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  1. Há 1 dia · Beim Totengedenken des Kameradschaftsbundes Drasenhofen wurde im Besonderen des am 12. Der Ehrenvorsitzende der Südmährer Franz Longin betonte, dass die Heimatvertriebenen bereits 1950 mit der Charta der Heimatvertriebenen auf Rache zu verzichten hatten, um so einen Beitrag für ein friedvolles Europa zu leisten.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Helmut_KohlHelmut Kohl - Wikipedia

    Há 1 dia · Helmut Josef Michael Kohl ( German pronunciation: [ˈhɛlmuːt ˈkoːl] ⓘ; 3 April 1930 – 16 June 2017) was a German politician who served as Chancellor of West Germany from 1982 to 1990, Chancellor of Germany from 1982 to 1998 and Leader of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) from 1973 to 1998. Kohl's 16-year tenure is the longest of any ...

  3. Há 2 horas · Tickets jetzt einfach für Stuttgart & Region sichern!

  4. Há 1 dia · Franz Leopold de Longueval (1703–1767), kaiserlich königlicher wirklicher Geheimer Rat, Oberlandhofmeister im Königreich Böhmen; Kaspar Scheurer (1703–1759), Augustiner und Theologe, Senior der Theologischen Fakultät, Prior der Augustiner-Eremiten; Franz Anton Baumann (1704–1750), Kirchenmusiker und Komponist

    • National Opposition, 1918–1924
    • Dawes Plan Vote: A Change in Direction
    • Mid-1920S: A Tack Towards The Centre
    • Hugenberg and The National Bloc: The Young Plan Referendum
    • Decline and Fall, 1930–1932
    • Bringing Hitler to Power, January 1933
    • In The Hitler Government
    • Post-War

    The party was formed in December 1918 by a merger of the German Conservative Party and the Free Conservative Party of the old monarchic German Empire. It was joined soon afterward by the most right-wing section of the former National Liberal Party, and most supporters of the dissolved radically nationalist German Fatherland Party, the antisemitic C...

    At a party conference in early April 1924, the DNVP had come out clearly against the proposed restructuring of Germany's reparations payments known as the Dawes Plan, which the DNVP denounced as the "second Versailles". Part of the restructuring was an 800 million Reichsmark loan provided primarily by a consortium of Wall Street banks led by the Ho...

    Initially, the change of leadership made little difference. In its platform for the Reichstag election of 7 December 1924, the party declared the following: Those parties that had voted against the Dawes Plan lost seats while that had voted for the Dawes Plan gained seats, which as half the DNVP caucus had voted for the Plan while the other half ha...

    The disastrous showing at the polls in the Reichstag election of 20 May 1928 (the party's share of votes fell from 21% in 1924 to 14% in 1928) led to a new outbreak of party in-fighting. The immediate cause of the in-fighting was an article published in July 1928 entitled "Monarchism" (Monarchismus) by Walther Lambach, a board member of the German ...

    Hugenberg had wanted to keep the Reichsausschuß going even after the failure of the Freedom Law referendum, but the Reichsausschuß dissolved in the spring of 1930 when the National Socialists walked out of it. When Hugenberg was forced in April 1930 to temporarily vote for the "presidential government" of Chancellor Heinrich Brüningthat he was othe...

    On 3 January 1933, Hitler and Von Papen had what was supposed to be a secret meeting that however was revealed by the press. Hugenberg was aware at least in general that Hitler and Von Papen were having talks on forming a new government, but was uncertain about just what exactly was happening, and did not want to see Hitler as Chancellor. In Januar...

    Performing badly in subsequent elections, the party chose to be a junior coalition partner to the NSDAP in the so-called, short-lived Regierung der nationalen Konzentration (Government of National Concentration) upon Adolf Hitler's appointment as Chancellor in 1933. Although Hugenberg had severe doubts about Hitler as Chancellor he agreed to serve ...

    In post-war Germany, no serious attempt was made to recreate the party as a political force when conservative and centrist forces united into bigger parties like the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and the Christian Social Union (CSU), its Bavarian ally. Former DNVP members in the CDU claimed to have undergone "inner change", but had difficulties ...