Display: 201-225 of 719 Results

Troops Returning from East Africa Parade through Berlin under General Lettow-Vorbeck (March 2, 1919)

German Cabinet Meeting on Diplomatic Effects of the Treaty of Rapallo (April 18, 1922)

Gustav Stresemann on the Occupation of the Ruhr (March 7, 1923)

Reichstag Hearing on the Occupation of the Ruhr (January 17, 1923)

Poster Protesting the Occupation of the Ruhr Valley: “Nein! Mich zwingt Ihr nicht!” (1923)

Foreign Minister Walter Rathenau after Signing the Treaty of Rapallo (April 16, 1922)

Inspecting a Barge along the Rhine-Herne Canal during the Occupation of the Ruhr Region (February 3, 1923)

A French Soldier Guards a Freight Yard in the Occupied Ruhr Region (January 1923)

Hans Bredow, “Christmas Message to the American People” (December 9, 1924)

“Map of German Ethnic and Cultural Lands” (1925)

“The Whole of Germany It Must Be!” (1925)

Russian Foreign Minister Chicherin (left) and Russian Ambassador Krestinsky (right) before a Visit to the Foreign Ministry in Berlin (September 1925)

“Contrasts in Africa” (1925)

Negotations between Gustav Stresemann, (Joseph) Austen Chamberlain, and Aristide Briand in Locarno (October 1925)

German Newsreel Report about Benito Mussolini (1924)

Chancellor Hans Luther and Foreign Minister Gustav Stresemann in Locarno (October 1925)

“What Is France Doing with Our Billions of Reparations?” (1920s)

Kuno von Westarp’s Reichstag Speech against Joining the League of Nations (January 27, 1926)

Käthe Kollwitz on Her Visit to Soviet Russia (1927/1943)

Social Democrat Rudolf Breitscheid on the League of Nations (1928)

Friendship Treaty between Germany and the Soviet Union (Berlin Treaty) (April 24, 1926)

Foreign Minister Gustav Stresemann Addresses the General Assembly of the League of Nations in Geneva (September 10, 1926)

Foreign Minister Gustav Stresemann Addresses the General Assembly of the League of Nations in Geneva (Detail) (September 10, 1926)

Caricature of Gustav Stresemann and Aristide Briand (March 1929)

“A Historical Masked Parade“ (February 19, 1928)