Leipzig is divided into ten boroughs or districts (Stadtbezirke). The boroughs are further divided into localities (Ortsteile). The administrative division of Leipzig has been formed over the centuries since the town charter from 1156/70. From 1889 onwards, many neighbouring municipalities were incorporated into the city of Leipzig to form a city of localities (Stadtteil).[1][2] From 1889 to 1925, the district of Leipzig lost 32 municipalities by incorporation into the city of Leipzig.[3] There are about a hundred of localities, depending on how you count them. As the city gradually incorporated new localities, its area increased.
After German reunification, the Leipzig authorities carried out a territorial reform in 1992, dividing the city into ten boroughs (Stadtbezirk) comprising 63 localities (Ortsteil). Until that, there were seven boroughs.[4][5][6] These new localities do not always correspond to the previous localities. In order to achieve administrative and demographic standardization, some localities were divided into several localities, others were grouped into a single locality.
Boroughs and localities
editReferences
edit- ^ Statistisches Jahrbuch 1992 [Statistical Year Book 1992] (PDF) (in German). Stadt Leipzig. 1992. p. 28.
- ^ Ringel, Sebastian (2015). Leipzig! One Thousand Years of History. Leipzig: Edition Leipzig in the Seemann Henschel GmbH Co. KG. p. 153. ISBN 978-3-361-00710-9.
- ^ Czok, Karl. Städte und Gemeinden im Landkreis Leipzig [Towns and municipalities in the district of Leipzig] (in German). Landratsamt Leipzig (District of Leipzig). p. 2., no ISBN, no year (ca. 1996, before the incorporations of Althen, Baalsdorf, Böhlitz-Ehrenberg, Burghausen, Engelsdorf, Holzhausen, Kleinpösna, Knautnaundorf, Lausen, Liebertwolkwitz, Lindenthal, Lützschena, Miltitz, Mölkau, Plaußig, Rückmarsdorf, Seehausen, Stahmeln and Wiederitzsch into the city of Leipzig).
- ^ Statistisches Jahrbuch 1992 [Statistical Year Book 1992] (PDF) (in German). Stadt Leipzig. 1992. p. 15.
- ^ "Kommunale Gliederung". leipzig-lexikon.de (in German). Retrieved 2018-01-06.
- ^ Fischer, Josef (2005). "Lage und Entwicklung. Stadtteilgliederung und Bevölkerungsdichte" [Location and development. Borough division and population density]. Der Leipzig Atlas (in German). Herrmann-Josef Emons Verlag. pp. 16–17. ISBN 3-89705-269-5.
External links
edit- "Kommunale Gebietsgliederung" [Municipal territorial division]. leipzig.de (in German). Retrieved 2024-09-14.
- "Ortsteile". leipzig-lexikon.de (in German). Retrieved 2018-01-06.