1 / 43

Germany

Germany. Population: 83 million, Size ~ Montana. Path to German Unification. Before 1871, Germany had been divided into a series of small principalities. First attempt at unification was the Frankfurt Assembly in 1848.

christis
Télécharger la présentation

Germany

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Germany Population: 83 million, Size ~ Montana

  2. Path to German Unification Before 1871, Germany had been divided into a series of small principalities. First attempt at unification was the Frankfurt Assembly in 1848. A gathering of liberal intellectuals who petitioned Wilhelm I, the King of Prussia to lead a united Germany. Frankfurt Assembly 1848 Kaiser Wilhelm King of Prussia 1st Emperor of Germany 1871-1888

  3. Unification would finally occur under Prussian leadership of Otto von Bismarck in 1871, with a capital in Berlin. Although the first German empire did have an elected parliament that met in the Reichstag – the Chancellor was responsible only to the Kaiser (emperor), not the parliament. Otto von Bismarck Minister of Prussia 1st Chancellor of Germany 1871-1890

  4. German Unification 1871 German Empire (Reich) 1871-1919

  5. The Reichstag – German Parliament in Berlin

  6. Germany and World War I

  7. Trench Warfare, Tanks, Aircraft, Machine Guns, Nerve Gas, 10 million dead

  8. The formation and fall of the Weimar Republic The Weimar Republic emerged out of Germany’s defeat in WWI. The Weimar Republic, founded in 1919, was largely the work of Social Democrats and its institutions reflected their belief in liberal institutional principles.

  9. The Weimar Republic 1924-1933

  10. Presidential-Parliamentary System Kurt von Schleicher, Last Chancellor of Weimar Republic Dec 1932-Jan 1933 Friedrich Ebert President 1919-1925

  11. Hyperinflation

  12. Unemployment

  13. The Instability of the Republic Economic instability helped galvanize radical groups in inter-war Germany. They found numerous recruits in the masses of poor and demoralized WWI veterans who blamed the liberal democratic Weimar government for the terms of the Versailles treaty and Germany’s postwar misery.

  14. The German Nationalist People’s Party succeeded in electing former WWI Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg as Germany’s President in 1925 and was reelected in 1932. President Paul von Hindenburg, 1925-1934

  15. National Socialist German Worker’s Party (Nazi Party) In the meantime, the National Socialist German Worker’s Party (Nazi Party) was also growing in strength under the charismatic leadership of Adolf Hitler, who would take German nationalism in an entirely new and sinister direction.

  16. Appeal of the Nazis The Nazi party was a highly successful catch-all party It stood in opposition to the Communist Party (which it viewed as an outside agent for Soviet expansion) as well as the social democrats (which it viewed as an appeaser of Western imperialists). The appeal of the Nazi party was populist German nationalism and it drew widespread support across German society.

  17. Politics and Religion in the 1932 Election Distribution of Catholics Distribution of Nazi Voters

  18. March 1933 Parliamentary Elections

  19. Nazi Germany 1933-1945 Adolph Hitler, Chancellor 1933-1945, President 1934-1945 (Führer) National Socialist German Workers' Party - Nazi 1919-1945

  20. World War II defeat – complete destruction of Germany

  21. Division of Germany 1945-1990

  22. The Berlin Wall 1961-1989

  23. Construction of the Berlin Wall 1961

  24. Fall of Berlin Wall, Thursday November 9, 1989 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zmRPP2WXX0U

  25. Unification of Germany October 3, 1990

  26. The Grand Coalition 2005-present Angela Merkel, Chancellor of Germany, CDU 2005-pres. Gerhard Schroeder, Chancellor of Germany, SPD 1998-2005

  27. Democracy in the Federal Republic of Germany

  28. Denazification Only partial denazification after WWII. Many former middle level Nazi bureaucrats and administrators found positions in post-war Germany, especially in the courts. Most, however, embraced new democratic parties on either the right or left.

  29. The Basic Law Germany’s first postwar constitution Established by German leaders selected by Western occupiers Framers were not directly elected as in the Weimar Republic. Intended as a compromise, temporary “basic law” or Grundgesetz. The Grundgesetz was set to expire following German reunification after which a permanent constitution would be established (had to wait 40 years).

  30. Constitutional Reform? The Basic Law was never submitted to a popular vote. Ratified by regional state legislatures. There has still never been a popular vote on the Basic Law even following reunification. The Basic Law was just declared binding on former East Germany as well. This has led some in Germany to call for its replacement with a real Constitution.

  31. The Federal System Germany divided into 16 states (Lander) three of which are city-states (Berlin, Hamburg, Bremen). Each state (Land) has its own unicameral State legislature (Landtag), elected every 4-5 years at different staggered periods. Each state has its own state government appointed by the majority party in the Landtag, headed by a minister-president (like a governor).

  32. Bundesrat - Upper House The Bundesrat directly represents the states. Representatives chosen by majority party in each state legislature. Bundesrat members vote based on instructions from state legislatures (delegate vs. trustee).

  33. Bundestag - Lower House The Bundestag: the lower house of the national legislature or Federal Diet It functions something like the British House of Commons – people elect representatives, who appoint government, and may remove government.

  34. Political Parties in the Federal Republic of Germany Social Democratic Party SDP 1863-present Christian Democratic Union CDU, 1945-present Christian Social Union of Bavaria 1945- The Left - 2007 The Greens 1979-present Free Democratic Party 1948-

  35. Islam in Germany There are about 3 million Muslims (mostly Turks) living in Germany. So far, German institutions have been more accommodating to religious rights of Muslims than France.

  36. US German Relations?

  37. US Military Bases in Germany

More Related