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Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. In November 1923. Hitler tried to take advantage of the crisis facing the Weimar government (with Ludendorff's support and alongside Gustav von Kahr, Otto von Loslow, Hans Ritter bon Seisser) by instigating a revolution in Munich. There was violence in the streets and Hitler was arrested. Hindenburg becomes president.

  2. Thus, it was nearly impossible for the Reichstag to govern, with the various parties undermining one another’s goals and coalition governments crumbling as swiftly as they formed. Figure 9.4.1: Diagram of electoral results over the course of the Weimar Republic. Note the lack of a governing party, as well as the rise of the Nazis (the NSDAP ...

  3. 8–9 November: The Beer Hall Putsch, an attempt led by Adolf Hitler and Erich Ludendorff to overthrow the Weimar Republic, fails in Munich. [61] 15 November: Germany's period of hyperinflation ends with the introduction of the Rentenmark. [62] 23 November: The Stresemann government falls on a vote of no confidence.

  4. Richard Bessel here relates the failure of the Republic to establish its legitimacy to the legacy of the First World War-a legacy which was clearly huge in both economic and political terms. but also in cultural terms. Above all, as Bessel emphasizes in this passage, German society in the 1920s suffered from a collective unwillingness to accept ...

  5. The weak coalition governments in the Reichstag close Reichstag The name of Germany's parliament. weren't able to deal effectively with the problems they faced and each one collapsed. Figure caption,

  6. 5. Juni 2012 · Summary. Unlike the case of the early French Third Republic, the rise and fall of the Weimar Republic in Germany has long been at the very center of theoretical attention among comparative-historical analysts of democratization. The reasons are clear. First, the fact that German democracy failed despite the country's high degree of economic ...

  7. Weimar Republic - Treaty, Versailles, 1919: The government’s instructions to the German peace delegation that went to Versailles, France, at the end of April 1919 show how wide was the gap between German and Allied opinion. In German eyes, the break with the past was complete, and the Wilsonian program of self-determination and equality of rights as set out in the Fourteen Points was binding ...