Display: 101-125 of 288 Results

A Patriotic Song from the Franco-Prussian War: The Watch on the Rhine (1840/54)

August Heinrich Hoffmann von Fallersleben, Founding Songs (1872)

Workers’ Conceptions of Religion (1890)

Founding Manifesto of the Protestant League (1887); Statistics on Membership (1887–1913)

Protestants, Catholics, Jews, and Others: Confessional Population (December 1, 1871)

Social Background of German Elites and Members of the Clergy (1800–1919)

Reasons to Forego a Performance of Wagner’s Parsifal at Bayreuth (July 23, 1889)

The Free Religious Movement (1870s–1880s)

Social Antagonism between Protestants and Catholics (1870s–1880s)

Emil Lehmann’s Petition to Improve the Legal Rights of Jews in Saxony (November 25, 1869)

Martin Lövinson Recalls Jewish Emancipation and Enthusiasm for the German Wars of Unification (early 1870s)

A Jewish Child’s Memories of his Family’s “Conversion” from Orthodox to Reform Practices (1880s)

A Jewish Rabbi in a Prussian Reading Circle (1880s)

Proportion of Foreign-Born Jews in Germany (1871–1910)

Court Chaplain Adolf Stoecker Introduces Antisemitism to the Christian Social Workers’ Party (September 19, 1879)

Richard Wagner, “Jewry in Music” (1850/1869)

Heinrich von Treitschke Pronounces “The Jews are Our Misfortune” (November 15, 1879)

Antisemites’ Petition (1880–81)

Wilhelm Marr, The Victory of Jewry over Germandom (March 1879)

Anonymous, “The Antipathy to Jews” (1879)

Jacob Burckhardt on the Likely Consequences of Antisemitic Agitation (January 2, 1880)

Emil Lehmann Addresses Leipzig Jews on the Antisemitic Movement (April 11, 1880)

Declaration of Seventy-Five Notables against Antisemitism (November 12, 1880)

The Antisemitic Movement in Germany—Through British Eyes (1873–1892)

“Manifesto to the Governments and Peoples of the Christian Nations Threatened by Jewry”: The First Anti-Jewish Congress in Dresden (September 11–12, 1882)