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Chapter 10
Education and Research
Home
Weimar Germany (1918/19–1933)
Chapter (10/15)
Sources
Volksschule Enrollment (1911-1941)
Mid-Tier Secondary Schools [Mittelschulen] (1911-1939)
Secondary Schools (1911-1938)
Regional Secondary School Enrollment (1911, 1926/27, and 1938)
Enrollment in Academic Institutions of Higher Education (1914-1943/44)
Opening of the First Waldorf School (September 1919)
Albert Einstein, “What Is The Theory Of Relativity?” (November 28, 1919)
Karl Binding and Alfred Hoche, “Permitting the Destruction of Life Unworthy of Living” (1920)
Martin Heidegger (r.) and Hans-Georg Gadamer (l.) (1923)
Margarete von Wrangell, First Female Professor in Germany (1923)
“Jolly Hygiene” (1926)
Students of the Waldorf School in Stuttgart (1927)
A Kindergarten Run by the Arbeiterwohlfahrt [Workers’ Welfare Organization] (1927)
Students by Subject Area and Chosen Major (1928 and 1936/37)
Edmund Husserl and His Son Gerhard (April 1929)
Friedrich von Bodelschwingh, Lecture in Lübeck on Questions Relating to Eugenics (1929)
Friedrich von Bodelschwingh (c. 1930)
Film Advertising the International Hygiene Exhibit in Dresden (1930)
Albert Einstein Speaks at the Opening of the Seventh German Radio Exhibition (August 22, 1930)
Alfred Wegener’s Final Greenland Expedition (1930)
Hans Harmsen, “Contemporary Questions of Eugenics” (1931)
The Five Nobel Prize Winners Nernst, Einstein, Planck, Millikan and von Laue (from left to right) (1931)
Radio Report on the Crew of the Airship “Graf Zeppelin” Returning from Their Arctic Voyage (July 30, 1931)
Lex Zwickau (1924) and Responses to It (January 1932)
Max Born on Physics in Göttingen in the 1920s and Early 1930s (Retrospective Account, 1975)
Max Born, Physicist (c. 1930)
Gershom Scholem on his Studies in Munich (Retrospective Account, 1977)
Felix Gilbert on Being a Student of Friedrich Meinecke in the 1920s (Retrospective Account, 1988)
Friedrich Meinecke (c. 1930)
Hannah Arendt (c. 1963)
Jewish Life
Arts and Culture