Kreis Meseritz


Kreis Meseritz was a district in Prussia, first in the southern administrative Region of Posen within the Prussian Province of Posen, then within the Province of the Frontier March of Posen-West Prussia and at last as part of the administrative Region of Frankfurt within the Province of Brandenburg. Its former territory presently lies in the eastern part of the Lubusz Voivodeship, a region of Poland, roughly resembling the extent of the present county Powiat międzyrzecki.

History

When the area later forming the territory of the Kreis Meseritz was first annexed to Prussia from 1793 to 1807 it formed the Meseritzer Kreis within the Province of South Prussia, then governed by the Departement der Kriegs- und Domänen-Kammer zu Posen.
After being part of the Duchy of Warsaw the area returned to Prussia as a result of the Congress of Vienna. The Kreis Meseritz came into existence on 1 January 1818 after separation from Kreis Birnbaum. In 1837 it measured 21.78 Prussian square miles. It consisted mostly of the rural territories around the town of Meseritz. It became part of the North German Confederation in 1867 and of the German Empire when it was founded in 1871. In 1910, Germans made up 77% of the district's population, with Poles constituting the remaining 23%.
After World War I, the administration had to be reorganised because the Region of Posen was split. Thus the eastern part of the county was handed over to Poland in 1920, according to the Versailles treaty. In 1920, the remaining county, measuring, joined the newly founded Regierungsbezirk Schneidemühl, which became part of the Province of the Frontier March of Posen-West Prussia, established in 1922. Together with Kreis Bomst and Kreis Schwerin the Kreis Meseritz formed a western territorial exclave of Posen-West Prussia. When that province was dissolved in 1938 the bulk of its territory, anyway neighbouring Pomerania, was merged into that province, whereas its western exclave became part of the Province of Brandenburg. In 1945, the Landkreis Meseritz was occupied by the Red Army and integrated into Poland.

Civil registry offices

In 1905, these civil registry offices served the following towns in Kreis Meseritz: