Display: 1-25 of 68 Results

Great Britain Remains Skeptical of Europe (January 2, 1973)

Dietrich Brandis, Report on the Teak Forests of Pegu (1856)

Agreement between the Governments of the United Kingdom and the United States on the Economic Fusion of their Respective Zones (December 2, 1946)

Revised Plan for Level of Industry in the Anglo-American Zones (August 29, 1947)

The Western Allies on the Desired Level of Industry in their Zones of Occupation (August 28, 1947)

The Destroyed and Demolished Krupp Works in Essen (1947)

Western Declaration on Germany, the European Defense Community, and Berlin (May 27, 1952)

Berlin Declaration by the Three Western Powers and the German Federal Republic on Reunification (July 29, 1957)

Decisions of the Conference of the Foreign Ministers of the Three Western Powers in Washington, DC (April 8, 1949)

Nehru and Jinnah (August 21, 1947)

Public Viewing of an American Spy Tunnel in East Berlin (May 3, 1956)

Preparing for a Victory Parade (c. June 1945)

Potsdam Conference (July 17-August 2, 1945)

Berlin Airlift: Children Hope for Chocolates (July 1948)

Statement by the Foreign Ministers of the Western Powers on the Berlin Conference (February 20, 1954)

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

The Adèle Spitzeder Banking Swindle in Bavaria (November 28, 1872)

Bismarck’s Diplomatic and Military Gamble through British Eyes (February–August 1866)

The Public Mood in Bavaria and Other Federal States through British Eyes (December 3, 1866)

King Ludwig II of Bavaria – Growing Concerns about his Mental State (1883–86)

Georg von Bunsen, “The Liberal Party in Germany” (November 1882)

The Wife of the British Ambassador in Berlin Writes to Queen Victoria about Bismarck’s Political Omnipotence (December 27, 1880)

Bismarck Tells the British Ambassador that Germany has Achieved its Legitimate Objectives (February 11, 1873)

Benjamin Disraeli on the “German Revolution” (February 9, 1871)

The Social Democratic Movement: Its Electoral Rise and Legal Repression (1871–1890)