From 1875 the territorial authority of the
estates in the twelve administrative
provinces of Prussia were re-organised as
Provinzialverbände. Each of these
self-governing bodies were represented in a
Provinziallandtag assembly, whose members were delegated by the rural and urban
districts within the province. The districts organised through their elected deputies their utilities, such as construction and maintenance of provincial roads, hospitals, schools, public savings banks, waste disposal etc., in self-rule. The provincial administration was initially headed by a
Landesdirektor, who was elected by the assembly for six-year terms (in
Pomerania: five years) and maximally two terms. The holder of the office presided over the
Provinzialausschuss, i.e. provincial government of self-rule, whereas the
Oberpräsident was the
king-appointed representative for the province, busy with implementing and supervising central prerogatives of the Prussian government. In the following decades,
Landeshauptmann gradually replaced the earlier expression
Landesdirektor in all but one of Prussia's provinces. When the kingdom turned into a
free state in 1920, only the
Landtag of
Brandenburg had decided to keep the traditional expression. With the abolition of democratic self-rule on all government levels in the course of the
Gleichschaltung process after the
Nazi takeover in 1933, the office-holders were furloughed or retired and the offices remained vacant.
Klaipėda Region The
Klaipėda Region (), which was dissected from
East Prussia after
World War I and annexed by
Lithuania in the
Klaipėda Revolt of 1923, continued the usage of the terms
Landesdirektor (i.e. government member) and
Landesdirektorium (; i.e. government). The head of government was given the title Landespräsident (state president). == References ==