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Display: 401-425 of 589 Results
August Heinrich Hoffmann von Fallersleben, Founding Songs (1872)
in:
Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Richard Wagner, What is German? (1865/78)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Workers’ Conceptions of Religion (1890)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Founding Manifesto of the Protestant League (1887); Statistics on Membership (1887–1913)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
The Free Religious Movement (1870s–1880s)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Social Antagonism between Protestants and Catholics (1870s–1880s)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Protestants, Catholics, Jews, and Others: Confessional Population (December 1, 1871)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Social Background of German Elites and Members of the Clergy (1800–1919)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Reasons to Forego a Performance of Wagner’s Parsifal at Bayreuth (July 23, 1889)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Proportion of Foreign-Born Jews in Germany (1871–1910)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Court Chaplain Adolf Stoecker Introduces Antisemitism to the Christian Social Workers’ Party (September 19, 1879)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Emil Lehmann’s Petition to Improve the Legal Rights of Jews in Saxony (November 25, 1869)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Martin Lövinson Recalls Jewish Emancipation and Enthusiasm for the German Wars of Unification (early 1870s)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Richard Wagner, “Jewry in Music” (1850/1869)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Heinrich von Treitschke Pronounces “The Jews are Our Misfortune” (November 15, 1879)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
A Jewish Child’s Memories of his Family’s “Conversion” from Orthodox to Reform Practices (1880s)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Wilhelm Marr, The Victory of Jewry over Germandom (March 1879)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
A Jewish Rabbi in a Prussian Reading Circle (1880s)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Anonymous, “The Antipathy to Jews” (1879)
in:
Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
The Antisemitic Movement in Germany—Through British Eyes (1873–1892)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
“Manifesto to the Governments and Peoples of the Christian Nations Threatened by Jewry”: The First Anti-Jewish Congress in Dresden (September 11–12, 1882)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Emil Lehmann Addresses Leipzig Jews on the Antisemitic Movement (April 11, 1880)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Ernst Henrici Addresses Berlin Antisemites in the Reichshall Meeting: A Report in the Tribune (December 1880)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Antisemites’ Petition (1880–81)
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Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
Declaration of Seventy-Five Notables against Antisemitism (November 12, 1880)
in:
Forging an Empire: Bismarckian Germany (1866-1890)
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