünde Department of the State Police [de], directly subordinated to the new Geheime Staatspolizei (GeStapo, secret state police), circumventing all prior existing Prussian administrative structures, to which the former Criminal Police had been subjected and reporting before. At first Wesermünde's Stapo Department persecuted all political enemies of Nazism and later persons involved in all kinds of disobediences, such as strikes, absenteeism, black marketing, circumventions of ordered dues to be delivered, which all became an ever-growing phenomenon with the increasing weariness in the long duration of the war. The Stapo had its special eye on forced labourers in the governorate, abducted from all over German occupied Europe.

In 1939 the Sandbostel camp, meanwhile usurped by the Nazi trade union Reichsarbeitsdienst, was converted into the prisoner-of-war camp Stalag X-B and a camp of internment for civilian enemy aliens. Until 1945 about a million inmates passed through the camp, with about 46,000 perished.

As to territorial changes the Reich's Nazi government decreed by the Greater Hamburg Act (1937) to incorporate the Hamburgian exclave of Cuxhaven into the Governorate of Stade, forming then an urban county. While at the most eastern end of the governorate some municipalities were integrated into the state of Hamburg. Two years later the Reich's Nazi government decreed to incorporate some municipalities of the counties of Osterholz and Verden into the city of Bremen and in return to disentangle Bremerhaven from the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen and to incorporate it into Wesermünde. But that redeployment didn't last long.

The Governorate of Stade as part of the British and U.S. Zone of Occupation (1945–1949)

From 1945 on the occupational U.S. forces in defeated Germany used the harbours of Bremen and Wesermünde as their Port of Embarkation. Being actually located in the British Zone of Occupation the Control Commission for Germany - British Element and the Office of Military Government for Germany, U.S. (OMGUS) agreed in 1947 to constitute the cities of Bremen and Wesermünde as a German state named Free Hanseatic City of Bremen, becoming at that occasion an exclave of the American Zone of Occupation within the British zone. Radio AFN (American Forces Network), based in rechristened Bremerhaven, became popular for its transmissions of jazz and rock music.

After this territorial toing and froing the Governorate of Stade belonged to Lower Saxony, the state newly founded in 1946 by the Control Commission for Germany – British Element (Cf. Ordinance No. 46), even before in 1947 the Allies officially dissolved the Free State of Prussia.

The Governorate of Stade as an administrative unit of the state of Lower Saxony (1946–1978)

The Governorate of Stade (in brown), consisting of 5 counties (Template:Lang-de, plural) within the German state of Lower Saxony (in beige), in 1977.

From 1973 to 1977 the number of Lower Saxon counties has been reduced by uniting counties. The urban county of Cuxhaven and the neighboured counties of the Land of Hadeln and Wesermünde were united to form the new County of Cuxhaven. The county of Bremervörde was integrated into the County of Rotenburg upon Wümme. Thus the governorate consisted only of a mere five counties: Cuxhaven, Osterholz, Rotenburg (Wümme), Stade and Verden. In 1977 the governorate's population amounted to almost 700,000.

The Governorate of Stade continued to exist until 31 January 1978. The next day it was incorporated into the neighbouring Governorate of Lunenburg (Template:Lang-de), with the complete dissolution of all Lower Saxon governorates following in 2004.

Today no single administrative entity covers the territory of the former Bremen-Verden. Today's efforts and activities in the field of culture in the region are covered by the Landschaftsverband der ehemaligen Herzogtümer Bremen und Verden [de] (Engl. about: landscape union of the former duchies of Bremen and Verden, or short Landschaftsverband Stade).

List of High-Bailiffs and Governors

Bearing the title: High-Bailiff (Template:Lang-de)

Bearing the title: Governor (Template:Lang-de)

Vital Statistics 1890–1980

County Population
1890
Population
1900
Population
1910
Population
1925
Population
1933
Population
1939
Population
1969[11]
Population
1980
Blumenthal [de] 22,547 30,353 39,535 43,104
Osterholz 28,232 29,205 31,284 32,545 80,216 41,529[12] 80,600 93,700
Achim [de] 20,981 24,051 28,555 33,717
Verden 25,125 26,392 27,638 28,177 63,441 51,643[12] 88,900 110,300
Zeven [de] 14,060 15,318 15,825 20,569
Bremervörde [de] 17,040 18,159 19,858 22,305 44,021 45,455 72,700
Rotenburg upon Wümme 19,642 21,128 25,425 29,171 30,947 33,821 57,100 138,400
Geestemünde, rural county [de] 35,398 41,906 51,002 23,355[13]
Lehe, rural county [de] 32,165 43,040 58,685 23,736[14]
Wesermünde, rural county [de] 47,695 49,632 78,900
Wesermünde, urban county 72,065[15] 77,461 86,043[16] ceded to the state of Bremen in 1947
Neuhaus upon Oste [de] 29,111 29,684 29,383 27,020
Hadeln [de] 16,652 15,959 16,662 16,921
Land of Hadeln [de] 42,281 43,827 64,200
Cuxhaven, urban county 22,094[17] 45,200
Cuxhaven, rural county 191,700
Kehdingen [de] 21,014 19,993 19,741 19,146
Jork [de] (Altes Land) 20,899 21,028 21,050 21,064
Stade 35,359 38,804 42,712 44,652 88,253 88,548 139,400 163,400
Stade Region 338,225 375,020 427,355 457,547 474,315 462,592 627,000 697,500

Source[18]

Notable people from the Stade Region as from 1823 on

A list of interesting people whose birth, death, residence or activity took place in the Stade Region.

  • Ludwig Alpers [de] (1866–1959), teacher, politician, after Prussian annexation of the Kingdom of Hanover in 1866 member of the separatist German-Hanoverian Party
  • Anita Augspurg (born in Verden upon Aller; 1857–1943), suffragette, women's rights fighter
  • Johann(es) Gerhard Behrens [de] (1889–1979), Lutheran pastor in Stade, in 1935 beaten up by a Nazi squad, scolding him 'serf of the Jews' (Judenknecht), astronomer (name-giver of the asteroid 1651 Behrens), member of the anti-Nazi Protestant Confessing Church
  • Cato Bontjes van Beek (1920–1943), grew up in Fischerhude, ceramist, resistant fighter against Nazism, beheaded in Berlin-Plötzensee
  • Heinrich Böse [de] (1783–1867), Bremian, Danish and West Indian sugar manufacturer, politician, anti-Napoléonic freedom fighter
  • Hans Heinrich Brockmann [de], (born in Altkloster [nds], 1903–1988), chemist
  • Karl Rudolf Brommy (born Bromme; 1804–1864), counter-admiral, navy-warrior in the independence wars of Brazil, Chile and Greece, founding organiser of the Greek Navy, supreme commander of the German Confederation's Reich's Navy in Bremerhaven (1849–1853)
  • Adolf Butenandt (born and grown up in Lehe, since 1947 part of Bremerhaven; 1903–1995), biochemist, Nobel prize-winner of chemistry in 1939
  • Louise Cooper (1849–1931), missionary, founder and leader of blind mission in Hildesheim
  • Carl Diercke (1842–1913), geographer, cartographer, pedagogue, school councilor, founder of Diercke atlas series
  • Wilhelm Heinrich Evers (1884–1960), aeronautical engineer and aircraft designer in the U.S. and Germany
  • Jürgen Christian Findorff [de] (1720–1792), carpenter, Moor Commissioner in charge of draining, reclaiming and settling moor lands in the Stade Region
  • Carl Friedrich Gauß (1777–1855), mathematician and astronomer, carried out triangulation in the Stade Region
  • August Karl von Goeben (1815–1880), general, sometimes disputed as Hanoverian treator, who served as commander in the Prussian army while the Prussian conquest of the Kingdom of Hanover in 1866
  • Diederich Hahn [de] (1859–1918), farmer, anti-Semitic and agricultural politician, member of Prussian House of Commons (1893–1912), member of the Reichstag (1903–1918)
  • Baron Carl Iwan Bodo von Hodenberg [de] (1826–1907), Hanoverian diplomat, minister for education, cultural and religious affairs of the Kingdom of Hanover (1865–1866), after Prussian annexation in 1866 leader of the separatist German-Hanoverian Party
  • Bernhard Hoetger (1874–1949), sculpturist, architect, among others active in Worpswede
  • August Heinrich Hoffmann von Fallersleben (1798–1874), poet (e.g., of today's German anthem), Germanist, as exilee illegally in the Stade Region
  • Hinrich Wilhelm Kopf (born in Neuenkirchen in Hadeln; 1893–1961), lawyer, businessman, last county commissioner (Landrat) of the county of Hadeln (1928–1932), politician, last Upper President of the Prussian Province of Hanover (1945–1947), co-founder and first Prime Minister of the state of Lower Saxony (1947–1955, 1959–1961), Vice Prime Minister (1957–1959)
  • Fritz Mackensen (1866–1953), painter, graphicker, sculpturist, novelist
  • Otto Modersohn (1865–1943), painter
  • Hermann Molkenbuhr [de] (1851–1927), politician, member of the Reichstag (1890–1924), speaker of the SPD faction the Reichstag (1911–1918)
  • Joachim Ringelnatz (1883–1934), marine in Cuxhaven, participating in September 1918 in the rebellion of 1918–1919, clerk, novelist, cabarettist
  • Hermann Rose [de] (1879–1943), lawyer, member of Prussian House of Commons (1921–1932), Regierungspräsident of Stade (1922–1933, forced to resign by Gauleiter Otto Telschow), author
  • Walther von Seydlitz-Kurzbach (1888–1976), general, president of the anti-Hitlerist Federation of German Officers in Soviet prisonship-of-war (then integrated into the National Committee for a Free Germany), returned from Soviet prisonship-of-war in 1955 to Verden upon Aller
  • Otto Telschow (1876–1945), member of the Reichstag (1930–1945), Nazi Gauleiter of East Hanover district of the Nazi party (1928–1945)
  • Anton Christian Wedekind [de] (1763–1845), administrator, jurist, historian
  • Rudolf Welskopf [de] (1902–1979), carpenter, resistance fighter against Nazism[19]

Notes

  1. ^ The reorganisation's legal basis was the Ordinance of High-Bailiwicks (Landdrostei-Ordnung).
  2. ^ For a map of the High-Bailiwick of Stade see here Landdrostei Stade
  3. ^ The Estates of Hadeln were unique in central Europe for not being organised by social status, but by regional division of the Hadeln territory into three subsections of equal status. Cf. Gerhard Köbler, Historisches Lexikon der deutschen Länder: Die deutschen Territorien vom Mittelalter bis zur Gegenwart, 7th ed., Munich: Beck, 2007, p. 244.
  4. ^ The regional consistories were in Aurich, a simultaneously Lutheran and Calvinist consistory dominated by Lutherans (for East Frisia) and the Lutheran consistories in Hanover (for the former Electorate of Brunswick and Lunenburg proper), in Ilfeld (for the Province of Hohnstein, a Hanoveran exclave in the Eastern Harz mountains), in Osnabrück (for the former Prince-Bishopric of Osnabrück), in Otterndorf (for the Land of Hadeln) as well as in Stade (for Bremen-Verden proper without Hadeln). Until 1903 all regional consistories, except of the one in Aurich were dissolved, their functions taken over by the state consistory.
  5. ^ Blumenthal (since 1939 part of the city of Bremen), Lehe (since 1924 a part of Wesermünde, today part of the Bremian exclave of Bremerhaven) and Holßel [nds] (since 2015 a part of Geestland), Neuenkirchen upon Weser [de] (since 1974 a part of Schwanewede), Rekum as well as Ringstedt (all Stade Region).
  6. ^ Later labour migration (first in an intra-Central European, and then in a post-WW II trans-Alpine scope) enabled to found more parishes. Among the refugees of World War II and the post-war expellees (1945–1948), settled in the Stade Region, a considerable number was Catholic.
  7. ^ About a third of the Jews emigrated in the 19th century to the United States of America. Cf. Jürgen Bohmbach, Sie lebten mit uns: Juden im Landkreis Stade vom 18. bis zum 20. Jahrhundert, Stade: city of Stade, 2001, (Veröffentlichungen aus dem Stadtarchiv Stade; vol. 21), p. 4.
  8. ^ Albert Marx, Geschichte der Juden in Niedersachsen, Hanover: Fackelträger-Verlag, 1995, p. 144 and Jürgen Bohmbach, Sie lebten mit uns: Juden im Landkreis Stade vom 18. bis zum 20. Jahrhundert, Stade: city of Stade, 2001, (Veröffentlichungen aus dem Stadtarchiv Stade; vol. 21), p. 4.
  9. ^ HGIS Multimedia Staatsarchiv: Landdrostei Stade
  10. ^ The county of Blumenthal [de] was incorporated into the county of Osterholz, Achim [de] into Verden, Zeven [de] into Bremervörde [de], Neuhaus [de] into Hadeln, Altes Land and Kehdingen [de] into Stade and the rural counties of Geestemünde [de] and Lehe [de] were united to form the rural county of Wesermünde [de].
  11. ^ The population increase as compared to 1939 derives from the settlement of people, who – in the course of World War II – were bombed-out especially in Bremen and Hamburg or who fled from Eastern parts of Germany by the war's end in 1945. In the time after the war (1945–1949) Germans from German territories annexed by Poland and USSR as well as Czechoslovaks, Hungarians, Poles and Yugoslavs, denaturalised and expelled by their nations because of German or alleged German ethnicity, were also settled in the Stade Region. The population increase between 1939 and 1946 alone amounted to 56.6%. Stephanie Abke, '"Diese rassisch Verfolgten glauben, sie könnten machen was sie wollen": Denunziation und Anzeige zwischen Flüchtlingen und Einheimischen im Regierungsbezirk Stade 1945–1949', In: Historical Social Research, vol. 26 (No. 2/3 = No. 96), pp. 102–118, 2001, here p. 109.
  12. ^ a b The population decrease is due to the fact, that in 1939 some municipalities, being part of Bremen's suburbia, were ceded to the city state of Bremen.
  13. ^ The population decrease is due to the fact, that in 1913 the city of Geestemünde [de], name-giving capital of the homonymous county, was disentangled and upgraded to an urban county of its own, which in 1924 was united with the neighboured urban county of Lehe under the new name of Wesermünde.
  14. ^ The population decrease is due to the fact, that in 1913 the city of Lehe [de], name-giving capital of the homonymous county, was disentangled and upgraded to an urban county of its own, which in 1924 was united with the neighboured urban county of Geestemünde under the new name of Wesermünde.
  15. ^ See the two notes before.
  16. ^ Before the incorporation of the Bremian city of Bremerhaven. In 1947 the American and British military governments decided to incorporate Wesermünde into the state of the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen. Wesermünde was then renamed into Bremerhaven.
  17. ^ Until 1937 the city of Cuxhaven had been an exclave of the State of Hamburg and was then ceded to the State of Prussia and transformed into an urban county within the Stade Region.
  18. ^ M. Rademacher Geschichte on Demand Daten der Kreise der Provinz Hannover
  19. ^ Lebensläufe zwischen Elbe und Weser: Ein biographisches Lexikon, Brage Bei der Wieden and Jan Lokers (eds.) on behalf of the Landschaftsverband der ehemaligen Herzogtümer Bremen und Verden, Stade: Landschaftsverband der ehemaligen Herzogtümer Bremen und Verden, 2002, (Schriftenreihe des Landschaftsverbandes der ehemaligen Herzogtümer Bremen und Verden; vol. 16)

References

  • Dannenberg, Hans-Eckhard and Heinz-Joachim Schulze (eds.) (1995–2008). Geschichte des Landes zwischen Elbe und Weser (3 vol., vol. 1 Vor- und Frühgeschichte (1995), vol. 2 Mittelalter (einschl. Kunstgeschichte) (1995), vol. 3 Neuzeit (2008), (Schriftenreihe des Landschaftsverbandes der ehem. Herzogtümer Bremen und Verden; vol. 7) ed.). Stade: Landschaftsverband der ehem. Herzogtümer Bremen und Verden. ISBN (vol. 1) ISBN 978-3-9801919-7-5, (vol. 2) ISBN 978-3-9801919-8-2, (vol. 3) ISBN 978-3-9801919-9-9. {{cite book}}: |first= has generic name (help)