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German Democratic Party | A Wisdom Archive on German Democratic Party |  | German Democratic Party A selection of articles related to German Democratic Party |  |
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German Democratic Party
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ARTICLES RELATED TO German Democratic Party | |
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 |  |  | German Democratic Party: Encyclopedia II - List of political parties in Germany - The partiesThe following parties currently participate in the German parliament, the Bundestag, sorted by the number of seats (refer to the following links for details):
Christian Democratic Union (CDU) / Christian Social Union (CSU) – conservative, right of center: 27.8 %, 179 seats and 7.4 %, 46 seats
Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) – social democrat, left of center: 34.3 %, 222 seats
Free Democratic Party (FDP) – free-market liberal: 9.8 %, 69 seats
The Left Party (formerly the Party of Democratic Socialism) – socialist: 8.7 %, 54 seat ...
See also:List of political parties in Germany, List of political parties in Germany - The parties, List of political parties in Germany - Minor Parties, List of political parties in Germany - More than 0.1 % of the vote at the last federal elections, List of political parties in Germany - Others, List of political parties in Germany - Historical parties, List of political parties in Germany - Parties existing before World War II, List of political parties in Germany - Defunct parties in Western Germany, List of political parties in Germany - Parties in the GDR Read more here: » List of political parties in Germany: Encyclopedia II - List of political parties in Germany - The parties |
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 |  |  | German Democratic Party: Encyclopedia II - Albert Einstein - Biography
Albert Einstein - Youth and college.
Einstein was born on March 14, 1879 at Ulm in Baden-Württemberg, Germany, about 100 km east of Stuttgart. His parents were Hermann Einstein, a featherbed salesman who later ran an electrochemical works, and Pauline, whose maiden name was Koch. They were married in Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt. The family was Jewish (non-observant); Albert attended a Catholic elementary school and, at the insist ...
See also:Albert Einstein, Albert Einstein - Biography, Albert Einstein - Youth and college, Albert Einstein - Work and doctorate, Albert Einstein - Middle years, Albert Einstein - Final years, Albert Einstein - Personality, Albert Einstein - Religious views, Albert Einstein - Political views, Albert Einstein - Popularity and cultural impact, Albert Einstein - Entertainment, Albert Einstein - Licensing, Albert Einstein - Honors, Albert Einstein - Notes, Albert Einstein - Works by Albert Einstein Read more here: » Albert Einstein: Encyclopedia II - Albert Einstein - Biography |
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 |  |  | German Democratic Party: Encyclopedia II - Albert Einstein - Biography
Albert Einstein - Youth and college.
Einstein was born on March 14, 1879 at Ulm in Baden-Württemberg, Germany, about 100 km east of Stuttgart. His parents were Hermann Einstein, a featherbed salesman who later ran an electrochemical works, and Pauline, whose maiden name was Koch. They were married in Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt. The family was Jewish (non-observant); Albert attended a Catholic elementary school and, at the insist ...
See also:Albert Einstein, Albert Einstein - Biography, Albert Einstein - Youth and college, Albert Einstein - Work and doctorate, Albert Einstein - Middle years, Albert Einstein - Final years, Albert Einstein - Personality, Albert Einstein - Religious views, Albert Einstein - Political views, Albert Einstein - Nationality: German Swiss or American?, Albert Einstein - Popularity and cultural impact, Albert Einstein - Entertainment, Albert Einstein - Licensing, Albert Einstein - Honors, Albert Einstein - Works by Albert Einstein, Albert Einstein - Notes Read more here: » Albert Einstein: Encyclopedia II - Albert Einstein - Biography |
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 |  |  | German Democratic Party: Encyclopedia II - Liberal Democratic Party of Germany - FoundationThe history of the party dates back to June 1946, when a group led by Waldemar Koch took the initative in refounding German Democratic Party. At first there were some speculation of forming a united liberal party with the Christian Democrats, but the idea was abandoned soon and in July, 5 1946, the Liberal Democratic Party of Germany was officially founded.
It was first of all aimed at uniting Weimar Republic-era members of the German Democratic Party, German People's Party and German National People's Party. Unlike the CDU, th ...
See also:Liberal Democratic Party of Germany, Liberal Democratic Party of Germany - Foundation, Liberal Democratic Party of Germany - Unification attempts, Liberal Democratic Party of Germany - A Blockpartei, Liberal Democratic Party of Germany - Chairmen of the LDPD, Liberal Democratic Party of Germany - External link Read more here: » Liberal Democratic Party of Germany: Encyclopedia II - Liberal Democratic Party of Germany - Foundation |
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 |  |  | German Democratic Party: Encyclopedia II - Max Weber - AchievementsMax Weber was – along with Karl Marx, Vilfredo Pareto and Émile Durkheim – one of the founders of modern sociology. Whereas Pareto and Durkheim, following Comte, worked in the positivist tradition, Weber created and worked – like Werner Sombart, his friend and then the most famous representative of German sociology – in the antipositivist, idealist and hermeneutic tradition. Those works started the antipositivistic revolution in social sciences, which stressed the difference between the social sciences and natural sciences, especial ...
See also:Max Weber, Max Weber - Life and career, Max Weber - Weber and German politics, Max Weber - Achievements, Max Weber - Sociology of religion, Max Weber - Sociology of politics and government, Max Weber - Economics, Max Weber - Works, Max Weber - Attacks from conservatives Read more here: » Max Weber: Encyclopedia II - Max Weber - Achievements |
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 |  |  | German Democratic Party: Encyclopedia II - Walther Rathenau - Political careerRathenau was a leading proponent of a policy of assimilation for German Jews: he argued that Jews should oppose both Zionism and socialism, but should instead integrate themselves into mainstream German society. This, he said, would eventually lead to the disappearance of anti-Semitism. This did not save him from becoming a hated figure, caricatured as an archetypal Jewish capitalist, by Germany's militant anti-Semitic movement.
During World War I Rathenau held senior posts in the Raw Materials Department of the War Ministry, as well ...
See also:Walther Rathenau, Walther Rathenau - Family, Walther Rathenau - Political career, Walther Rathenau - Assassination, Walther Rathenau - Works Read more here: » Walther Rathenau: Encyclopedia II - Walther Rathenau - Political career |
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 |  |  | German Democratic Party: Encyclopedia II - Contributions to liberal theory - Niccolò MachiavelliNiccolò Machiavelli (Florence, 1469-1527), best known for his Il Principe was the founder of realist political philosophy, advocated republican government, citizen armies, division of power, protection of personal property, and restraint of government expenditure as being necessary to the liberties of a republic. He wrote extensively on the need for individual initiative - virtu - as an essential characteristic of stable government. He argued that liberty was the central good which government should protect, and that "g ...
See also:Contributions to liberal theory, Contributions to liberal theory - Niccolò Machiavelli, Contributions to liberal theory - Desiderius Erasmus, Contributions to liberal theory - Hugo Grotius, Contributions to liberal theory - Thomas Hobbes, Contributions to liberal theory - Baruch Spinoza, Contributions to liberal theory - John Locke, Contributions to liberal theory - John Trenchard, Contributions to liberal theory - Charles de Montesquieu, Contributions to liberal theory - Thomas Gordon, Contributions to liberal theory - François Quesnay, Contributions to liberal theory - Voltaire, Contributions to liberal theory - Benjamin Franklin, Contributions to liberal theory - David Hume, Contributions to liberal theory - Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Contributions to liberal theory - Denis Diderot, Contributions to liberal theory - Jean le Rond d'Alembert, Contributions to liberal theory - Samuel Adams, Contributions to liberal theory - Richard Price, Contributions to liberal theory - Anders Chydenius, Contributions to liberal theory - Adam Smith, Contributions to liberal theory - William Blackstone, Contributions to liberal theory - Immanuel Kant, Contributions to liberal theory - Anne Robert Jacques Turgot, Contributions to liberal theory - Edmund Burke, Contributions to liberal theory - Joseph Priestley, Contributions to liberal theory - August Ludwig von Schlözer, Contributions to liberal theory - Patrick Henry, Contributions to liberal theory - Thomas Paine, Contributions to liberal theory - Thomas Jefferson, Contributions to liberal theory - Marquis de Condorcet, Contributions to liberal theory - Jeremy Bentham, Contributions to liberal theory - Emmanuel Sieyès, Contributions to liberal theory - James Madison, Contributions to liberal theory - Alexander Hamilton, Contributions to liberal theory - Anne Louise Germaine de Staël, Contributions to liberal theory - Benjamin Constant, Contributions to liberal theory - Jean-Baptiste Say, Contributions to liberal theory - Wilhelm von Humboldt, Contributions to liberal theory - David Ricardo, Contributions to liberal theory - James Mill, Contributions to liberal theory - Friedrich List, Contributions to liberal theory - Johan Rudolf Thorbecke, Contributions to liberal theory - Frédéric Bastiat, Contributions to liberal theory - Harriet Martineau, Contributions to liberal theory - Ralph Waldo Emerson, Contributions to liberal theory - Alexis de Tocqueville, Contributions to liberal theory - William Lloyd Garrison, Contributions to liberal theory - John Stuart Mill, Contributions to liberal theory - Abraham Lincoln, Contributions to liberal theory - Juan Bautista Alberdi, Contributions to liberal theory - Henry David Thoreau, Contributions to liberal theory - Jakob Burkhardt, Contributions to liberal theory - Herbert Spencer, Contributions to liberal theory - Thomas Hill Green, Contributions to liberal theory - Carl Menger, Contributions to liberal theory - William Graham Sumner, Contributions to liberal theory - Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., Contributions to liberal theory - Lujo Brentano, Contributions to liberal theory - Tomás Masaryk, Contributions to liberal theory - Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk, Contributions to liberal theory - Louis Brandeis, Contributions to liberal theory - Thorstein Veblen, Contributions to liberal theory - John Dewey, Contributions to liberal theory - Friedrich Naumann, Contributions to liberal theory - Max Weber, Contributions to liberal theory - Leonard Hobhouse, Contributions to liberal theory - Benedetto Croce, Contributions to liberal theory - Walther Rathenau, Contributions to liberal theory - William Beveridge, Contributions to liberal theory - Ludwig von Mises, Contributions to liberal theory - John Maynard Keynes, Contributions to liberal theory - José Ortega y Gasset, Contributions to liberal theory - Salvador de Madariaga, Contributions to liberal theory - Upton Sinclair, Contributions to liberal theory - Will Durant, Contributions to liberal theory - Adolf Berle, Contributions to liberal theory - Wilhelm Röpke, Contributions to liberal theory - Bertil Ohlin, Contributions to liberal theory - Friedrich Hayek, Contributions to liberal theory - Karl Popper, Contributions to liberal theory - Alan Paton, Contributions to liberal theory - John Hicks, Contributions to liberal theory - Raymond Aron, Contributions to liberal theory - Simone de Beauvoir, Contributions to liberal theory - John Kenneth Galbraith, Contributions to liberal theory - Isaiah Berlin, Contributions to liberal theory - Milton Friedman, Contributions to liberal theory - Arthur Schlesinger Jr., Contributions to liberal theory - James Buchanan, Contributions to liberal theory - John Rawls, Contributions to liberal theory - Murray Newton Rothbard, Contributions to liberal theory - Gore Vidal, Contributions to liberal theory - Noam Chomsky, Contributions to liberal theory - Ralf Dahrendorf, Contributions to liberal theory - Karl-Hermann Flach, Contributions to liberal theory - Joseph Raz, Contributions to liberal theory - Ronald Dworkin, Contributions to liberal theory - Richard Rorty, Contributions to liberal theory - Amartya Sen, Contributions to liberal theory - Robert Nozick, Contributions to liberal theory - Hernando de Soto, Contributions to liberal theory - Bruce Ackerman, Contributions to liberal theory - Joseph Stiglitz, Contributions to liberal theory - Martha Nussbaum, Contributions to liberal theory - Francis Fukuyama, Contributions to liberal theory - Dirk Verhofstadt, Contributions to liberal theory - Will Kymlicka Read more here: » Contributions to liberal theory: Encyclopedia II - Contributions to liberal theory - Niccolò Machiavelli |
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 |  |  | German Democratic Party: Encyclopedia II - Walther Rathenau - Political careerRathenau was a leading proponent of a policy of assimilation for German Jews: he argued that Jews should oppose both Zionism and socialism, but should instead integrate themselves into mainstream German society. This, he said, would eventually lead to the disappearance of anti-Semitism. This did not save him from becoming a hated figure, caricatured as a archetypal Jewish capitalist, by Germany's militant anti-Semitic movement.
During World War I Rathenau held senior posts in the Raw Materials Department of the War Ministry, as well a ...
See also:Walther Rathenau, Walther Rathenau - Family, Walther Rathenau - Political career, Walther Rathenau - Assassination, Walther Rathenau - Works Read more here: » Walther Rathenau: Encyclopedia II - Walther Rathenau - Political career |
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 |  |  | German Democratic Party: Encyclopedia II - Liberalism in Germany - Timeline
Liberalism in Germany - From German Progress Party to German State Party.
1861: Liberals united in the German Progress Party (Deutsche Fortschrittspartei)
1867: The moderate faction seceded as the ⇒ National Liberal Party
1868: A radical South German faction seceded as the ⇒ Democratic People's Party
1884: The party merged with the ⇒ Liberal Union into the German Freeminded Party (Deutsche Freisinnige Partei)
1893: The party split in the ...
See also:Liberalism in Germany, Liberalism in Germany - Introduction, Liberalism in Germany - Timeline, Liberalism in Germany - From German Progress Party to German State Party, Liberalism in Germany - German People's Party 1868, Liberalism in Germany - National Liberal Party / German People's Party 1918, Liberalism in Germany - Liberal Union, Liberalism in Germany - Freeminded Union, Liberalism in Germany - National Social Union, Liberalism in Germany - Democratic Union, Liberalism in Germany - From Liberal Democratic Party of Germany to Alliance of Free Democrats GDR, Liberalism in Germany - Free Democratic Party, Liberalism in Germany - Liberal Democrats, Liberalism in Germany - Liberal leaders, Liberalism in Germany - Liberal thinkers Read more here: » Liberalism in Germany: Encyclopedia II - Liberalism in Germany - Timeline |
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 |  |  | German Democratic Party: Encyclopedia II - Gustav Stresemann - Second Cabinet October - November 1923Changes
November 3, 1923 - The Social Democratic Ministers, Sollmann, Radbruch, and Schmidt, resign. Sollmann is succeeded as Interior Minister by Karl Jarres (DVP). The others are not replaced before the ministry falls
Gustav Stresemann - Footnotes.
^ Stresemann in an article for the Hamburger Fremdenblatt, 10 April 1922, quoted after Martin Broszat, 200 Jahre deutsche Polenpolitik, F ...
See also:Gustav Stresemann, Gustav Stresemann - First Cabinet August - October 1923, Gustav Stresemann - Second Cabinet October - November 1923, Gustav Stresemann - Footnotes, Gustav Stresemann - Books, Gustav Stresemann - External link Read more here: » Gustav Stresemann: Encyclopedia II - Gustav Stresemann - Second Cabinet October - November 1923 |
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 |  |  | German Democratic Party: Encyclopedia II - Wilhelm Solf - Early lifeWilhelm Solf was born into a wealthy and liberal family in Berlin. He attended university in Anklam (Pommern) and in Mannheim, where he graduated in 1881. Afterwards he took up the study of Oriental languages, in particular Sanskrit in Berlin, Göttingen and Halle, earning his doctorate in philology in the winter of 1885; under the influence of one of his teachers, the well-known Indologist Richard Pischel, ...
See also:Wilhelm Solf, Wilhelm Solf - Early life, Wilhelm Solf - Early Diplomatic Career, Wilhelm Solf - Governor of Samoa, Wilhelm Solf - Later Career Read more here: » Wilhelm Solf: Encyclopedia II - Wilhelm Solf - Early life |
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 |  |  | German Democratic Party: Encyclopedia II - Albert Einstein - Popularity and cultural impactEinstein's popularity has led to widespread use of Einstein in advertising and merchandising, including the registration of "Albert Einstein" as a trademark.
Albert Einstein - Entertainment.
Albert Einstein has become the subject of a number of novels, films and plays, including Jean-Claude Carrier's 2005 French novel, Einstein S'il Vous Plait (Please Mr Einstein), Nicolas Roeg's film Insignificance, Fred Schepisi's film I.Q., Alan Lightman's novel Einstein's Dreams, and Steve Martin's ...
See also:Albert Einstein, Albert Einstein - Biography, Albert Einstein - Youth and college, Albert Einstein - Work and doctorate, Albert Einstein - Middle years, Albert Einstein - Final years, Albert Einstein - Personality, Albert Einstein - Religious views, Albert Einstein - Political views, Albert Einstein - Nationality: German Swiss or American?, Albert Einstein - Popularity and cultural impact, Albert Einstein - Entertainment, Albert Einstein - Licensing, Albert Einstein - Honors, Albert Einstein - Works by Albert Einstein, Albert Einstein - Notes Read more here: » Albert Einstein: Encyclopedia II - Albert Einstein - Popularity and cultural impact |
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More material related to German Democratic Party can be found here:
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