Display: 1-25 of 100 Results

“Between Berlin and Rome” (1875)

French Caricature about Prussian Expansion (1867)

Paul Bürde, Homage to Kaiser Wilhelm I (1871)

Southern Germany and the North German Confederation (April 11, 1868)

“Something is Rotten in the State, etc.” (October 4, 1868)

Map: Elections to the Prussian House of Deputies (July 3, 1866)

A Traditionalist Pleads for a More Positive Memory of Prussia (October 21, 1978)

Exhibition Guide: Prussia – An Appraisal Attempt (1981)

The Brandenburg Recess: Resolutions agreed to by Frederick William (“the Great Elector”) and the Brandenburg Estates in the Recess of July 26, 1653 (1653)

The Political Testament of Frederick William I (“the Soldier King”) (February 17, 1722)

Political Testament of Frederick William (“the Great Elector”) (May 19, 1667)

Frederick William I (“the Soldier King”) Demands Unvarnished Information from the Pomeranian Commissariat (July 20, 1722)

King Frederick William I’s Handwritten Instructions to the East Prussian Land-Tax Commission [Generalhufenschoß-Kommission] (April 23, 1716)

Frederick William I (“the Soldier King”), Instructions on the Formation and Functioning of the General Directory (December 20, 1722)

Frederick II, Anti-Machiavel, or An Examination of Machiavel’s Prince (1741)

Frederick II (“the Great”), Notes to Himself on the Invasion of Silesia (1740)

Berlin City Map (1737)

Political Testament of Frederick II (“the Great”) (1752)

Frederick II (“the Great”), “Forms of Government and the Duties of Rulers” (1777)

Prussian Law on Freedom of Trade, signed by Chancellor Hardenberg and King Frederick William III (September 7, 1811)

Karl August Baron von Hardenberg, “On the Reorganization of the Prussian State” (September 12, 1807)

King Frederick William III and His Ministers Stein and Schrötter, “Ordinance for All Cities of the Prussian Monarchy” (November 19, 1808)

Karl Baron vom und zum Stein, Nassau Memorandum on Administrative Reform in Prussia (June 1807)

The Prussian Finance Edict of 1810, signed by State Chancellor Hardenberg and King Frederick William III (October 27, 1810)

Frederick William III’s Call for National Mobilization, “To My People” (March 17, 1813)