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  • ...unity between German militarism and German culture ultimately backfired on Germany's reputation abroad. * That Germany caused this war
    3 KB (485 words) - 17:22, 3 February 2010
  • ...ution dispersion modeling|air pollution dispersion model]], developed in [[Germany]], for simulating the dispersion of air pollutants in the ambient [[Earth's
    232 bytes (28 words) - 23:58, 25 May 2011
  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • *[http://www.jamiecullum.de/ Official Universal Music Germany website]
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  • ...Paris X – Nanterre (France) and J.W. Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main (Germany).</small>]
    499 bytes (63 words) - 00:21, 14 September 2013
  • ...ine, Maas or Meuse, and Schelde) in north-western Europe; situated between Germany and Belgium, and bordering the North Sea to the north and west; founding me
    343 bytes (48 words) - 14:22, 8 March 2009
  • {{rpl|Imperial Germany}}
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  • '''Mainz''' is the capital of the [[Germany|German]] federal state [[Rhineland-Palatinate]] and is situated directly at
    333 bytes (47 words) - 01:54, 7 October 2013
  • *(with [[Condoleezza Rice]]) ''Germany Unified and Europe Transformed: A Study in Statecraft'' (Harvard University
    381 bytes (48 words) - 15:14, 29 March 2024
  • ...ermanic languages|West-Germanic language]], the [[official language]] of [[Germany]], [[Austria]] and [[Liechtenstein]], one of several official languages in
    282 bytes (33 words) - 09:13, 10 January 2012
  • |Germany |Germany
    1,012 bytes (135 words) - 23:00, 19 October 2009
  • ...ll, in August 2009, present his credentials. From the American standpoint, Germany stands at the center of European affairs and is a key partner in U.S. relat ...ues to recognize that the security and prosperity of the United States and Germany significantly depend on each other.
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  • ...views a heap of corpses at the Buchenwald concentration camp near Weimar, Germany.}}. ...ll). It operated between July 1937 and April 1945 and lay in east-central Germany, about five miles northwest of the city of Weimar, in a wooded area on the
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  • ...e [[Beer Hall Putsch]]; later [[Reich Minister of the Interior]] of [[Nazi Germany]] with authority over the [[Nuremberg Laws]]; titular authority over the po
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  • ...'''Drenthe''' lies in the northeastern section of the country, bordering [[Germany]] in the east, [[Groningen]] province in the north, [[Friesland]] province
    334 bytes (45 words) - 07:20, 4 February 2008
  • ...rom [[Austria]] and [[Slovenia]] in the east, through [[Liechtenstein]], [[Germany]], [[Italy]] and [[Switzerland]] to [[France]] in the west.
    330 bytes (46 words) - 18:43, 14 July 2008
  • ...diterranean]] in the south-east; bounded by [[Belgium]], [[Luxembourg]], [[Germany]], [[Switzerland]], [[Italy]], [[Monaco]], [[Andorra]] and [[Spain]]; found
    463 bytes (52 words) - 07:08, 14 February 2013
  • ...August 1998, Hamburg, Germany) was a [[Jew]]ish&ndash;[[Catholic]]&ndash;[[Germany|German]]&ndash;[[Russia]]n composer who enjoyed great fame in Russia and [[
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  • ...rope (population c. 8.2 million; capital Vienna), bordered to the north by Germany and the Czech Republic; to the south by Italy and Slovenia; to the west by
    295 bytes (45 words) - 10:02, 4 June 2009
  • ...' usually refers to the Allied-led initiative for the rearmament of [[West Germany]], so it could become a militarily significant part of the [[NATO|North Atl the cost of a rapid reunification of Germany ([[Wiedervereinigung]]).<ref>{{citation
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  • ...plification. The first electric piano, the Neo-Bechstein, was developed in Germany in the 1930's [http://120years.net/machines/grosstonorgel/index.html]. othe
    442 bytes (59 words) - 14:32, 14 December 2009
  • It drains areas in Eastern Germany and much of [[Austria]], emptying into the [[North Sea]].
    305 bytes (45 words) - 07:56, 8 June 2009
  • First President of the Reichsbank during the rearmament of Germany, resigning in 1930, returning there and to the Ministry of the Economy in 1
    370 bytes (53 words) - 13:28, 10 January 2011
  • : Germany: :: Germany defaults on War Reparations
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  • * Herbert Hoover's 1946 - 1947 factfinding mission to Germany. [http://www.trumanlibrary.org/whistlestop/study_collections/marshall/large ...947-02-26&documentid=5166&pagenumber=1 The President's Economic Mission to Germany and Austrian, Report No. 1, German Agricultural and Food Requirements], Feb
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  • ...n agreement with Graefe, temporarily giving the DVFP dominance in northern Germany while the [[Nazi Party]] retained dominance in the South. [[Hermann Esser]] ...[[Erich Ludendorff]] authorized the DVFP as his representative in northern Germany, further challenging Hitler. <ref>{{citation
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  • {{r|Germany}}
    217 bytes (26 words) - 11:22, 27 July 2009
  • ...t Union and the United States represented; dealt with the [[Occupation of Germany]], the joint [[Potsdam Declaration]] to Japan, and a secret agreement for t
    360 bytes (55 words) - 21:42, 20 September 2010
  • {{r|Nazi Germany}}
    237 bytes (31 words) - 18:04, 12 January 2009
  • ...ake more rational the distribution of charity originated in [[Elberfeld]], Germany and spread to Great Britain and the U.S. in the late 1870s. [[Charity organ
    431 bytes (59 words) - 22:09, 22 May 2008
  • ...tler moustache]] on the [[Passover_Seder#The_Four_Sons|wicked son]]. Soon Germany and Britain were at war, however, and Szyk's history of opposition to the N
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  • {{r|Wilhelm II (Germany)}}
    270 bytes (35 words) - 14:41, 11 December 2010
  • ...l Fund''' of the United States (GMF) was created in 1972, by a gift from [[Germany]] as a memorial to the [[Marshall Plan]]. It is a nonpartisan American publ
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • |Germany |Germany
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  • ...on its southern borders with the Czech Republic and Slovakia; also borders Germany to the west, the Russian Federation and Lithuania to the north-east, and Be
    364 bytes (54 words) - 01:24, 12 August 2008
  • * [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,695837-1,00.html "A New Germany Rises"], ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]'', September 12, 2004
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  • ...ope]], bordered by [[Belgium]] to the west, [[France]] to the south, and [[Germany]] to the east.
    446 bytes (52 words) - 12:53, 7 October 2010
  • ...teratur in Deutschland (Transl.: "Amma Darko – Intercultural Literature in Germany?")
    879 bytes (105 words) - 20:11, 15 September 2013
  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • ...ich absorbed all other national foreign intelligence organizations of Nazi Germany. <ref name=WS-AFF>{{citation ...intelligence and [[counterespionage]] functions, and attributed it part to Germany's not having a "Secret Service" tradition like that of the British [[Secret
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  • ...s]]. Its drains into the [[North Sea]]. It drains areas of [[France]], [[Germany]], [[Switzerland]], [[Luxembourg]] and the [[Netherlands]].
    381 bytes (54 words) - 08:49, 8 June 2009
  • '''Lübeck''' is a city in the state of [[Schleswig-Holstein]] in northern [[Germany]]. It is located on the [[Trave River]], near the [[Baltic Sea]]. Lübeck i ...ng city of the [[Hanseatic League]], and it was the second largest city in Germany (after [[Cologne]]) during the 13th century. The city was growing rich on t
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  • *[[Ministry of Defense of Germany]]
    502 bytes (59 words) - 21:18, 19 February 2010
  • ...e '''Kasner''') is a German politician. She is the current Chancellor of [[Germany]] (the equivalent of Prime Minister in other countries), having taken offic
    450 bytes (64 words) - 18:54, 29 July 2009
  • ..."unification". It is the specific term for the formal annexation by [[Nazi Germany]] of Austria, then a federal state, into the Third Reich on 13 March 1938.
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  • ...f [[concentration camp|concentration]] and [[extermination camp]]s of Nazi Germany, with a mixed chain of command but principally under the [[WVHA]] economic
    492 bytes (72 words) - 12:02, 18 May 2023
  • {{r|Germany}}
    379 bytes (50 words) - 05:22, 3 September 2009
  • ...ds of the [[Peres Centre for Peace]] in Israel and the [[Global Panel]] in Germany
    425 bytes (56 words) - 02:06, 6 October 2009
  • '''Duisburg''' is a city in [[Germany]], on the [[Rhine River]]. It lies within a heavily industrialized areawhe
    336 bytes (47 words) - 07:55, 8 June 2009
  • {{r|Nazi Germany}}
    257 bytes (36 words) - 13:54, 1 August 2013
  • ...al Protestantism. The movement began in England in the 1850s and spread to Germany. It predated modern trade unionism. 2) Quite different forms of 20th centur
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  • ...originates in [[Switzerland]] and flows North for about 700 km through [[Germany]]; it bends West near the city of [[Kleve]] and crosses the Dutch-German bo ...hein-Westfalen''), one of the most industrialized ''Länder'' (states) of [[Germany]].
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  • ...nclude>After the [[Bolshevik Revolution]] and Russia's separate peace with Germany, the Western Allies and Japan sent troops to [[Siberia]] in August 1918, t
    429 bytes (59 words) - 13:13, 30 August 2010
  • Before the '''Nazi'''s took power, Germany had a well-established system of '''military ranks'''. The early [[Sturmabt ...he military (but not the SS) had no rank of [[brigadier general]]. In both Germany and the Soviet Union, the "Generalmajor" rank was equivalent to the "one-st
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  • ...ds]] and also of the capital city of that province. The province borders [[Germany]] in the east, [[Friesland]] province in the west, and [[Drenthe]] province
    347 bytes (50 words) - 07:32, 4 February 2008
  • ...[[Abwehr]]; drafted "Provisional Basic Law of the State" for a post-coup Germany in 1938-1939; executed for participating in the [[1944 assassination attemp
    487 bytes (68 words) - 23:41, 28 November 2010
  • ...liothek]]: [http://www.d-nb.de/wir/kooperation/issn.htm Getting an ISSN in Germany]
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  • {{Image|Magdeburg.jpg|right|400px|Position of Magdeburg in middle Germany}} ...period of German partition, it was the most important inland port of East Germany. With about 230,000 inhabitants it is the second largest city of the state.
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  • |UK/Germany/EU
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • .... He was born in [[Berlin]], [[Germany]] into a [[Jewish]] family and left Germany in 1933 after the rise of [[Adolf Hitler]] to national political power. Aft
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  • ...in Rotterdam, he lived in France, Belgium, Italy, England, Switzerland and Germany, and died in Basel. In another way he introduced a new slant by trying to
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  • '''Joseph Beuys''' (May 12 1921, Krefeld, Germany - January 23 1986, Dusseldorf) was a German sculptor and performance artist Beuys was born in Krefeld, Germany, in 1921 and was educated in Rindern. He served in the German air force dur
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  • ...ntral candle being lit on [[Christmas Eve]]. The Advent Wreath began in [[Germany]] as a private observance in people's homes, but is now widely used in [[ch
    451 bytes (68 words) - 21:50, 22 May 2008
  • |UK/Germany/EU
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  • {{r|Nazi Germany}}
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  • * Friedlander, Saul. ''Nazi Germany and the Jews: Volume 1: The Years of Persecution 1933-1939'' (1998) ...007), the standard history [http://www.amazon.com/Years-Extermination-Nazi-Germany-1939-1945/dp/0060190434/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1195979435&sr=8-1 ex
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  • {{Image|UBA Dessau.jpg|right|400px|UBA headquarters building in Dessau, Germany}} ...l federal authority for [[Natural environment|environmental]] matters in [[Germany]]. The agency is commonly referred to as the '''UBA''', an acronym for its
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  • |UK/Germany/EU
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • ...s started on [[March 22]], 1935, and its headquarters was in [[Berlin]], [[Germany]]. It was managed by [[Eugen Hadamovsky]], who held the title of "Reichsse ...of his early televisors. Indeed, the mechanical television system used in Germany was first developed via Baird Television's German affiliate, [[Fernseh AG]]
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • ...rff''' (1865-1937) was First Quartermaster-General/Chief of Army Staff for Germany in [[World War I]], generally considered the "brains behind" commander-in-c ...support him. From this, he initiated the "stab in the back" concept: that Germany was never defeated on the battlefield, but betrayed at home, an idea import
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  • ...asion of Poland''',code named Case White, began on 1 September 1939 after Germany had staged a Polish attack. At the orders of [[Adolf Hitler]], had been pl *Western: [[Warthegau]], to be absorbed into Greater Germany
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  • ...in German) was an internationally-known German art school in [[Weimar]], [[Germany]], founded by architect [[Walter Gropius]] in 1919 that combined [[fine art
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  • ...n [[human-source intelligence]] and counterintelligence activities of Nazi Germany, the '''Sicherheitsdienst''', best known as the '''SD''', was created as a | title = Germany's Venlo sting completely compromised an already shaky British Intelligence
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  • '''1973 7" single''' (Austria/Germany: Atlantic ATL 10316) '''1973 7" single''' (Germany: Atlantic ATL 10316)
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  • ...nt''' is an [[alcohol|alcoholic]] [[beverage]] from northern [[Frisia]], [[Germany]]. It is simple to make: to a cup of hot chocolate, add 4 cl (about one [[
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  • *[[Operation Uranus]]: Soviet Union vs. Germany at Stalingrad; Soviet victory *[[Capture of Metz]]: United States vs. Germany at Metz, France; U.S., under [[George S. Patton]], victorious
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  • Combinos are used in [[Germany]], [[Netherlands]], [[Hungary]], [[Switzerland]], [[Poland]], [[Japan]] and
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  • ...as commonly used for a legislative body in mediaeval [[Germany]]. Imperial Germany was the most influential model for the process of modernization undertaken
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  • ...under this doctrine had the right to territorial "compensation", based on Germany's being the dominant land power in Europe and prepared to enforce its deman | title = Dreadnought: Britain, Germany and the Coming of the Great War
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • ...im as ''liberator haud dubie Germaniae'' ("unquestionably the liberator of Germany").
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • Born Frederick Lindemann in Baden-Baden, Germany in 1886, and later created '''Lord Cherwell''', 1st Viscount of Cherwell, h ...er Sir [[Arthur Harris]]. He supported the [[Morgenthau Plan]] for postwar Germany, which would have reduced it to an agricultural society.
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  • ...]] headquarters personnel, for planning and implementing [[war crime]]s in Germany and Nazi-occupied countries. The largest share of defendants belonged to t | author = Office of Military Government for Germany (US) | title= Indictment, Nuremberg Military Tribunal 11 - Ministries Case.
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  • !Germany ! Germany 2006
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  • ...rman Petrochem Plant.jpg|right|200px|Petrochemical plant in Gelsenkirchen, Germany}} ...Ludwigshafen.jpg|right|200px|The BASF Group headquarters in Ludwigshafen, Germany. The largest industrial complex in Europe.}}
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  • ...elzel, Alexandra. 'The Singing Muse: Three Centuries of Music Education in Germany.' Journal of Historical Research in Music Education XXVI no. 1 (2004): 8-27 *Kertz-Welzel, Alexandra. 'General Music Education in Germany Today: A Look at How Popular Music is Engaging Students.' General Music Tod
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  • ...hout the League's consent, was designed to prevent political union between Germany and Austria. In the case of [[Carinthia]], however, the treaty did allow p ...cknowledge responsibility for loss and damage caused in the war and, as in Germany's case, required to pay reparations. Reparations were in-kind and no finan
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • ===Germany===
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  • ====Germany ==== ...ted Kingdom. These countries, in turn, used their reparation payments from Germany to service their war debts to the United States.
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • ...''Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe'' [Museum for Art and Craft] in Hamburg ([[Germany]]).
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • ...''spritzen'', "spray" or "sprinkle", however mixed wine and soda drinks in Germany are termed ''Schorlen'' (i.e. a white wine and apple juice spritzer is call
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • * Russell F. Weigley. ''Eisenhower's Lieutenants: The Campaign of France and Germany 1944-1945'' (1981)
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • ...to Europe, and later she followed the allied Seventh Army through parts of Germany. At the end of the war, she was with the allied Third Army and went to Ber Following Germany's defeat, Barden wrote multiple articles warning that the occupying troops'
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/William II (Germany)]]. Needs checking by a human.
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  • ...ted Kingdom. These countries, in turn, used their reparation payments from Germany to service their war debts to the United States. ...onomic activity in the United States started in 1929, economic activity in Germany was already declining.
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  • ...ured the Czechs, who might have intervened, that they faced no threat from Germany''
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  • ...eneral [[Maxime Weygand]], the commander of French forces in North Africa. Germany forced Weygand to return to metropolitan France, where he retired but was s ...[division]] and became deputy commander of the French occupation forces in Germany.
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  • In Germany, as the Nazis rose to power, the '''''Sturmabteilung''''' (SA), also known
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  • |colspan="2" align="center"|[[Image:Flag of Germany.svg|150px]] Flag of Germany.
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  • ===Germany 1920-1945===
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  • ...cemetery is unique in that many of the Canadian soldiers fallen in nearby Germany are buried here. General [[H. D. G. Crerar]], who commanded the Canadian l ...n ideal because the cemetery is on a hilltop overlooking the border with Germany. The work on the cemetery began in the summer of 1945 and was conducted und
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  • {{rpl|Social legislation (Germany)}}
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  • ...ey Made in the Summer of 1794, through Holland and the Western Frontier of Germany, with a Return Down the Rhine: To Which Are Added Obersavtions During a Tou
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  • ...p was marked by the [[Munich Conference]], when France and Britain allowed Germany to annex the Sudetan areas of Czechoslovakia. ...newspaper. Following Hitler's invasion of Poland, Daladier declared war on Germany two days after [[Neville Chamberlain]] of Britain, on September 3 1939. Dal
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  • ...of injuries caused by [[mustard gas]], called "Lost" or "Yellow Cross" by Germany.
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  • {{r|William II (Germany)}}
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  • ...ebbels]] to succeed him as [[Wikipedia:Chancellor of Germany|Chancellor of Germany]]. ...in violation of the [{Treaty of Versailles]], which forbade submarines to Germany. Much more complex, however, are the issues about the conduct of the war a
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  • ...manMausoleum.jpg|right|350px|Altes Mausoleum in Park Rosenhöhe, Darmstadt, Germany.}}
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  • ...re the [[WWI Guilt Clause|War Guilt Clause]] created lasting resentment in Germany, particularly among its armed forces. ...ee million and lost nearly three million, four hundred thousand lives.<ref>Germany and Austria together losing some three million</ref> The direct war expendi
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  • ...]. Wilson had to compromise with French leaders who wanted revenge against Germany, and deal with overlapping and conflicting claims of national self determin ...ague, Cohrs argues. Under combined British-American aegis, both France and Germany adopted the spirit and politics of productive mutual compromise. What stunt
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  • ...rs come from Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, Hong Kong SAR, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Korea, Luxembourg, Mexico,
    747 bytes (96 words) - 07:06, 3 February 2010
  • ...War I]]. Its initial purpose was to resist the spread of [[communism]] in Germany but it quickly became a focus for nationalism in the [[Weimar Republic]]. W
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  • ...the [[United States of America]], several in [[Canada]], and one each in [[Germany]] and [[Switzerland]].
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  • *3 December - Frankfurt, Germany *4 December - Ludwigshafen, Germany
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  • '''Ernst Kaltenbrunner''' (-1946) was an official of [[Nazi Germany]], with his final post being heading the [[Reich Main Security Administrati
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  • ...come hugely popular in continental [[Europe]], especially in [[France]], [[Germany]], eastern Europe and [[Scandinavia]]. It has been an [[Olympic Games|Olymp
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  • ====Germany====
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • ...t the unities would be regarded. They had little influence in Britain and Germany, which had different dramatic traditions.
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  • ...northern [[Europe]]. It shares only one land border, to the south, with [[Germany]]. To the west lies the [[North Sea]] and the [[Baltic Sea]] is to the east
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  • ...ce and its extensive park are located in the Graswang valley in Southern [[Germany]]. Ludwig began planning for the construction project in 1867 after a visi
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  • ...War II the Allies maintained a small weather station for most of the war. Germany tried and failed to establish its own weather station there.
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  • ...ery located in the village of [[Ettal]] in the Ammergau Alps of southern [[Germany]]. The monastery, founded in 1330 by [[Holy Roman Emperor]] [[Ludwig the B
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • ...reeley Schacht''' was president of the Reichsbank during the rearmament of Germany, resigning in 1930, before the Nazis took power. In 1934, he returned to th
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  • !align="center"|&nbsp;&nbsp; Germany &nbsp;&nbsp; !align="center"|&nbsp;&nbsp; Germany &nbsp;&nbsp;
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  • ...ds-Organisation der NSDAP]], which represented German Nazis living outside Germany. His positions included Gauleiter of the Foreign Organization of the Nazi P
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • |title=Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany ...n Destiny. Dictatorship, Foreign Policy, and War in Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany,'' (2000)
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  • |UK/Germany/EU
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  • '''Operation Sea Lion''' was the code name for Nazi Germany's planned, but never executed, invasion of Great Britain. The German Army a
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  • ...alin]]. Major areas of agreement included policies for the [[Occupation of Germany]] and conduct of the [[World War Two in the Pacific|war against Japan]]. Th ...ly as a means of forcing the Western allies to open a second front against Germany. By January 1944, however, Stalin had concluded it was in his country's in
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  • A '''morgen''' was a unit of [[measurement]] of land in [[Germany]], the [[Netherlands]] and the Dutch colonies, including [[South Africa]].
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  • ...academy/all-research-publications Kiel Institute for the World Economy] ''(Germany]''
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  • ...the [[Reichstag]], and a [[Wikipedia:Chancellor of Germany]|Chancellor of Germany] who was [[head of government]].
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  • * {{cite book| title=Zeppelin!: Germany and the Airship, 1900&ndash;1939| author=Guillaume de Syon| id=ISBN 0801867
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  • ====Germany====
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  • ...inate]], the British King's German possessions. She may have been born in Germany, herself.
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  • ...erbandsgemeinde]] [[Alzey-Land]] of the [[Landkreis]] [[Alzey-Worms]] of [[Germany]]'s [[Bundesland]] [[Rhineland-Palatinate]]. It lies in the heart of [[wine
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  • ...zi. He had run the Army intelligence branch directed at the Soviet Union. Germany took control in 1956. | title = The history of the Bundesnachrichtendienst(Germany’s Federal Intelligence Service)}}</ref>
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  • {{r|Great Depression in Germany}}
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  • ...on ''[[Drang nach Osten]]'', or expansion into Slavic lands to the east of Germany. ...nnotations of Teutonic knights of the Middle Ages, taking Slavic lands for Germany.<ref>{{citation
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  • ...n response to the [[Bolshevik Revolution]], Russia's separate surrender to Germany, and the Russian Civil War. The intervening forces supported White Russian ...Japan to move troops west from Vladivostok. Japan was also concerned that Germany might want the return of the seized German leasehold at Tsingtao.
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  • {{r|Great Depression in Germany}}
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  • The most famous group of rigid airships were the [[Zeppelin]]s built in [[Germany]]
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  • {{rpl|William II (Germany)}}
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  • ...habitants (January 1, 2010). The municipality is bounded on the east by [[Germany]] and in the south and west by the province of [[Limburg]]. The center is l Groesbeek is located in a hilly and wooded area that continues into Germany as the [[Reichswald]]. The hills and valleys of Groesbeek were formed arou
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  • The nations ranking was won by Germany with a total number of 12 medals (4 gold medals: dressage team, dressage in The nations ranking was won by Germany with a total number of 16 medals (7 gold medals: dressage team, dressage sp
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  • * [[Wilhelm II]] &ndash; Kaiser of Germany (1859–1941).
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  • A '''Pharisee''' is a special hot [[coffee]] [[beverage]] from Northern [[Germany]]. The base is strong [[coffee]] with [[sugar]], completed by 4 cl (one sh
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  • ...tic features. Adler advocated the Anschluss (unification) of Austria with Germany. He moved through the provincial legislatures and, in 1918, was Secretary
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  • ...Bernha, ''The State of Germany Atlas'' (1998) [http://www.amazon.com/State-Germany-Atlas-Bernha-Schafers/dp/0415188261/ref=sr_1_27?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1201324 ...al. ''Lonely Planet Germany'' (2007) [http://www.amazon.com/Lonely-Planet-Germany-Andrea-Schulte-Peevers/dp/1740599888/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1201324
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  • ...eloper of mobile clinics and preventive dentistry programs for children in Germany. According to the Bonn synogogue (2006) website ...e dental clinic for area schools. This preventive care model was unique in Germany. His work in making the benefits of dentistry available even to the poorest
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  • ...was established in 1930 to deal with the reparation payments imposed on [[Germany]] by the [[Treaty of Versailles]]. Nowadays it serves as the central banks�
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  • '''1995 CD single edition''' (Germany: Atlantic PRCD 27)
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  • ...land area is 944,735 square kilometres, which is about the size of France, Germany and the Netherlands combined.
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  • In Germany under the [[Weimar Republic]] (1919-1934), the '''Minister of Defense''' wa
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  • * Roseman, Mark. ''A Past in Hiding: Memory and Survival in Nazi Germany'' (2001). [http://books.google.com/books?id=W872LVPL_sUC&printsec=frontcove
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  • ...at the Institute of Social Research in [[Frankfurt am Main]], [[Hesse]], [[Germany]]. The institute was intended to be a German ''Marx-Engels-Institute (Mosc
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  • ...discovery, arrest, and execution. Providing information on both Japan and Germany, he is considered one of the most effective spies and espionage network lea
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  • !Germany
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  • {{rpl|Germany}}
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  • ...ince of Friesland (Fris. ''Fryslân'') and in a few small areas in northern Germany.<ref name=PositionFrisian/> It is commonly divided into three dialect area ...st Frisian (spoken in two neighboring municipalities in Saterland in the [[Germany|German]] ''Land'' of Lower Saxony; also known as ''Sater Frisian'');
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  • ...ecutions (out of 89,964-100,000 prisoners in all), located in east central Germany on the border with [[Czechoslovakia]]. Its laborers were used to extract s
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • ...is a now defunct German-American automaker that consisted of the merger of Germany's Daimler-Benz AG and the United States-based [[Chrysler Corporation]] in 1
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  • ==Haushofer and Germany==
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  • ...Phillips Newton. ''To Command the Sky: The Battle for Air Superiority over Germany, 1942-1944'' (1991)
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  • {{r|Federal Environment Agency of Germany}}
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  • ...pulation of Neuss is currently around 152,000 and is well known throughout Germany for its [[Schützenfest]]. ...(''Augusta Treverorum''), is one of the three oldest Roman settlements in Germany.
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  • {{r|Occupation of Germany}}
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  • During [[World War II]], before [[Germany]] attacked the [[Soviet Union]], Germany hired Soviet icebreakers to escort a [[merchant raider]] across the Norther
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  • ...he first systems of government mandated health insurance was instituted in Germany in 1883 under [[Otto Von Bismarck]]. A national health insurance act was pa
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  • | [[Germany]]
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  • ...gust 22, 1902 – September 8, 2003) was an accomplished but controversial [[Germany|German]] film maker. She was also a dancer and actress, but it was her pio ...he thought of Riefenstahl’s friendship with Hitler and her support of Nazi Germany, film historians agree that she was an outstanding innovator.
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  • {{r|Federal Environment Agency of Germany}}
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  • ...), Britain and France had few other good alternatives than trying to bleed Germany of every last cent.<ref>Paul F. Boller Jr. and John George, ''[http://books ...m on war debt repayments and reparations until 1932. Britain, France, and Germany readily agreed. But after 1932, Hoover was unwilling to continue the morat
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  • ...principally from the [[Satsuma Clan|Satsuma]] and [[Chosu Clan]]s, much as Germany had a traditional military elite.<ref>{{citation ==Haushofer and Germany==
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  • ...hem), [[Russia]], [[Estonia]], [[Latvia]], [[Lithuania]], [[Poland]] and [[Germany]]. The [[Kiel Canal]] is one of the main routes into the Baltic Sea, and th
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  • {{r|Great Depression in Germany}}
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  • {{r|Federal Environment Agency of Germany}}
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  • ...t project of Aerospatiale-Matra of France and DaimlerChrysler Aerospace of Germany, is now a subsidiary of the [[EADS]] company. The missile is now a product ...the French and German armies, by a joint manufacturing program of France, Germany and the UK. The UK chose not to procure it. <ref name=AT-TRIGAT>{{citation
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  • * Estes, Kenneth. "A European Anabasis: Western European Volunteers in the Germany Army and SS, 1940-1945" (Ph.D. diss., University of Maryland), 1984 * Friedlander, Saul. ''Nazi Germany and the Jews: Volume 1: The Years of Persecution 1933-1939'' (1998)
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  • *19 October 1994 - [[Große Freiheit 36]] - [[Hamburg]], [[Germany]] *20 October 1994 - Metrol - [[Berlin]], [[Germany]]
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • Borkum is served by the ferries to the towns of [[Emden]] ([[Germany]]) and [[Eemshaven]] ([[Netherlands]], near the city of [[Groningen]]). The
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  • * Beard, Charles. ''Martin Luther and the Reformation in Germany Until the Close of the Diet of Worms'' (1896) 468 pages; [http://books.goog
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  • ...of Westphalia]] in 1648, but returned by [[France]] to the newly-unified [[Germany]] under the [[1871]] [[Treaty of Frankfurt]] (which ended the [[Franco-Prus
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  • {{r|Federal Environment Agency of Germany}}
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  • ...ten, ''My Political Awakening''. It traced "corrosive Jewish influence" on Germany. Hitler found it resonating with his views:<blockquote>Once I had begun, I ...her Beobachter]]'', and also wrote the Nazi anthem, "Deutschland erwache" (Germany awake).<ref>{{citation
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  • As Nazi Germany pushed eastwards on the '''Russian front''' of '''World War II''', their re Germany ground forces fought hard, but after the summer of 1944 they were defeated
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  • ...r Force]] (RAF) initially decided there was no need to take photographs of Germany before the Second World War. He flew weapons into Pakistan and other crisi ...9, beginning with overflights of Italian colonies in Africa and later over Germany. <ref name=P1>{{citation
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  • {{r|Federal Environment Agency of Germany}}
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  • ..., known in [[French]] as '''Aix-la-Chapelle''', is the westernmost city of Germany. It has a population of 256605.<ref>[http://library.eb.co.uk/eb/article-900 Aachen is home to Schwertbad-Quelle, the warmest hot spring in Germany.
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  • ...tsche Forschungsgemeinschaft''' (English: German Research Foundation), a [[Germany|German]] organization based in Bonn, is a self-governing research funding b
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  • ...used by an aircraft to attack a ship. While it had been designed in 1939, Germany first used a rocket-boosted guided weapon, which was radio-controlled by a
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  • ...im, told [[Wilhelm II]] he had to abdicate. He later became [[President of Germany]] (1925-1934), and [[Adolf Hitler]] was only able to gain control after his
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  • ...explaining puzzles which she had confronted with her patients. She fled [[Germany]] in 1933 because of [[Nazi]] oppression and emigrated to the [[United Stat
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  • *Kavenna, Joanna (2005) ''The Ice Museum: to Shetland, Germany, Iceland, Norway, Estonia, Greenland, and Svalbard in Search of the Lost La
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  • ...ache]] in Switzerland, promoted to [[major]], and then military attache in Germany until 1922. ...first meeting of the [[Three Crows]], who were all attaches themselves, in Germany in 1921. This was a military faction that intended to modernize the Japanes
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  • ...of genocide, war crimes and other atrocities. In November 1945, 22 of Nazi Germany's leading figures took the stand in a trial that foreshadowed the trials of ...ears, until Robert Gellately &mdash; one of the premier historians of Nazi Germany &mdash; made them available to the public in this collection....[I]nterview
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • ...see through Hitler's tactics and supported the declaration of war against Germany after the invasion of [[Poland]]. ...to buy time so that Britain could rearm against the Nazi menace. Hitler's Germany invaded Poland on 1 September 1939, and following the debacle of the Britis
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • ...ition''' (US & Australia: Swan Song SS 70110, Canada: Swan Song SWS 70110, Germany: Swan Song SS K 19407, Japan: Warner-Pioneer P-35N, Portugal: Atlantic ATL
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  • ...rialization of the United States, the university adopted the approach of [[Germany|German]] universities and emphasized laboratory instruction from an early d
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  • He joined the [[Esalen Institute]] in 1960: "What the Bauhaus was in Germany for the creation of a new style in architecture and the arts, Esalen is as
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  • :Nationality: [[Germany|German]] :Nationality: [[Germany|German]]
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  • ...hnological Societies: Cabinet & Member Career Patterns in Austria, France, Germany & Great Britain
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  • ...vid Irving''' is a British historian specializing in World War II and Nazi Germany, called a revisionist by his supporters, but widely believed to be a Nazi a Due to his perceived pro-Nazi views, Canada, Austria, Germany and Australia bar him from entry. He has been a speaker at meetings of the
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  • ...ectured extensively in Australasia, [[Canada]], [[Denmark]], [[France]], [[Germany]], [[Italy]] and the [[United States of America|USA]]. He was awarded an MB
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  • ...forces deliberately and systematically toward the requirements of war, as Germany was compelled to do in the period between the two World Wars.<ref>Georg Tho William Shirer observed "Germany, of course, was not 'compelled' to prepare on such a scale for war &mdash;
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  • {{r|Federal Environment Agency of Germany}}
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  • Given the strain on its aircraft industry, Germany tried to produce far too many modifications of the basic Me-109, making it
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  • ...ne sculptures created in the final stages of the [[Late Gothic]] period in Germany.
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  • ...1968}}</ref> Before nuclear weapons, the air campaigns against Britain, Germany,<ref name=USSBS-ETO>{{citation ...rchill]]'s scientific advisor, insisted on "dehousing" targeting against Germany. Part of his reasoning was his bombers carried a heavier bombload that thei
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  • ...John Sepkoski, Jr. (University of Chicago), (1997). Paleo 21. Frankfurt, Germany, 1997. Retrieved from Natural History Museum, London England, Feb. 7, 2009
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  • {{r|Federal Environment Agency of Germany}}
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  • ...n the 16th and 17th centuries, originating from Italy and being brought to Germany via master builders and architects. As a visual alternative to stonework, s
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  • ...aniche'', is also used. Nowadays, it is argued that Poodles originated in Germany, but, as with most [[dog breed]]s, this is hotly debated.
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  • ...ty]] and [[third sector]] studies. He was born April 9, 1948 in Paderborn, Germany. He is professor emeritus at the Justus Liebig University in Giessen, where ...chitecture]] and [[Urban Planning]] at the Technical University Aachen ( [[Germany]]) in 1973.
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  • ...Representing Eisenhower, he signed the surrender documents with Italy and Germany.
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  • {{r|Germany}}
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  • ...distinguished record in [[World War I]], receiving the [[Pour le Merite]], Germany's highest decoration for bravery.
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  • {{r|Great Depression in Germany}}
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  • .... ''Public Attitudes toward Immigration in the United States, France, and Germany.'' Cambridge U. Press, 2000. 253 pp ...ty? Anti-Immigration Sentiment and Nativist Political Movements in France, Germany and the USA." ''Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies.'' Volume: 26#1 200
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  • [[Argentina]], [[Australia]], [[Brazil]], [[Canada]], China, [[France]], [[Germany]], [[India]], [[Indonesia]], [[Italy]], [[Japan]], [[Mexico]], [[Russia]],
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  • ...the defeat of [[Napoleon]]; including the creation of the Confederation of Germany :: - concluded the [[Treaty of Versailles|treaties of Versailles]] (with Germany), St Germain (with Austria), Trianon (with Hungary), Neuilly (with Bulgaria
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  • In [[National Socialism|Nazi Germany]] the '''''Völkischer Beobachter''''' was the official national newspaper
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  • ...anada/New Zealand: Swan Song SS 71003, Ecuador/Uruguay: Atlantic 45-73015, Germany/Holland: Swan Song SS 19421, Italy: Swan Song W-19421, Japan: Warner Pionee
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  • [[Germany]]
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