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Junker

A Wisdom Archive on Junker

Junker

A selection of articles related to Junker

More material related to Junker can be found here:
Index of Articles
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Junker
junker

ARTICLES RELATED TO Junker

Junker: Encyclopedia II - Junker - Modern influences

Being the bulwark of the Hohenzollern Empire, the Junkers controlled the military, leading in political influence and social status, and owning immense estates, especially in the north-eastern half of Germany. Their political influence extended from the German Empire of 1871 to 1918 through the Weimar Republic of 1919–1933. It was said that Prussia ruled Germany, the Junkers ruled Prussia, and through it the Empire itself. They dominated all the higher civil offices and officer corps of the army and navy. Supporting monarchism and m ...

See also:

Junker, Junker - Origins, Junker - Modern influences, Junker - Bodenreform, Junker - Bibliography

Read more here: » Junker: Encyclopedia II - Junker - Modern influences

Junker: Encyclopedia II - Hohenzollern - German Emperors

Another branch of the Hohenzollerns, actually the dynastically senior line, the Hohenzollern-Sigmaringens, were also important landowners in pre-German-Empire Germany, and later were the princes (1866–1881) and kings (1881–1947) of Romania. French opposition to their candidacy for the throne of Spain led to the Franco-Prussian War (1870–1871) and the founding (January 1871) of the German Empire. Kings of Romania (Princes to 1881) Carol I (1881–1914; Prince 1866–1881) Ferdinand (1914–1927) ...

See also:

Hohenzollern, Hohenzollern - Electors of Brandenburg, Hohenzollern - Margraves of Brandenburg-Ansbach, Hohenzollern - Margraves of Brandenburg-Bayreuth, Hohenzollern - Dukes of Prussia, Hohenzollern - Kings of Prussia, Hohenzollern - German Emperors

Read more here: » Hohenzollern: Encyclopedia II - Hohenzollern - German Emperors

Junker: Encyclopedia - Otto von Bismarck

Chancellor of Germany Count Otto von Bismarck, Duke of Lauenburg (April 1, 1815 – July 30, 1898) was one of the most prominent European aristocrats and statesmen of the nineteenth century. As Prime Minister of Prussia from 1862 to 1890, he engineered the unification of the numerous states of Germany. From 1867 on, he additionally was Chancellor of the North German Confederation. The latter was enlarged in 1871 to the German Empire, as the first Chancellor of which Bismarck served ...

Including:

Read more here: » Otto von Bismarck: Encyclopedia - Otto von Bismarck

Junker: Encyclopedia - Weimar Republic

The period of German history from 1919 to 1933 is known as the Weimar Republic (German Weimarer Republik, IPA: [ˈvaɪ̯marər repuˈbliːk]). It is named after the city of Weimar where a national assembly convened to produce a new constitution after the German Monarchy and German Empire were abolished following the nation's defeat in World War I. This first attempt to establish a liberal democracy in Germany happened during a time of civil conflict, and failed with t ...

Including:

Read more here: » Weimar Republic: Encyclopedia - Weimar Republic

Junker: Encyclopedia II - Paul von Hindenburg - Presidency

In 1925, Hindenburg had no interest in running for public office. In the first round of the 1925 presidential elections, no candidate had emerged with a majority and a run-off election had been called. The Social Democratic candidate, Prime Minister Otto Braun of Prussia, had agreed to drop out the race and had endorsed the Catholic Center Party's candidate, Wilhelm Marx. Since Karl Jarres, the joint candidate of the two conservative parties, the German People's Party and German National People's Party was regarded as too dull, it seemed lik ...

See also:

Paul von Hindenburg, Paul von Hindenburg - German army, Paul von Hindenburg - Aftermath of the war, Paul von Hindenburg - Presidency, Paul von Hindenburg - January 1932-January 1933: A Year of Decisions, Paul von Hindenburg - The Machtergreifung, Paul von Hindenburg - Conclusion, Paul von Hindenburg - Endnotes, Paul von Hindenburg - Sources

Read more here: » Paul von Hindenburg: Encyclopedia II - Paul von Hindenburg - Presidency

Junker: Encyclopedia II - List of German expressions in English - German terms commonly used in academic contexts in English

German terms frequently appear in several academic disciplines in English, notably in history, psychology, philosophy, music and the physical sciences. Non-specialists in a given field may or may not be familiar with a given German term. List of German expressions in English - Academia. Ansatz, basic approach Festschrift, book prepared by colleagues to honor a scholar Leitfaden, illustration of the interdepe ...

See also:

List of German expressions in English, List of German expressions in English - German terms commonly used in English, List of German expressions in English - Food and drink, List of German expressions in English - Sports and recreation, List of German expressions in English - Other aspects of everyday life, List of German expressions in English - German terms commonly used in academic contexts in English, List of German expressions in English - Academia, List of German expressions in English - Architecture, List of German expressions in English - Economics, List of German expressions in English - Geography, List of German expressions in English - Geology, List of German expressions in English - History, List of German expressions in English - Linguistics, List of German expressions in English - Literature, List of German expressions in English - Mathematics and formal logic, List of German expressions in English - Medicine, List of German expressions in English - Music, List of German expressions in English - Philosophy, List of German expressions in English - Physical sciences, List of German expressions in English - Psychology, List of German expressions in English - Sociology, List of German expressions in English - German terms mostly used for literary effect, List of German expressions in English - German terms rarely used in English, List of German expressions in English - Music, List of German expressions in English - Meanings of German band names, List of German expressions in English - Classical Music Works

Read more here: » List of German expressions in English: Encyclopedia II - List of German expressions in English - German terms commonly used in academic contexts in English

Junker: Encyclopedia II - Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Preparations

The plan of the expedition was to go to Cairo, then to Zanzibar to hire porters, then south of Africa, around the Cape, to the mouth of the Congo, up the Congo by Leopold's steamers, branching off at the Aruwimi River. Stanley intended to establish a camp on the Aruwimi, then go east overland through unknown territory to reach Lake Albert and Equatoria. He then expected that Emin would send the families of Emin's Egyptian employees back along the just-pioneered route, along with a large store of ivory accumulated in Equatoria, while Stanley, ...

See also:

Emin Pasha Relief Expedition, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Anxiety about Equatoria, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Preparations, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Up the Congo, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Darkest Africa, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - With Emin, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Fate of the Rear Column, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - To the coast, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Aftermath, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Reference

Read more here: » Emin Pasha Relief Expedition: Encyclopedia II - Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Preparations

Junker: Encyclopedia II - Otto von Bismarck - Biography

Otto von Bismarck - Early life. Bismarck was born at Schönhausen, his family's estate in the Prussian Province of Saxony (now Saxony-Anhalt). Bismarck's family had belonged to the nobility since the fourteenth century; from his birth, he held the title Graf (Count). His father, Ferdinand von Bismarck, was a landowner and a former Prussian military officer; his mother, Wilhelmine Mencken, originally belonged to a well-off commoner family. Otto von Bismarck had several siblings, but only an elder brother (Bernhard) and a yo ...

See also:

Otto von Bismarck, Otto von Bismarck - Biography, Otto von Bismarck - Early life, Otto von Bismarck - Early political career, Otto von Bismarck - Ministerpräsident Prime Minister of Prussia, Otto von Bismarck - The Defeat of Denmark and Austria, Otto von Bismarck - The Establishment of the German Empire, Otto von Bismarck - Chancellor of the German Empire, Otto von Bismarck - Foreign Policies, Otto von Bismarck - Last years, Otto von Bismarck - Legacy

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

Junker: Encyclopedia II - Weimar Republic - Controlled revolution: the establishment of the Republic 1918-1919

From 1916 onwards, the 1871 German Empire had effectively been governed by the military, led by the Oberste Heeresleitung (OHL, Supreme Army Command) with the Chief of Staff Paul von Hindenburg. When it became apparent that World War I was lost, the OHL demanded that a civil government be installed in order to meet a key peace talk condition from United States President Woodrow Wilson. Any attempt to continue the war after Bulgaria had left the Central Powers would only have caused German territories to be occupied. The new Reichsk ...

See also:

Weimar Republic, Weimar Republic - Controlled revolution: the establishment of the Republic 1918-1919, Weimar Republic - The Reichswehr and the Revolution, Weimar Republic - The socialist roots of Weimar, Weimar Republic - The early years: internal conflict 1919-1923, Weimar Republic - Stresemann's Golden Era 1923-1929, Weimar Republic - The Republic crumbles and Hitler's support rises 1930-1932, Weimar Republic - Loss of credibility for the Republic, Weimar Republic - Franz von Papen calls for elections, Weimar Republic - November and 'Socialist General' Schleicher, Weimar Republic - Hitler's chancellorship and the death of the Weimar Republic 1933, Weimar Republic - Reichstag Fire, Weimar Republic - Reichstag election of March 5, Weimar Republic - Hitler cabinet meeting in mid-March, Weimar Republic - Enabling Act negotiations, Weimar Republic - Ceremonial opening of the Reichstag in Potsdam on March 21, Weimar Republic - Passage of the Enabling Act by the Reichstag on March 23, Weimar Republic - Aftermath, Weimar Republic - Reasons for the Weimar Republic's failure, Weimar Republic - Economic problems, Weimar Republic - Institutional problems, Weimar Republic - Individual roles, Weimar Republic - Other roles, Weimar Republic - Reference

Read more here: » Weimar Republic: Encyclopedia II - Weimar Republic - Controlled revolution: the establishment of the Republic 1918-1919

Junker: Encyclopedia II - Tbilisi - History

Tbilisi - Early History. According to an old legend, the present-day territory of Tbilisi was covered by forests as late as the 5th century A.D. One widely accepted variant of the legend of Tbilisi's founding states that King Vakhtang I Gorgasali of Georgia went hunting in the heavily forested region with a falcon (sometimes the falcon is either substituted by a hawk or other small birds of prey in the legend). The King's falcon allegedly caught/injured a pheasant during the hunt, after which both b ...

See also:

Tbilisi, Tbilisi - History, Tbilisi - Early History, Tbilisi - Tbilisi Turns into a Capital, Tbilisi - Foreign Domination, Tbilisi - Tbilisi as the Capital of a Unified Georgian State and the Georgian Renaissance, Tbilisi - Mongol Domination and the following Period of Instability, Tbilisi - Tbilisi Under Russian Control, Tbilisi - Independence: 1918–1921, Tbilisi - Under Communist Rule, Tbilisi - After the Break-Up of the Soviet Union, Tbilisi - Geography, Tbilisi - Climate, Tbilisi - People and culture, Tbilisi - Demographics, Tbilisi - Religion, Tbilisi - Architecture, Tbilisi - Periodic events, Tbilisi - Landmarks, Tbilisi - Miscellaneous, Tbilisi - Pronunciation, Tbilisi - Education, Tbilisi - Sister cities, Tbilisi - Notable people, Tbilisi - Photo Tour

Read more here: » Tbilisi: Encyclopedia II - Tbilisi - History

Junker: Encyclopedia II - Weimar Republic - Controlled revolution: the establishment of the Republic 1918–1919

From 1916 onwards, the 1871 German Empire had effectively been governed by the military, led by the Oberste Heeresleitung (OHL, Supreme Army Command) with the Chief of Staff Paul von Hindenburg. When it became apparent that World War I was lost, the OHL demanded that a civil government be installed in order to meet a key peace talk condition from United States President Woodrow Wilson. Any attempt to continue the war after Bulgaria had left the Central Powers would only have caused German territories to be occupied. The new Reichsk ...

See also:

Weimar Republic, Weimar Republic - Controlled revolution: the establishment of the Republic 1918–1919, Weimar Republic - The Reichswehr and the Revolution, Weimar Republic - The socialist roots of Weimar, Weimar Republic - The early years: internal conflict 1919–1923, Weimar Republic - Stresemann's Golden Era 1923–1929, Weimar Republic - The Republic crumbles and Hitler's support rises 1930–1932, Weimar Republic - Loss of credibility for the Republic, Weimar Republic - Franz von Papen calls for elections, Weimar Republic - November and 'Socialist General' Schleicher, Weimar Republic - Hitler's chancellorship and the death of the Weimar Republic 1933, Weimar Republic - Reichstag Fire, Weimar Republic - Reichstag election of March 5, Weimar Republic - Hitler cabinet meeting in mid-March, Weimar Republic - Enabling Act negotiations, Weimar Republic - Ceremonial opening of the Reichstag in Potsdam on March 21, Weimar Republic - Passage of the Enabling Act by the Reichstag on March 23, Weimar Republic - Aftermath, Weimar Republic - Reasons for the Weimar Republic's failure, Weimar Republic - Economic problems, Weimar Republic - Institutional problems, Weimar Republic - Individual roles, Weimar Republic - Other roles, Weimar Republic - Reference

Read more here: » Weimar Republic: Encyclopedia II - Weimar Republic - Controlled revolution: the establishment of the Republic 1918–1919

Junker: Encyclopedia II - Faust Part 1 - Synopsis

Although there is no precise classification in the overall story, the individual scenes may be loosely bound into three parts: The Prologue, Faust's Tragedy and Gretchen's Tragedy. Faust Part 1 - Prologues. In the first prologue, three people, the theatre director, the poet, and a buffoon, discuss the purpose of the theatre. The director approaches the theatre from a financial perspective, and is looking to make an income by pleasing the crowd; the buffoon seeks his own glory through ...

See also:

Faust Part 1, Faust Part 1 - Characters, Faust Part 1 - Synopsis, Faust Part 1 - Prologues, Faust Part 1 - Faust's Tragedy, Faust Part 1 - Gretchen's Tragedy, Faust Part 1 - Relationship to Part 2 and importance, Faust Part 1 - Historic performances

Read more here: » Faust Part 1: Encyclopedia II - Faust Part 1 - Synopsis

Junker: Encyclopedia II - History of the German Democratic Republic - Creation 1945-1949

History of the German Democratic Republic - Division of Germany. At the Yalta Conference, held in February 1945 before the capitulation of the Third Reich, the United States, United Kingdom, and the Soviet Union agreed on the division of Germany into occupation zones. Estimating the territory that the converging armies of the western Allies and the Soviet Union would overrun, the Yalta Conference determined the demarcation line for the respective areas of occupation. Following Germany's surrender, the All ...

See also:

History of the German Democratic Republic, History of the German Democratic Republic - Creation 1945-1949, History of the German Democratic Republic - Division of Germany, History of the German Democratic Republic - Early years 1949–54, History of the German Democratic Republic - SED as leading party, History of the German Democratic Republic - June 17 1953, History of the German Democratic Republic - Economic policy 1956–75, History of the German Democratic Republic - Collectivization and nationalization of agriculture and industry 1956–63, History of the German Democratic Republic - New Economic System 1963–70, History of the German Democratic Republic - The Main Task, History of the German Democratic Republic - Foreign policy 1967–75, History of the German Democratic Republic - Ulbricht Versus Détente, History of the German Democratic Republic - Honecker and East-West Rapprochement, History of the German Democratic Republic - Two Germanies, History of the German Democratic Republic - Domestic policy 1970s, History of the German Democratic Republic - GDR identity, History of the German Democratic Republic - Dissidents, History of the German Democratic Republic - 10th Party Congress 1981, History of the German Democratic Republic - Decline and Fall of the GDR 1975–89, History of the German Democratic Republic - Coffee crisis 1976–79, History of the German Democratic Republic - Developing international debt crisis, History of the German Democratic Republic - Regime collapse 1989, History of the German Democratic Republic - Financial situation in 1990

Read more here: » History of the German Democratic Republic: Encyclopedia II - History of the German Democratic Republic - Creation 1945-1949

Junker: Encyclopedia II - Tbilisi - Education

Universities in Tbilisi include: Tbilisi State University Tbilisi State Medical University Georgian Agrarian University Georgian Technical University Tbilisi State Pedagogical University Tbilisi State University of Languages and Culture Tbilisi - Sister cities. Tbilisi's sister cities include: Kiev, the capital of Ukraine Bristol, the principal city of south-west England, UK Innsbruck, the capital of the Austria ...

See also:

Tbilisi, Tbilisi - History, Tbilisi - Early History, Tbilisi - Tbilisi Turns into a Capital, Tbilisi - Foreign Domination, Tbilisi - Tbilisi as the Capital of a Unified Georgian State and the Georgian Renaissance, Tbilisi - Mongol Domination and the following Period of Instability, Tbilisi - Tbilisi Under Russian Control, Tbilisi - Independence: 1918–1921, Tbilisi - Under Communist Rule, Tbilisi - After the Break-Up of the Soviet Union, Tbilisi - Geography, Tbilisi - Climate, Tbilisi - People and culture, Tbilisi - Demographics, Tbilisi - Religion, Tbilisi - Architecture, Tbilisi - Periodic events, Tbilisi - Landmarks, Tbilisi - Miscellaneous, Tbilisi - Pronunciation, Tbilisi - Education, Tbilisi - Sister cities, Tbilisi - Notable people, Tbilisi - Photo Tour

Read more here: » Tbilisi: Encyclopedia II - Tbilisi - Education

Junker: Encyclopedia II - Tbilisi - Miscellaneous

Tbilisi - Pronunciation. Georgians pronounce Tbilisi with a barely-spoken 't', so that it almost sounds like "Bill-EE-see"; English speakers often mispronounce it like "Tib-LEE-see", but that is incorrect. The correct pronunciation is T*-bi-li-si. The "i" is pronounced as in machine. The "t*" is pronounced as English "t": aspirated--with a puff of breath after the consonant sound. There is no voiced sound between the "t" and "b" in Tbilisi. Moreover, the Georgian language is unstressed. To approximate the correct pronunciation, English speakers should say t*-BI-li-si, with a l ...

See also:

Tbilisi, Tbilisi - History, Tbilisi - Early History, Tbilisi - Tbilisi Turns into a Capital, Tbilisi - Foreign Domination, Tbilisi - Tbilisi as the Capital of a Unified Georgian State and the Georgian Renaissance, Tbilisi - Mongol Domination and the following Period of Instability, Tbilisi - Tbilisi Under Russian Control, Tbilisi - Independence: 1918–1921, Tbilisi - Under Communist Rule, Tbilisi - After the Break-Up of the Soviet Union, Tbilisi - Geography, Tbilisi - Climate, Tbilisi - People and culture, Tbilisi - Demographics, Tbilisi - Religion, Tbilisi - Architecture, Tbilisi - Periodic events, Tbilisi - Landmarks, Tbilisi - Miscellaneous, Tbilisi - Pronunciation, Tbilisi - Education, Tbilisi - Sister cities, Tbilisi - Notable people, Tbilisi - Photo Tour

Read more here: » Tbilisi: Encyclopedia II - Tbilisi - Miscellaneous

Junker: Encyclopedia II - Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Up the Congo

The expedition left Zanzibar on 25 February and arrived at Banana at the mouth of the Congo on 18 March, somewhat unexpectedly because a telegraph cable had broken, and local officials had received no instructions. Chartered steamers brought the expedition to Matadi, where the carriers took over, bringing some 800 loads of stores and ammunition to Leopoldville on the Stanley Pool. (railroad?) Progress was slow, since the rainy season was at its height, and food was short - a problem that was to be persistent throughout the expedition (as a subsistence economy, the area alon ...

See also:

Emin Pasha Relief Expedition, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Anxiety about Equatoria, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Preparations, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Up the Congo, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Darkest Africa, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - With Emin, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Fate of the Rear Column, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - To the coast, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Aftermath, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Reference

Read more here: » Emin Pasha Relief Expedition: Encyclopedia II - Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Up the Congo

Junker: Encyclopedia II - Tbilisi - Photo Tour

The Right Embankment of the Mtkvari River at Night Abanot-Ubani District Ananuri Fortress, 25 miles north of Tbilisi Kashveti Church in Central Tbilisi Vake District from Chavchavadze Ave. The Historic Dry Bridge District looking towards the Right Embankment The grounds of the National Public Library of Georgia Tbilisi's largest park Vake, with the foothills o ...

See also:

Tbilisi, Tbilisi - History, Tbilisi - Early History, Tbilisi - Tbilisi Turns into a Capital, Tbilisi - Foreign Domination, Tbilisi - Tbilisi as the Capital of a Unified Georgian State and the Georgian Renaissance, Tbilisi - Mongol Domination and the following Period of Instability, Tbilisi - Tbilisi Under Russian Control, Tbilisi - Independence: 1918–1921, Tbilisi - Under Communist Rule, Tbilisi - After the Break-Up of the Soviet Union, Tbilisi - Geography, Tbilisi - Climate, Tbilisi - People and culture, Tbilisi - Demographics, Tbilisi - Religion, Tbilisi - Architecture, Tbilisi - Periodic events, Tbilisi - Landmarks, Tbilisi - Miscellaneous, Tbilisi - Pronunciation, Tbilisi - Education, Tbilisi - Sister cities, Tbilisi - Notable people, Tbilisi - Photo Tour

Read more here: » Tbilisi: Encyclopedia II - Tbilisi - Photo Tour

Junker: Encyclopedia II - Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Anxiety about Equatoria

When the Mahdists captured Khartoum in 1885, Egyptian administration of the Sudan collapsed, and the extreme southern province Equatoria, located on the upper reaches of the Nile near Lake Albert was nearly cut off from the outside world. Emin Pasha, a German doctor and naturalist who had been appointed Governor of Equatoria had been able to send and receive letters via Buganda and Zanzibar, had been informed in February 1886 that the Egyptian government that Equatoria was to be abandoned, and in July, encouraged by the missionary Alexander ...

See also:

Emin Pasha Relief Expedition, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Anxiety about Equatoria, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Preparations, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Up the Congo, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Darkest Africa, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - With Emin, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Fate of the Rear Column, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - To the coast, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Aftermath, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Reference

Read more here: » Emin Pasha Relief Expedition: Encyclopedia II - Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Anxiety about Equatoria

Junker: Encyclopedia II - Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - To the coast

By 17 February all the surviving members of the expedition, and Emin with a group of about 65 loyal soldiers, met at Stanley's camp above Lake Albert, and during the subsequent weeks several hundred more of Emin's followers, many of them the families of the soldiers, accumulated there. Emin still had not expressed a firm intention to leave Equatoria, and 5 April, after a heated argument, Stanley determined to leave shortly, and ...

See also:

Emin Pasha Relief Expedition, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Anxiety about Equatoria, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Preparations, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Up the Congo, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Darkest Africa, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - With Emin, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Fate of the Rear Column, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - To the coast, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Aftermath, Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - Reference

Read more here: » Emin Pasha Relief Expedition: Encyclopedia II - Emin Pasha Relief Expedition - To the coast

Junker: Encyclopedia II - Weimar Republic - Hitler's chancellorship and the death of the Weimar Republic 1933

Hitler was sworn in as Chancellor on the morning of January 30, 1933 in what some observers later described as a brief and indifferent ceremony. By early February, a mere week after Hitler's assumption of the chancellorship, the government had begun to clamp down on the opposition. Meetings of the left-wing parties were banned, and even some of the moderate parties found their members threatened and assaulted. Measures with an appearance of legality suppressed the Communist Party in mid-February and included the plainly illegal ...

See also:

Weimar Republic, Weimar Republic - Controlled revolution: the establishment of the Republic 1918–1919, Weimar Republic - The Reichswehr and the Revolution, Weimar Republic - The socialist roots of Weimar, Weimar Republic - The early years: internal conflict 1919–1923, Weimar Republic - Stresemann's Golden Era 1923–1929, Weimar Republic - The Republic crumbles and Hitler's support rises 1930–1932, Weimar Republic - Loss of credibility for the Republic, Weimar Republic - Franz von Papen calls for elections, Weimar Republic - November and 'Socialist General' Schleicher, Weimar Republic - Hitler's chancellorship and the death of the Weimar Republic 1933, Weimar Republic - Reichstag Fire, Weimar Republic - Reichstag election of March 5, Weimar Republic - Hitler cabinet meeting in mid-March, Weimar Republic - Enabling Act negotiations, Weimar Republic - Ceremonial opening of the Reichstag in Potsdam on March 21, Weimar Republic - Passage of the Enabling Act by the Reichstag on March 23, Weimar Republic - Aftermath, Weimar Republic - Reasons for the Weimar Republic's failure, Weimar Republic - Economic problems, Weimar Republic - Institutional problems, Weimar Republic - Individual roles, Weimar Republic - Other roles, Weimar Republic - Reference

Read more here: » Weimar Republic: Encyclopedia II - Weimar Republic - Hitler's chancellorship and the death of the Weimar Republic 1933

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