Arrondissement of Strasbourg-Campagne
The arrondissement of Strasbourg-Campagne is a former arrondissement of France in the Bas-Rhin department in the Alsace region. It was disbanded at the 2015 arrondissements reform, and its communes were assigned to the arrondissements of Saverne, Strasbourg, Haguenau-Wissembourg and Molsheim.[1] It had 104 communes, and its population was 284,815 (2012).[2]
Strasbourg-Campagne | |
---|---|
Former arrondissement | |
Location within the former region Alsace | |
Country | France |
Region | Grand Est |
Department | Bas-Rhin |
No. of communes | 104 |
Disbanded | 2015 |
Prefecture | Strasbourg |
Area | |
• Total | 684 km2 (264 sq mi) |
Population (2012) | |
• Total | 284,815 |
• Density | 416/km2 (1,080/sq mi) |
Composition
The 104 communes of the arrondissement of Strasbourg-Campagne, and their INSEE codes, were:[2]
- Achenheim (67001)
- Alteckendorf (67005)
- Bernolsheim (67033)
- Berstett (67034)
- Bietlenheim (67038)
- Bilwisheim (67039)
- Bischheim (67043)
- Blaesheim (67049)
- Bossendorf (67058)
- Breuschwickersheim (67065)
- Brumath (67067)
- Dingsheim (67097)
- Donnenheim (67100)
- Dossenheim-Kochersberg (67102)
- Duntzenheim (67107)
- Duppigheim (67108)
- Durningen (67109)
- Eckbolsheim (67118)
- Eckwersheim (67119)
- Entzheim (67124)
- Eschau (67131)
- Ettendorf (67135)
- Fegersheim (67137)
- Fessenheim-le-Bas (67138)
- Friedolsheim (67145)
- Furdenheim (67150)
- Gambsheim (67151)
- Geispolsheim (67152)
- Geiswiller (67153)
- Geudertheim (67156)
- Gingsheim (67158)
- Gougenheim (67163)
- Grassendorf (67166)
- Gries (67169)
- Griesheim-sur-Souffel (67173)
- Handschuheim (67181)
- Hangenbieten (67182)
- Hochfelden (67202)
- Hoenheim (67204)
- Hœrdt (67205)
- Hohatzenheim (67207)
- Hohfrankenheim (67209)
- Holtzheim (67212)
- Hurtigheim (67214)
- Illkirch-Graffenstaden (67218)
- Ingenheim (67220)
- Issenhausen (67225)
- Ittenheim (67226)
- Kienheim (67236)
- Kilstett (67237)
- Kolbsheim (67247)
- Krautwiller (67249)
- Kriegsheim (67250)
- Kurtzenhouse (67252)
- Kuttolsheim (67253)
- La Wantzenau (67519)
- Lampertheim (67256)
- Lingolsheim (67267)
- Lipsheim (67268)
- Lixhausen (67270)
- Melsheim (67287)
- Minversheim (67293)
- Mittelhausbergen (67296)
- Mittelhausen (67297)
- Mittelschaeffolsheim (67298)
- Mommenheim (67301)
- Mundolsheim (67309)
- Mutzenhouse (67312)
- Neugartheim-Ittlenheim (67228)
- Niederhausbergen (67326)
- Oberhausbergen (67343)
- Oberschaeffolsheim (67350)
- Olwisheim (67361)
- Osthoffen (67363)
- Ostwald (67365)
- Pfettisheim (67374)
- Pfulgriesheim (67375)
- Plobsheim (67378)
- Quatzenheim (67382)
- Reichstett (67389)
- Ringeldorf (67402)
- Ringendorf (67403)
- Rohr (67406)
- Rottelsheim (67417)
- Saessolsheim (67423)
- Schaffhouse-sur-Zorn (67439)
- Scherlenheim (67444)
- Schiltigheim (67447)
- Schnersheim (67452)
- Schwindratzheim (67460)
- Souffelweyersheim (67471)
- Stutzheim-Offenheim (67485)
- Truchtersheim (67495)
- Vendenheim (67506)
- Waltenheim-sur-Zorn (67516)
- Weyersheim (67529)
- Wickersheim-Wilshausen (67530)
- Willgottheim (67532)
- Wilwisheim (67534)
- Wingersheim (67539)
- Wintzenheim-Kochersberg (67542)
- Wiwersheim (67548)
- Wolfisheim (67551)
- Zœbersdorf (67560)
History
The arrondissement of Strasbourg-Campagne was created in 1919.[3] It was disbanded in 2015.[1] The cantons of the arrondissement of Strasbourg-Campagne were, as of January 2015:[2]
- Bischheim
- Brumath
- Geispolsheim
- Hochfelden
- Illkirch-Graffenstaden
- Mundolsheim
- Schiltigheim
- Truchtersheim
gollark: I prefer declarative service files, systemd integrates logging (so that `systemctl status` can show the last few lines of output) and generally has a nicer UI for monitoring and managing things (also, it seems that restarting services in OpenRC causes their output to just be printed to your terminal?), and actually that's basically it.
gollark: As for specific issues, I'm typing.
gollark: OpenRC on Alpine, Runit on Void.
gollark: I've used both and I don't really like the user experience.
gollark: I think you could reasonably make a nicer service manager which just reads INI files, manages processes, communicates with some logging backend, and has an API for firing events/managing services. But nobody seems to have done this.
References
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