The Hungarian counterparts were the Comitatus (German: Gespanschaften or Komitate, formerly spelled Comitate; Hungarian: Vármegyék), which had existed for much longer and were dominated by the nobility.
The Amtsbezirke [de] ('office districts'), or more precisely the Bezirksämter ('district offices'), created in the reforms which followed the Revolutions of 1848 (specifically those of 1849[2] and 1853[3]), largely took over the responsibilities of the Kreisämter. These were proposed as early as 1849 by Interior Minister Alexander von Bach as part of a necessary reform to the administrative apparatus to deal with the increase in the number citizens interacting with the offices following the final abolition of serfdom in 1848. The Kreis administrations were thereby subdivided into subordinate Amtsbezirke. Some smaller Kreise were abolished or merged. The Kreis system was also expanded to the Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar[3][4] (formerly part of southern Hungary) and the Grand Principality of Transylvania[5] in the course of these reforms.
The statutory cities were also excluded from Kreis administration, much like they are excluded from the modern districts (Bezirke).
Abolition
With the creation of the political districts (Bezirke) in 1868, which go back to the December Constitution of 1867,[6] the Kreis divisions were abolished and replaced with much more finely divided Bezirk divisions; however, the newly created district commissions (Bezirkshauptmannschaften) were strongly influenced by the former Kreis administrations.
Organisation
With the Kreisämtern there was for the first time a level of administration between the manors and free cities and the Imperial Court [de] (in the crown lands the gubernatorial administration). At the head of every Kreis was a Kreishauptmann [de] (roughly 'circle/district captain/head'; see Hauptmann), whose officials were entrusted with clearly defined tasks, which significantly disempowered the estates in financial matters. The Kreisämter were the lowest level of political administration. This brought together direct oversight of taxation, as well as the conscription and recruitment system, the supervision of schools and poorhouses, the supervision of the individual municipalities and the protection of the peasants before the manor lords. The captains were obliged to travel to the Kreise at least once per year or allow the inspectors to visit. For this the captains received a state salary, but were not allowed to hold any other lordly or stately offices and were bound to their instructions.
The Kreisämtern were subordinate to the Gubernia [de] (the administrative bodies of the crown lands, roughly governorates).
Legacy
Despite numerous reforms, the borders of the Kreise are still roughly visible in the 39 Austrian electoral districts. Also the divisions (Sprengel) of the district courts (Kreisgerichte; now regional courts – Landesgerichte) are essentially equivalent to those of the former Kreisämter. The 35 NUTS 3 regions are loosely aligned with the former Kreis divisions.
List of Kreise
The following is a list of the Kreise and statutory cities in the non-Hungarian lands of the Austrian Empire (Cisleithania in later terminology) c. 1854;[7] pre-1848 Kreise[1] are also listed where applicable.
Lands of the Bohemian Crown
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The Kreise in Bohemia were abolished in 1862 (enacted 23 October, effective 31 October).[9]
1849–54
In the 1849 administrative reforms which followed the Revolutions of 1848 and introduced the first political districts (Bezirkshaupmannschaften), the Kreise of Bohemia were reduced to seven:[10]
Until 1848 part of the joint Gubernium of Moravia and Silesia (Gouvernment Mähren und Schlesien or Mährischschlesisches Landesgubernium; Moravskoslezské gubernium [cs; pl]).[1]
Kreis Brünn or Brünner Kreis (Czech: Brněnský kraj); in the late 18th century included the area around Saar/Žďár, Neustadtl/Nové Město and Bystrzitz/Bystřice, which later became part of the Iglauer Kreis.
Kreis Iglau or Iglauer Kreis (Czech: Jihlavský kraj; Jihlava)
Kreis Neutitschein (Czech: Novojičínský kraj; Nový Jičín); until 1848: Kreis Prerau or Prerauer Kreis (Czech: Přerovský kraj; Přerov); Prerau/Přerov itself became part of Kreis Olmütz in 1854.[11]
Kreis Olmütz or Olmützer Kreis (Czech: Olomoucký kraj; Olomouc)
City of Olmütz (Stadtbezirk subordinate to Kreis Olmütz)[11]
Kreis Hradisch or Hradischer Kreis (Czech: Hradišťský kraj; Uherské Hradiště)
Kreis Znaim or Znaimer Kreis (Czech: Znojemský kraj; Znojmo)
The traditional Moravian Kreise were abolished in 1849 (see below) but were reconstituted (with some border changes and with Nový Jičín/Neutitschein replacing Přerov/Prerau) in 1854 and divided into Bezirke (76 in total, excluding the cities of Brünn and Olmütz).[11] Changes included:
the assignment of the upper (southern) Bečva valley (Bezirk Wsetin/Vsetín) to Kreis Neutitschein[11] (formerly part of the Hradischer Kreis)
the assignment of Bezirk Prerau (Přerov) to Kreis Olmütz[11] (formerly the nominal seat of the Prerauer Kreis).
the assignment of Bezirk Göding (Hodonín) and Bezirk Kremsier (Kroměříž) to Kreis Hradisch[11] (formerly of the Brünner Kreis and the Prerauer Kreis respectively; Kwassitz/Kvasice, which was part of the new Bezirk Kremsier had already been part of the Hradischer Kreis pre-1848)
the assignment of the Bezirke Gewitsch, (Mährisch) Triebau and Zwittau (Jevíčko, Moravská Třebová and Svitavy), as well as part of the new Bezirk Boskowitz around Knichnitz (Knínice) to Kreis Brünn[11] (formerly of the Olmützer Kreis).
the assignment of Bezirk Nikolsburg (Mikulov) to Kreis Znaim[11] (formerly of the Brünner Kreis).
several settlements along the borders of Kreis Iglau, Kreis Brünn and Kreis Znaim, as well as several exclaves, changed hands, including Groß Bitesch (Velká Bíteš; from Znaim to Iglau) and Eibenschütz (Ivančice; from Znaim to Brünn).[11]
The Moravian Kreise were dissolved in 1860 and their Bezirke (and Bezirksämter) subordinated directly to the Statthalterei in Brünn/Brno.[12]
1849–54
In the 1849 administrative reforms which followed the Revolutions of 1848 and introduced the first political districts (Bezirkshaupmannschaften), the Kreise of Moravia were reduced to two:[13]
Brünner Kreis (Brněnský kraj) – 12 political districts:
Formally the Duchy of Upper and Lower Silesia (Herzogtum Ober- und Niederschlesien). Until 1848 part of the joint Gubernium of Moravia and Silesia (Gouvernment Mähren und Schlesien or Mährischschlesisches Landesgubernium).[1] Although administratively separate Silesia was judicially subordinate to Brünn (Moravia) thereafter.[14] Austrian Silesia had no Kreise after the 1849[13] or 1853 reforms,[3] but the separate Kreisgerichte remained for judicial matters.[14]
Kreis Troppau or Troppauer Kreis (Czech: Opavský kraj)
Kreis Teschen [de; cs; pl] or Teschner Kreis (Czech: Těšínský kraj; Polish: Cyrkuł cieszyński; seat at Těšín, German: Teschen, Polish: Cieszyn; similar to Cieszyn Silesia but with an exclave on the far side of the Oder)
From 1860 Silesia was administered once again from the Moravian Statthalterei in Brünn/Brno but remained a formally separate crown land.[12]
Corresponds with modern Upper Austria. The Kreise in Austria above the Enns were from 1749 subdivided into district commissions and regional courts.[18]
from 1850: the city of Linz[19] (previously part of the Mühlkreis;[1]: 317 part of the Hausruckkreis until the early 19th century)
Mühlkreis; seat at Linz[1]: 317 [20] (from the early 19th century). Comprised the areas north of the Danube and, from the early 19th century, the immediate area around Linz. Initially divided into Upper [de] and Lower sections [de], corresponding to the pre-1779 Mühlviertel (upper, western) and Machlandviertel [de]/Schwarzviertel (lower, eastern).
from 1867: the city of Steyr[21] (traditionally part of the Traunkreis[1]: 317 )
Traunkreis; seat at Steyer.[1]: 317 [20] Traditionally bounded by the Traun river. In the early 19th century expanded to include part of the western Traun basin, roughly up to the boundaries of the modern Gmunden District (excluding St. Wolfgang im Salzkammergut). Upon the re-establishment of the Kreise in 1853 roughly the western third of the previous Traunkreis, including Ischl, Gmunden and Hallstatt (roughly corresponding to the modern Gmunden District and some parts of the Wels-Land District south of the Traun), became part of the Hausruckkreis.[20]
Formerly the Salzburgkreis or Salzachkreis of Austria above the Enns, the Duchy of Salzburg became a crown land in its own right (with a single Kreis) on 26 June 1849[22] (formally constituted 30 December[23]). The Duchy of Salzburg had no Kreise after 1853.[3]
The Duchy of Styria (German: Herzogtum Steiermark, contemporary spelling Herzogthum Steyermark), although administered as a single gubernium/Gouvernement, was divided into upper and lower parts – Obersteiermark (Obere-Steyermark) and Untersteiermark (Untere-Steyermark).[1]: 318 The upper part, which comprised the Judenburger and Brucker Kreise,[1]: 318 corresponds with the modern Austrian use of the term Upper Styria, i.e. the modern districts of Bruck-Mürzzuschlag, Leoben, Liezen, Murau and Murtal in the north-west of the modern Austrian state of Styria; from 1848 it was synonymous with the now-expanded Brucker Kreis. The lower part, which comprised the Grazer, Marburger and Cillier Kreise,[1]: 318 included all of Slovene Styria and the modern Austrian Central Styria [de].
Kreis Marburg [de] or Marburger Kreis (Marburg an der Drau, Slovene: Maribor); in 1848 northwestern parts merged into Kreis Graz; Kreisgericht ('circle/district court') in 1854 in Cilli.[25]
until 1848: Kreis Cilli [de] or Cillier Kreis (Celje; merged into Kreis Marburg 1848; also spelled Zilli(er))
The Kingdom of Illyria was a crown land formed as a successor to the Napoleonic Illyrian Provinces[note 2] after the 1815 Congress of Vienna returned its territory to Austria. It was divided into two Gubernia: Gubernium Laibach[note 3] and Gubernium Triest.[note 4] It was disbanded in 1849 and replaced with the separate Duchy of Carinthia, Duchy of Carniola and Austrian Littoral crown lands. The Kreise listed below are grouped by these post-1849 crown lands; internally within the Kingdom they were grouped as such,[1] and the duchies and subdivisions of the Littoral correspond with Habsburg states which existed before the 1809 Treaty of Schönbrunn by which they were annexed by Napoleon.
Until 1809 the area (excluding those parts of Croatia and the Military Frontier which were Illyrian until the 1820s) was organised as part of Inner Austria, an informal region which comprised the Duchies of Styria, Carinthia and Carniola, the County of Gorizia and Gradisca, the March/Margraviate of Istria and the Free City of Trieste. During this period the Habsburg March of Istria only included a small interior part of the peninsula centred on Mitterburg (Pazin, Pisino) and was administered from Carniola; the north-eastern mostly inland part of the later Istrian Kreis, as well as part of the eastern coast of the peninsula and a northern coastal exclave around Duino-Aurisina were part of the Carniolan Adelsberger Kreis. The Republic of Venice held most of the peninsula itself, including all of the western coast and around half of the eastern coast, as well as the islands in the Kvarner Gulf including Krk and Cres; the Venetian territories were annexed by Austria (as the Venetian Province) in the 1797 Treaty of Campo Formio, but lost again to the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy in the 1805 Peace of Pressburg. The mercury-mining area around Idrija had a special status apart from the Carniolan Kreise. The Princely County of Gorizia and Gradisca included several exclaves in Venetian territory and within the Carniolan Adelsberger Kreis; by the 1805 Peace of Pressburg and 1807 Treaty of Fontainebleau, the parts of the county west of the Soča/Isonzo were ceded to the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy.
Duchy of Carinthia
The Duchy of Carinthia (Herzogt(h)um Kärnten) was 1815–49 part of Gubernium Laibach of the Kingdom of Illyria; separate crown land thereafter. Carinthia had no Kreise after 1853.[3]
Formally the Princely County of Gorizia and Gradisca, the Margraviate of Istria and the City of Triest with its Territory (die gefürstete Grafschaft Görz und Gradiska, die Markgrafschaft Istrien und die Stadt Triest mit ihr Gebiet). 1815–49 Gubernium Triest of the Kingdom of Illyria; separate crown land thereafter.
Judicially the Gorizian districts of Comen (Komen) and Sessana (Sežana) and the Istrian districts of Capo d'Istria (Koper, Kopar), Pirano (Piran), Castel-Nuovo (Podgrad) and Volosca (Volosko) were subordinate to the Landesgericht in Trieste (c. 1853).[26]
Other
In addition to the Kreise of Carinthia, Carniola and the Littoral listed above, until the 1820s the Kingdom of Illyria also included the former Croatie civile province of the Napoleonic Illyrian Provinces. This territory was transferred to the re-established Kingdom of Croatia, except for Fiume (Rijeka), which returned to its previous status as a Corpus separatum under Hungary. This was organised into:
Kreis Fiume/Fiumaner Kreis (Fiume/Rijeka, which also included the eastern parts of the Istrian peninsula which would later become part of Kreis Istrien
Like the Littoral, these belonged to Gubernium Triest. During this time the remainder of Istria and the southern part of what was later Görz, including all of its coastline (much of which had been part of the Carniolan Adelsberger Kreis until 1809), was organised as the Triester Kreis, which was distinct from the city of Triest.
The district of Glurns, formerly belonging to Kreis Oberinntal
until 1861: Kreis Bregenz, Bregenzer Kreis, Kreis Vorarlberg or Vorarlberger Kreis; detached as a separate crown land – Land Vorarlberg – in the 1861 February Patent.[29]
Kreis Trient. After 1849 it was broadly coextensive with modern Trentino.[note 6]
until 1849: Kreis Rovereto (or Roveredo); merged into Kreis Trient 1849.[28] A Kreisgericht of Roveredo covering the former territory of Kreis Roveredo (the Bezirke of Ala, Arco, Condino, Mori, Nogaredo, Riva, Roveredo, Stenico and Tione) existed within Kreis Trient as of 1854.[27]
Formally the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria with the Grand Duchy of Kraków (after 1846) and the Duchies of Auschwitz and Zator (Königreich Galizien und Lodomerien mit dem Großherzogt(h)um Krakau und den Herzogt(h)ümern Auschwitz und Zator). The Grand Duchy of Kraków, which was annexed in 1846 (previously the Free City of Cracow) corresponded with the Krakauer Kreis; Auschwitz and Zator had no administrative status, with both forming part of the Wadowicer Kreis, although nominally they were part of the German Confederation while the rest was not.
The Kreise in Galicia and Lodomeria were abolished in 1865 (enacted 23 September, effective 31 October).[30]
Kreis Bukowina, Bukowiner Kreis, Czernowitzer Kreis or Kreis Czernowitz; military district before 1786; separate crown land – the Duchy of Bukovina – from 1849;[32] the Duchy had no Kreise from 1853;[3] reincorporated (as Kreis Czernowitz) into Galicia and Lodomeria in 1860;[31] re-separated in the 1861 February Patent.[29]
City of Czernowitz (Ukrainian: Чернівці́, romanized: ChernivtsiRomanian: Cernăuți); part of Bukovina when a separate crown land.
Kreis Stanislau [uk] or Kreis Stanisławów, Stanislauer Kreis, Stanisławower Kreis (Stanisławów, contemporary Ukrainian: Станісла́вівStanislaviv; modern Івано-ФранківськIvano-Frankivsk)
Kreis Złoczów [uk] or Złozówer Kreis (Złoczów; German: Solotschiw, Ukrainian: Золочів, romanized: Zolochiv)
Kreis Żółkiew [uk] or Zołkiewer Kreis (Żółkiew; German: Schowkwa, Ukrainian: Жовква, romanized: Zhovkva)
until 1809: Kreis Zaleszczyki or Zalestschyker Kreis. Bulk of the Kreis (the part bounded by the Dniester and Strypa rivers) ceded to Russia in the 1809 Treaty of Schönbrunn – Tarnopolsky Krai; remainder becomes part of Kreis Kolomea. Restored to Austria by the Congress of Vienna 1815 as Kreis Czortków.
In 1850 Galicia and Lodomeria was divided into three Regierungsbezirke ('government districts'), named after their capitals: Lemberg, Krakau and Stanislau. The Kreise were abolished and replaced with political districts (Bezirkshauptmannschaften).[33]
Verwaltungsbebiete (1854–60)
The 1850 changes to the administrative structure of the empire were reversed in Bach's January 1853 reforms, although the precise divisions remained to be determined.[3] In April 1854 Galicia and Lodomeria was divided into two Verwaltungsgebiete (lit.'administrative regions/territories') and its Kreise formally restored:[34]
Verwaltungsgebiet Lemberg, containing the 12 eastern Kreise:
Lemberg
Zołkiew
Przemyśl
Sanok
Złoczow
Brzezan
Stryi
Sambor
Tarnopol
Czortkow
Kolomea
Stanislau
Verwaltungsgebiet Krakau, containing the 7 western Kreise:
Krakau
Wadowice
Sandec
Jasło
Rzeszow
Tarnow
Bochnia
The cities of Lemberg and Krakau remained directly subordinate to the crown land.[34] Bukovina was not part of Galicia and Lodomeria at this time.[3]
In 1860 Verwaltungsgebiet Krakau and Bukovina were dissolved and re-subordinated to Lemberg.[31]
West or New Galicia (1795–1803/09)
Maps of the Kreise of West Galicia c. 1803
West or New Galicia (Westgalizien/Neugalizien) comprised the Habsburgs' gains in the Third Partition of Poland in 1795. The first-partition Myslenicer, Sandecer and Bochnier Kreise were also attached to it. It was incorporated into Galicia and Lodomeria 1803–09 as a separate gubernium. Other than the first-partition Kreise it was ceded to the Duchy of Warsaw in 1809 by the Treaty of Schönbrunn (Congress Poland and Free City of Cracow after 1815).
Kreis Gross-Becskerek(modern German: Großbetschkerek; Hungarian: Nagybecskerek, Romanian: Becicherecul, Serbian: Велики БечкерекVeliki Bečkerek; modern Serbian: ЗрењанинZrenjanin). Corresponded with Torontál County.
^The Illyrian provinces contained some territory – eastern Tyrol around Lienz – which was not part of the Kingdom of Illyria. Likewise, eastern/"Lower" Carinthia was part of the Kingdom of Illyria but never part of the Illyrian Provinces, having remained Austrian in 1809.
^Gubernium Laibach was also known as Upper Illyria (Ober-Illyrien)[1]
^Gubernium Triest was also known as Lower Illyria (Unter-Illyrien) or as the Littoral (Küstenland),[1] a name also used for the post-1849 crown land.
^ abcdIn contemporary German the word Tal, meaning valley, was spelled Thal, as were the names of Kreise which included it, i.e.: Oberinnthal or Ober-Innthal; Unterinnthal, Unter-Innthal or Unter-Inn und Wippthal; Pusterthal.
^ abIn addition to the territory of modern Trentino, post-1849 Kreis Trient also included what is now:
The northernmost part of the Chiese valley was part of the Austrian Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia (specifically the Lombard province of Bergamo) at this time.
Kreis Trient gained Truden/Trodena (previously part of the Bozener Kreis, today part of South Tyrol) in the 1854 reforms.[27]
^Rumpler, Helmut (1997), Österreichische Geschichte 1804–1914. Eine Chance für Mitteleuropa. Bürgerliche Emanzipation und Staatsverfall in der Habsburgermonarchie. [Austrian History 1804–1914. A chance for Central Europe. Citizen Emancipation and State Decline in the Habsburg Monarchy] (in German), Vienna: Ueberreuther, pp. 476–477, ISBN978-3-8000-3979-1
^Benedikt Pillwein, ed. (1830), "3: Der Hausruckkreis.", Geschichte, Geographie und Statistik des Erzherzogthums Oesterreich ob der Enns und des Herzogthums Salzburg (1 ed.), Linz, p. 167 With a register, which provides both the topographic and genealogical lexicon, and the Kreis map. Geographical-historical-statistical detail after Districts-Commissioner. (Google eBook); (2nd edition 1843 Google Book)
^Gesetz vom 18. Jänner 1867, LGBl. 8/1850: "Landesgesetz betreffend das Gemeinde-Statut für die Stadtgemeinde Steyr". Landes-Gesetz- und Regierungsblatt für das Erzherzogthum Oesterreich ob der Enns (in German). 1867-01-18. Retrieved 2023-11-09 – via ÖNB-ALEX - Historische Rechts- und Gesetztexte Online.
^ abPatent vom 28. Februar 1861, RGBl. 20/1861: "February Patent". Reichs-Gesetz-Blatt für das Kaiserthum Österreich. 1861-02-28. Retrieved 2023-07-07 – via ÖNB-ALEX - Historische Rechts- und Gesetztexte Online.
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Term in baseball sabermetrics Rod Carew had a .408 BABIP in 1977, one of the best single-season BABIPs since 1945.[1] In baseball statistics, batting average on balls in play (abbreviated BABIP) is a measurement of how often batted balls result in hits, excluding home runs.[2] It can be expressed as, when you hit the ball and it’s not a home run, what’s your batting average?[1] The statistic is typically used to evaluate individual batters and individual pitchers. ...
Racial and ethnic minority in Puerto Rico Ethnic group Afro-Puerto Ricans Afropuertorriqueños Afroboricuas · Afroborinqueños Afroborincanos · Afropuertorros (Spanish) Afro–Puerto Rican women in Bomba dance wearTotal population228,711-1,000,000[1][2](Includes Afro-Puerto Ricans living outside of Puerto Rico)Regions with significant populationsPuerto Rico (more heavily concentrated in coastal Northeast regions of the island)LanguagesSpanishBozalEnglishLucumíHabl...
هذه المقالة تحتاج للمزيد من الوصلات للمقالات الأخرى للمساعدة في ترابط مقالات الموسوعة. فضلًا ساعد في تحسين هذه المقالة بإضافة وصلات إلى المقالات المتعلقة بها الموجودة في النص الحالي. (أغسطس 2023) جامعة إلينوي في شيكاغو الشعار (بالإنجليزية: Teach, research, serve, care.) معلومات التأ�...
American college basketball season This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: 2013–14 Bryant Bulldogs men's basketball team – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (February 2024) (Learn how and when to remove this message) 2013–14 Bryant Bulldogs men's basketballConferenceNortheast Conference...
2006 Brands Hatch Superbike World Championship roundRound detailsRound 8 of 12 rounds in the 2006 Superbike World Championship.andRound 8 of 12 rounds in the 2006 Supersport World Championship.← Previous roundCzech RepublicNext round →NetherlandsDate6 August, 2006LocationBrands HatchCoursePermanent racing facility3.703 km (2.301 mi)Superbike World Championship Pole position Troy Bayliss 1:25.449 Fastest lap race 1 Fastest lap race 2 James Toseland Troy Bay...
Elections to the Baseball Hall of Fame 1959 Baseball Hall of Fame ballotingNew inductees1via Veterans Committee1Total inductees84Induction dateJuly 20, 1959← 19581960 → 1959 inductee Zack Wheat Elections to the Baseball Hall of Fame for 1959 followed a system established after the 1956 election. The baseball writers were voting on recent players only in even-number years (until 1967). The Veterans Committee met in closed sessions to consider executives, managers, umpires...
Mihika VarmaLahir3 Januari 1985 (umur 39)Mumbai, IndiaKebangsaanIndianPekerjaanaktrismodelTahun aktif2004–2016Karya terkenalYeh Hai MohabbateinSuami/istriAnand KapaiAnak1KerabatMishkat Varma (saudara laki-laki) Mihika Varma (lahir 3 Januari 1985) adalah seorang aktris televisi India dan mantan model yang dikenal karena perannya sebagai Mihika Khanna di Yeh Hai Mohabbatein. Dia memenangkan gelar Miss India International pada tahun 2004 dan mewakili India dalam kompetisi Miss Inter...