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  1. K. Luise Kähler. Wilhelmine Kähler. Wilhelm Ferdinand Kalle. Richard Kaselowsky (died 1921) Iwan Katz. Karl Kaufmann. Hanns Kerrl. Friedrich Krebs (mayor)

  2. Constitution of Prussia (1920) on a police station building. The Prussian Constitution of 1920 ( German: Verfassung von Preußen 1920) formed the legal framework for the Free State of Prussia, a constituent state of the Weimar Republic, from 1918 to 1947. It was based on democratic parliamentary principles and replaced the Constitution of 1848/50.

  3. Under the Kingdom of Prussia the Minister President functioned as the chief minister of the King, and presided over the Landtag (the Prussian legislature established in 1848). After the unification of Germany in 1871 and until the German Revolution of 1918–1919 , the office of the Prussian Minister President was usually held by the Chancellor of the German Empire , beginning with the tenure ...

  4. Nos estados constitutivos da república federal da Alemanha e da Áustria, no independente Liechtenstein e na província autónoma de Bolzano ( Autonome Provinz Bozen — Südtirol ), etnicamente de maioria germânica, uma Landtag é um poder legislativo unicameral . Nem todos os estados da Alemanha têm um corpo chamado de Landtag: nas cidades ...

  5. The Landtag of Prussia (German: Preußischer Landtag) was the representative assembly of the Kingdom of Prussia implemented in 1849, a bicameral legislature consisting of the upper House of Lords (Herrenhaus) and the lower House of Representatives (Abgeordnetenhaus). After World War I and the German Revolution of 1918–19 the Landtag diet continued as the parliament of the Free State of ...

  6. Prussian State Council. The Prussian House of Lords ( German: Preußisches Herrenhaus) in Berlin was the upper house of the Landtag of Prussia ( German: Preußischer Landtag ), the parliament of Prussia from 1850 to 1918. Together with the lower house, the House of Representatives ( Abgeordnetenhaus ), it formed the Prussian bicameral legislature.

  7. Prussian estates. The Prussian estates ( German: Preußischer Landtag, Polish: Stany pruskie) were representative bodies of Prussia, first created by the Monastic state of Teutonic Prussia in the 14th century (around the 1370s) [1] but later becoming a devolved legislature for Royal Prussia within the Kingdom of Poland.