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  1. Case. 250/57. Nationality of parties. West Germany. President. Humphrey Waldock. Communist Party of Germany v. the Federal Republic of Germany was a 1957 European Commission of Human Rights decision which upheld the dissolution of the Communist Party of Germany by the Federal Constitutional Court a year earlier.

  2. www.weimarer-republik.net › en › weimar-gatewayKPD / Weimarer Republik

    KPD. The Communist Party of Germany ( KPD) was founded at the end of 1918. It emerged from the merger of the Spartacists and other radically leftist groups and advocated a democratic system made up of councils, as in Russia. Accordingly, it boycotted the national constituent assembly elections, leaving it without any representation in Weimar.

  3. The Communist Party opposed the United States involvement in the early stages of World War II (until June 22, 1941, the date of the German invasion of the Soviet Union), the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the invasion of Grenada, and American support for anti-Communist military dictatorships and movements in Central America.

  4. In the former East Germany and East Berlin, various places were named for Luxemburg by the East German communist party. These include the Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz and a U-Bahn station which were located in East Berlin during the Cold War. An engraving on the nearby pavement reads "Ich war, ich bin, ich werde sein" ("I was, I am, I will be").

  5. International Communists of Germany (Internationalen Kommunisten Deutschlands; IKD) was a Communist political grouping founded in November 1918 during the German Revolution. The small party was, together with the better known Spartacist League , one of the constituent organizations that joined to form the Communist Party of Germany in 1918.

  6. Communist Workers Union of Germany. Communist Workers Union of Germany ( German: Kommunistische Arbeiter-Union Deutschlands, KAUD) was a council communist organization in Germany. KAUD was founded in December 1931 by the 'Frankfurt-Breslauer Tendency' of the Allgemeine Arbeiter-Union – Einheitsorganisation and sections of KAPD and AAUD.

  7. The Polish party was independently minded, and in the Polish Commission convened at the Comintern's Fifth Congress (1924), made efforts to defend both Leon Trotsky and Heinrich Brandler, the leader of the Communist Party of Germany. The main prosecutor in the case against the Polish leadership was Julian Leszczyński, but the Polish Commission ...