English
Deutsch
GHDI Extra
The Project
GHDI Extra
The Project
About the Project
Editors
GHI Project Team
Sponsors and Partners
Project History
Terms and Conditions
English
Deutsch
1500-1648
1648-1815
1815-1866
1866-1890
1890-1918
1918/19-1933
1933-1945
1945-1961
1961-1989
1990-2023
Content Notice
: This site includes sources you may find offensive or even harmful.
Learn more...
Dismiss
✕
Search
Home
Search
Display: 1-14 of 14 Results
Love for the Socialist Fatherland (October 19, 1968)
in:
Two Germanies (1961-1989)
Dolf Sternberger Describes the Term “Constitutional Patriotism” (1979)
in:
Two Germanies (1961-1989)
Federal President Richard von Weizsäcker on the Meaning of Being German (1986)
in:
Two Germanies (1961-1989)
Cosmopolitanism and Patriotism Blend during the World Cup (June 19, 2006)
in:
A New Germany (1990-2023)
A Patriotic Song from the Franco-Prussian War: The Watch on the Rhine (1840/54)
in:
Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Self-Described Status and Duties of an Elementary School Teacher (c. 1890)
in:
Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Heinrich von Sybel to Hermann Baumgarten on the Founding of the Reich (January 27, 1871)
in:
Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Memories of Sedan Day Festivities in the 1870s (Retrospective Account, 1930)
in:
Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
The Kaiser Speaks from the Balcony of the Royal Palace (August 1, 1914)
in:
Wilhelmine Germany and the First World War (1890-1918)
The Manifesto of the Ninety-Three: “To the Civilized World!” (October 4, 1914)
in:
Wilhelmine Germany and the First World War (1890-1918)
“Patriotic Enlightenment” (May 10, 1917)
in:
Wilhelmine Germany and the First World War (1890-1918)
Engelbert Krebs, “On the Meaning of Sacrifice” [“Vom Opfersinn”] (1914–15)
in:
Wilhelmine Germany and the First World War (1890-1918)
Johann Plenge, 1789 and 1914 (1916)
in:
Wilhelmine Germany and the First World War (1890-1918)
Thomas Mann, “Reflections of a Nonpolitical Man” (1918)
in:
Wilhelmine Germany and the First World War (1890-1918)