Display: 101-125 of 129 Results

Prussian “Soldier King” Frederick William I Instructs his Officials on Peasant Colonization in East Prussia (July 2, 1718)

Edict Protecting the Brandenburg Woolens Industry (March 30, 1687)

Imperial Trade Ordinance [Reichshandwerksordnung] (August 16, 1731)

Emperor Joseph II’s “Buying-In” Patent (November 1, 1781)

The Prussian Regulation Edict of 1811 (September 14, 1811)

The Prussian “October Edict” of 1807 (October 9, 1807)

Emperor Joseph II’s Taxation and Urbarial Patent (1789)

Jérôme [Hieronymus] Napoleon, King of Westphalia, Decree on the Abolition of Personal Serfdom in the French Satellite Kingdom of Westphalia (January 23, 1808)

The Prussian Declaration of 1816, modifying the Regulation Edict of 1811 (May 29, 1816)

Gustav Stresemann Converses with the German Ambassador to the Netherlands, Graf Zech (August 25, 1929)

Heinrich Brüning Delivering an Election Campaign Speech (1930)

Hitler Attends a Meeting of the Industry Club in Düsseldorf (January 26, 1932)

Cabinet Consultation with the President Regarding the Agenda for Genoa (April 5, 1922)

Workers in Duisburg Demonstrate in Favor of Maintaining Passive Resistance (1923)

Charles G. Dawes and Owen D. Young in Berlin (1924)

Report of the Commissioner of the Reichsbank (December 10, 1928)

Film Advertising the Krupp Company’s Grocery Stores for Its Employees (1928)

Excerpts from the Reichstag Debate on the National Budget (February 5, 1931)

Hjalmar Schacht on Reparations Requirements (1931)

Wilhelm Cuno on “The Existential Requirements of the German Shipping Industry” (December 23, 1932)

Friedrich von Gottl-Ottlilienfeld, “Fordism. On Industry and Technical Reason” (1926)

Hjalmar Schacht, “The Colonial Question” (1931)

“That Was When I Knew: I Had to Become a Refugee” (March 19, 1953)

”Nationally-Owned Enterprises – The Backbone of the Economic Plan”: Representatives of Nationally-Owned Enterprises Meet in Leipzig to Prepare for the Two-Year Plan for 1949/50 (July 4, 1948)

Propaganda Poster: “Farms for ‘New Farmers’ from Materials from Demolished Barracks and Manor Houses” (May 1948)