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  1. Weimar Republic - Hyperinflation, Political Turmoil, Social Unrest: The “Weimar coalition” of the Social Democrats, Centre, and Democrats, which had been the basis of Scheidemann’s ministry (February–June 1919), was reestablished by Bauer when the Democrats joined his government in October 1919 and maintained by Hermann Müller (also a Social Democrat) when he took Bauer’s place as ...

  2. 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 ...

  3. They will begin the case study by learning about the fourteen years of the Weimar Republic, the democratic government that replaced monarchy in Germany after the war and was in existence in the years preceding the rise of Nazi Germany. While exploring the politics, culture, economics, and social trends of Germany during this era, students will ...

  4. It was the only party to win more than 100 seats at every Reichstag election, beginning with 165 seats in January 1919. Despite its internal divisions and Germany’s political and economic woes, the SPD remained a strong and consistent supporter of the Weimar Republic and its constitution. The SPD was a major partner in all but one of the ...

  5. in. The history of the Weimar Republic falls more or less distinctly periods, each dominated by a "hero" or "non-hero." The first of which may be called the period of Precarious Existence, begins lamation of the Republic on November 9, 1918, and continues suppression of the two Spartacist risings of January and March.

  6. 28. Okt. 2009 · On January 30, 1933, President Paul von Hindenburg names Adolf Hitler, leader or führer of the National Socialist German Workers Party (or Nazi Party ), as chancellor of Germany. The year 1932 ...

  7. Germany - End of Republic, Weimar, Nazi: An unintended effect of the anti-Young Plan campaign was to give widespread public exposure to Hitler, who used his access to the Hugenberg-owned press empire and to its weekly movie newsreels to give himself and his Nazi movement national publicity. An additional assist to Hitler’s career came on October 29, 1929, with the stock market crash on Wall ...