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Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg

A Wisdom Archive on Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg

Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg

A selection of articles related to Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg

More material related to Friedrich Wilhelm I Of Brandenburg can be found here:
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Friedrich Wilhelm I Of Br...
Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg

ARTICLES RELATED TO Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg

Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg: Encyclopedia - 1688

1688 - Births. January 18 - Lionel Cranfield Sackville, 1st Duke of Dorset, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland (d. 1765) January 29 - Emanuel Swedenborg Swedish scientist, philosopher, and theologian (d. 1772) February 2 - Queen Ulrike Eleonora of Sweden (d. 1741) February 4 - Pierre de Marivaux, French playwright (d. 1763) April 4 - Joseph-Nicolas Delisle, French astronomer (d. 1768) April 15 - Johann Friedrich Fasch, German composer (d. 1758) May 22 - Alexande ...

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Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg: Encyclopedia - 1620

1620 - Events. September 6 - English emigrants on the Mayflower depart from Plymouth, England for the future New England and arrive at the end of the year. The Mayflower Compact is signed on November 11. November 8 - The Battle of White Mountain, the first battle in the Thirty Years' War, takes place near Prague, ending in a decisive Catholic victory in only two hours. Francis Bacon publishes the Novum Organum Two officers of the British East India Company attempt to claim ...

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Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg: Encyclopedia II - Govert Flinck - Life

Born at Cleves, he was apprenticed by his father to a silk mercer, but having secretly acquired a passion for drawing, was sent to Leeuwarden, where he boarded in the house of Lambert Jacobszon, a Mennonite, better known as an itinerant preacher than as a painter. Here Flinck was joined by Jacob Backer, and the companionship of a youth determined like himself to be an artist only confirmed his passion for painting. Amongst the neighbours of Jacobszon at Leuwarden were the sons and relations of Rombert Ulenburg, whose daughter Saske ma ...

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Govert Flinck, Govert Flinck - Life, Govert Flinck - Works

Read more here: » Govert Flinck: Encyclopedia II - Govert Flinck - Life

Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - Slavic East Germany

Starting in the 6th century Slavic peoples from the east settled in the vacated area between the Elbe and Oder rivers. About 720 two Slavic tribes settled in the Berlin region. The Heveller (Slavic: Havolane) settled on the river Havel with their central settlement in Brennabor, which later has become the town of Brandenburg. Close to the river Spree in today's borough of Berlin Köpenick the Sprewanen (Slavic: Sprevjane) settled. About 750 the Havolane founded Spandow (today's Spandau) on the river Havel. This seems to be the close ...

See also:

History of Berlin, History of Berlin - Origin, History of Berlin - Slavic East Germany, History of Berlin - The Germans return, History of Berlin - Berlin and Cölln, History of Berlin - Mark Brandenburg, History of Berlin - Kingdom of Prussia, History of Berlin - German Empire, History of Berlin - Weimar Republic, History of Berlin - Third Reich, History of Berlin - Nazi plans for postwar Berlin, History of Berlin - The war comes to Berlin, History of Berlin - The divided city, History of Berlin - Blockade Airlift, History of Berlin - The June 17th Uprising, History of Berlin - Berlin Wall, History of Berlin - Student Movement, History of Berlin - Reunited, History of Berlin - Historical population

Read more here: » History of Berlin: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - Slavic East Germany

Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg: Encyclopedia II - Otto von Guericke - Biography

Guericke was born in Magdeburg, Germany. Otto von Guericke - Air pressure and the vacuum. He invented the piston air pump to produce a vacuum and investigated the properties of the vacuum in many experiments. Guericke demonstrated the force of air pressure with dramatic experiments, e.g. in 1663 at the court of Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg. Guericke had joined two copper hemispheres of 51 cm diameter (Magdeburg hemispheres) and pumped the air out of the enclosure. Then he harnessed a team of eight ho ...

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Otto von Guericke, Otto von Guericke - Biography, Otto von Guericke - Air pressure and the vacuum, Otto von Guericke - Other investigations, Otto von Guericke - Death and afterwards, Otto von Guericke - Literature

Read more here: » Otto von Guericke: Encyclopedia II - Otto von Guericke - Biography

Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg: Encyclopedia II - Frederick - People

Frederick is also a common male forename. It has been the name of several monarchs, often shared by different members from the same dynasty. Frederick is Friedrich in German, Fredrik in Swedish and Norwegian, Frederik in Danish, Dutch and Finnish, Fryderyk in Polish, Federico in Italian and Spanish, and Frédéric in French. Frederick - Monarchs. Frederick I of Austria (Babenberg), Duke of Austria from 1195-1198 Frederick II of Austria (Babengerg), the Quarrelsome, (1219-1246), last D ...

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Frederick, Frederick - Meaning, Frederick - People, Frederick - Monarchs, Frederick - Other, Frederick - Places, Frederick - Fictional Characters

Read more here: » Frederick: Encyclopedia II - Frederick - People

Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg: Encyclopedia II - Kingdom of Prussia - Invasion of Austria

In 1740, Frederick II (more commonly known as Frederick the Great) came to the throne and invaded Silesia, a province of Austria which was in turmoil after the death of the Emperor Charles VI. The invasion was the first shot of the War of the Austrian Succession (Silesia was to have passed to the rulers of Brandenburg on the extinction of its Piast dynasty according to a bilateral arrangement of 1537, subsequently vetoed by the Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand I). After rapidly occupying Silesia, Frederick offered to protect the new Austrian Arc ...

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Kingdom of Prussia, Kingdom of Prussia - Invasion of Austria, Kingdom of Prussia - Defence Against Europe's Assault, Kingdom of Prussia - Expansion to Poland

Read more here: » Kingdom of Prussia: Encyclopedia II - Kingdom of Prussia - Invasion of Austria

Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - The divided city

By the end of the Second World War, up to 33% of Berlin had been destroyed by concerted Allied air raids and street fighting. The so called "Stunde Null" marked a new beginning for the city. Greater Berlin was divided into four sectors by the Allies under the London Protocol of 1944, one each for:- the United States, consisting of the Boroughs of Neukölln, Kreuzberg, Tempelhof, Schöneberg, Steglitz and Zehlendorf;(See : commandants of Berlin American Zone) the United Kingdom, consisting of th ...

See also:

History of Berlin, History of Berlin - Origin, History of Berlin - Slavic East Germany, History of Berlin - The Germans return, History of Berlin - Berlin and Cölln, History of Berlin - Mark Brandenburg, History of Berlin - Kingdom of Prussia, History of Berlin - German Empire, History of Berlin - Weimar Republic, History of Berlin - Third Reich, History of Berlin - Nazi plans for postwar Berlin, History of Berlin - The war comes to Berlin, History of Berlin - The divided city, History of Berlin - Blockade Airlift, History of Berlin - The June 17th Uprising, History of Berlin - Berlin Wall, History of Berlin - Student Movement, History of Berlin - Reunited, History of Berlin - Historical population

Read more here: » History of Berlin: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - The divided city

Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - The war comes to Berlin

Allied bombardment of Berlin started in earnest in 1943, though an earlier raid for propaganda purposes had been conducted in 1940. Raids on German major cities grew in scope and raids of over 1,000 4-engined bombers were not uncommon by 1944. (On March 18, 1945 alone, for example, 1,250 American bombers attacked the city). In April 1945, the German capital was an obvious objective for Allied troops. In a controversial decision, General Eisenhower halted Anglo-American troops on the Elbe River. The whereabouts of Adolf Hitler were in doubt, ...

See also:

History of Berlin, History of Berlin - Origin, History of Berlin - Slavic East Germany, History of Berlin - The Germans return, History of Berlin - Berlin and Cölln, History of Berlin - Mark Brandenburg, History of Berlin - Kingdom of Prussia, History of Berlin - German Empire, History of Berlin - Weimar Republic, History of Berlin - Third Reich, History of Berlin - Nazi plans for postwar Berlin, History of Berlin - The war comes to Berlin, History of Berlin - The divided city, History of Berlin - Blockade Airlift, History of Berlin - The June 17th Uprising, History of Berlin - Berlin Wall, History of Berlin - Student Movement, History of Berlin - Reunited, History of Berlin - Historical population

Read more here: » History of Berlin: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - The war comes to Berlin

Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - Nazi plans for postwar Berlin

In the pre-World War II period Adolf Hitler and his subordinates had great plans to transform Berlin, because he thought that Berlin was one of the ugliest cities in the world, and he hated it. (Berlin was and is a center of left-wing political activity in Germany, and its residents largely opposed the Nazis' rise to power.) Therefore he and his architect Albert Speer made enormous plans for the new Berlin, the so-called Welthauptstadt Germania. On the site of today's Parliamentary offices (Paul-Löbe-Haus) adjacent to the Reic ...

See also:

History of Berlin, History of Berlin - Origin, History of Berlin - Slavic East Germany, History of Berlin - The Germans return, History of Berlin - Berlin and Cölln, History of Berlin - Mark Brandenburg, History of Berlin - Kingdom of Prussia, History of Berlin - German Empire, History of Berlin - Weimar Republic, History of Berlin - Third Reich, History of Berlin - Nazi plans for postwar Berlin, History of Berlin - The war comes to Berlin, History of Berlin - The divided city, History of Berlin - Blockade Airlift, History of Berlin - The June 17th Uprising, History of Berlin - Berlin Wall, History of Berlin - Student Movement, History of Berlin - Reunited, History of Berlin - Historical population

Read more here: » History of Berlin: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - Nazi plans for postwar Berlin

Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - Blockade Airlift

In response to Allied efforts to fuse the American, French, and British sectors of western Germany into a federal state, American refusal to grant the Soviets war reparations from industrial areas of western Germany, and to a currency reform undertaken by the western powers without Soviet approval, the Soviets blocked ground access to West Berlin on 26 June 1948, in what became known as the "Berlin Blockade", in the hope of gaining control of the whole of Berlin. The Western Allies undertook a massive logistical effort to supply the western ...

See also:

History of Berlin, History of Berlin - Origin, History of Berlin - Slavic East Germany, History of Berlin - The Germans return, History of Berlin - Berlin and Cölln, History of Berlin - Mark Brandenburg, History of Berlin - Kingdom of Prussia, History of Berlin - German Empire, History of Berlin - Weimar Republic, History of Berlin - Third Reich, History of Berlin - Nazi plans for postwar Berlin, History of Berlin - The war comes to Berlin, History of Berlin - The divided city, History of Berlin - Blockade Airlift, History of Berlin - The June 17th Uprising, History of Berlin - Berlin Wall, History of Berlin - Student Movement, History of Berlin - Reunited, History of Berlin - Historical population

Read more here: » History of Berlin: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - Blockade Airlift

Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - The June 17th Uprising

See Uprising of 1953 in East Germany. 60 construction workers building the showpiece Stalin-Allee in East Berlin went on strike on 16 June 1953, to demand a reduction in recent work-quota increases. They called for a general strike the next day, 17 June. The general strike and protest marches turned into rioting and spread throughout East Germany. The East German police failed to quell the unrest. It had to be suppressed by Soviet troops, who encountered stiff resistance from angry crowds across East Germany, and responded with live ammunition. At leas ...

See also:

History of Berlin, History of Berlin - Origin, History of Berlin - Slavic East Germany, History of Berlin - The Germans return, History of Berlin - Berlin and Cölln, History of Berlin - Mark Brandenburg, History of Berlin - Kingdom of Prussia, History of Berlin - German Empire, History of Berlin - Weimar Republic, History of Berlin - Third Reich, History of Berlin - Nazi plans for postwar Berlin, History of Berlin - The war comes to Berlin, History of Berlin - The divided city, History of Berlin - Blockade Airlift, History of Berlin - The June 17th Uprising, History of Berlin - Berlin Wall, History of Berlin - Student Movement, History of Berlin - Reunited, History of Berlin - Historical population

Read more here: » History of Berlin: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - The June 17th Uprising

Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - Third Reich

Berlin had never been a center of the National Socialist (Nazi) movement, which had its roots in Bavaria. As the capital of the Weimar Republic, it constituted what the Nazis were fighting. But now it became the capital of the Third Reich. On February 27, 1933 the Reichstag building was set on fire. The fire gave Hitler the opportunity to set aside the constitution: for details, see "Reichstag fire". Around 1933, some 160,000 Jews were living in Berlin: one third of all German Jews, 4% of the Berlin's population. A third of the ...

See also:

History of Berlin, History of Berlin - Origin, History of Berlin - Slavic East Germany, History of Berlin - The Germans return, History of Berlin - Berlin and Cölln, History of Berlin - Mark Brandenburg, History of Berlin - Kingdom of Prussia, History of Berlin - German Empire, History of Berlin - Weimar Republic, History of Berlin - Third Reich, History of Berlin - Nazi plans for postwar Berlin, History of Berlin - The war comes to Berlin, History of Berlin - The divided city, History of Berlin - Blockade Airlift, History of Berlin - The June 17th Uprising, History of Berlin - Berlin Wall, History of Berlin - Student Movement, History of Berlin - Reunited, History of Berlin - Historical population

Read more here: » History of Berlin: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - Third Reich

Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - Student Movement

In the 1960s, West Berlin became one of the centers of the German student movement. West Berlin was especially popular with young German left-wing radicals, as young men living in West Berlin were exempted from the obligatory military service required in West Germany proper: the Kreuzberg district became especially well-known for its high concentration of young radicals. The Wall afforded unique opportunities for social gatherings. The physical wall was set some distance behind the actual sector border, up to several meters behind in ...

See also:

History of Berlin, History of Berlin - Origin, History of Berlin - Slavic East Germany, History of Berlin - The Germans return, History of Berlin - Berlin and Cölln, History of Berlin - Mark Brandenburg, History of Berlin - Kingdom of Prussia, History of Berlin - German Empire, History of Berlin - Weimar Republic, History of Berlin - Third Reich, History of Berlin - Nazi plans for postwar Berlin, History of Berlin - The war comes to Berlin, History of Berlin - The divided city, History of Berlin - Blockade Airlift, History of Berlin - The June 17th Uprising, History of Berlin - Berlin Wall, History of Berlin - Student Movement, History of Berlin - Reunited, History of Berlin - Historical population

Read more here: » History of Berlin: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - Student Movement

Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - Reunited

At the 40th anniversary celebration of East Germany in East Berlin in October 1989, guest of honor Mikhail Gorbachev gave a speech indicating that he would not support hard-line positions by the East German regime, millions of whose citizens were trying to flee to West Germany across the weakening Iron Curtain in Hungary and Czechoslovakia. On 9 November 1989, after a misleading press statement by Politburo member Günter Schabowski, border guards gave in and allowed crowds from East Berlin across the frontier at the Bösebrücke. The ...

See also:

History of Berlin, History of Berlin - Origin, History of Berlin - Slavic East Germany, History of Berlin - The Germans return, History of Berlin - Berlin and Cölln, History of Berlin - Mark Brandenburg, History of Berlin - Kingdom of Prussia, History of Berlin - German Empire, History of Berlin - Weimar Republic, History of Berlin - Third Reich, History of Berlin - Nazi plans for postwar Berlin, History of Berlin - The war comes to Berlin, History of Berlin - The divided city, History of Berlin - Blockade Airlift, History of Berlin - The June 17th Uprising, History of Berlin - Berlin Wall, History of Berlin - Student Movement, History of Berlin - Reunited, History of Berlin - Historical population

Read more here: » History of Berlin: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - Reunited

Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - Berlin Wall

On August 13, 1961 the communist East German government started to build the Berlin Wall, physically separating West Berlin from East Berlin and the rest of East Germany, as a response to massive numbers of East German citizens fleeing into West Berlin as a way to escape to the west. The East German government called the Wall the "anti-fascist protection wall". During the Wall's existence there were around 5,000 successful escapes into West Berlin; 192 people were killed trying to cross and around 200 were seriously injured. The sandy ...

See also:

History of Berlin, History of Berlin - Origin, History of Berlin - Slavic East Germany, History of Berlin - The Germans return, History of Berlin - Berlin and Cölln, History of Berlin - Mark Brandenburg, History of Berlin - Kingdom of Prussia, History of Berlin - German Empire, History of Berlin - Weimar Republic, History of Berlin - Third Reich, History of Berlin - Nazi plans for postwar Berlin, History of Berlin - The war comes to Berlin, History of Berlin - The divided city, History of Berlin - Blockade Airlift, History of Berlin - The June 17th Uprising, History of Berlin - Berlin Wall, History of Berlin - Student Movement, History of Berlin - Reunited, History of Berlin - Historical population

Read more here: » History of Berlin: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - Berlin Wall

Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - Mark Brandenburg

In 1417 Friedrich I of Brandenburg became Kurfürst of Brandenburg. Until 1918 members of the Hohenzollern family ruled Berlin, successively as Margraves of Brandenburg, Kings of Prussia, and Emperors of Germany. Berlin's people were not enthusiastic about this change. In 1447 they revolted unsuccessfully against the monarch, losing many of their political and economic liberties. When Berlin became the residence of the Hohenzollerns, it had to give up its Hanseatic League free city status. Its main economical activity changed from tra ...

See also:

History of Berlin, History of Berlin - Origin, History of Berlin - Slavic East Germany, History of Berlin - The Germans return, History of Berlin - Berlin and Cölln, History of Berlin - Mark Brandenburg, History of Berlin - Kingdom of Prussia, History of Berlin - German Empire, History of Berlin - Weimar Republic, History of Berlin - Third Reich, History of Berlin - Nazi plans for postwar Berlin, History of Berlin - The war comes to Berlin, History of Berlin - The divided city, History of Berlin - Blockade Airlift, History of Berlin - The June 17th Uprising, History of Berlin - Berlin Wall, History of Berlin - Student Movement, History of Berlin - Reunited, History of Berlin - Historical population

Read more here: » History of Berlin: Encyclopedia II - History of Berlin - Mark Brandenburg

Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg: Encyclopedia II - Frederick - Meaning

Frederick Origin: Old German Meaning: peaceful ruler ...

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Frederick, Frederick - Meaning, Frederick - People, Frederick - Monarchs, Frederick - Other, Frederick - Places, Frederick - Fictional Characters

Read more here: » Frederick: Encyclopedia II - Frederick - Meaning

Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg: Encyclopedia II - Kingdom of Prussia - Expansion to Poland

Prussia continued to grow through aggression against its neighbour however. To the east and south, Poland had gradually become weakened. In 1772, Frederick took part in the first of the Partitions of Poland between Russia, Prussia, and Austria. The Kingdom of Prussia thus gained full sovereignty of Warmia and the Polish Royal Prussia, henceforth (until 1824, and again in 1878-1918) the province of West Prussia. After Frederick the Great died (in 1786), his nephew Fredrick William II continued the partitions, gaining a large part of western Poland in 1793 and a large area (including Warsaw) to the south of East ...

See also:

Kingdom of Prussia, Kingdom of Prussia - Invasion of Austria, Kingdom of Prussia - Defence Against Europe's Assault, Kingdom of Prussia - Expansion to Poland

Read more here: » Kingdom of Prussia: Encyclopedia II - Kingdom of Prussia - Expansion to Poland

Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg: Encyclopedia II - Kingdom of Prussia - Defence Against Europe's Assault

This war was a desperate struggle for the Prussians, and the fact that they managed to fight much of Europe to a draw bears witness to Frederick's military skills. Facing Austria, Russia, France and Sweden simultaneously, and with only Hanover (and the non-continental British) as notable allies, Frederick managed to prevent serious invasion until October 1760, when the Russian army briefly occupied Berlin and Königsberg. The situation became progressively grimmer, however, until the death of Russia’s Tsarina Elizabeth. The accession of the prussophile Peter III relieved the pressure o ...

See also:

Kingdom of Prussia, Kingdom of Prussia - Invasion of Austria, Kingdom of Prussia - Defence Against Europe's Assault, Kingdom of Prussia - Expansion to Poland

Read more here: » Kingdom of Prussia: Encyclopedia II - Kingdom of Prussia - Defence Against Europe's Assault

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