12:53
Weimar Constitution [History]
Weimar Constitution [History] History EdExcel iGCSE iLessonsOnline -----------------------...
published: 04 Jan 2012
Author: iLessonsOnline
Weimar Constitution [History]
Weimar Constitution [History] History EdExcel iGCSE iLessonsOnline ---------------------------------- I Use ---------------------------------- Wacom Bamboo Tablet Camtasia ----------------------------------
1:07
Who supported or opposed the Weimar constitution?
Who supported or opposed the Weimar constitution?...
published: 05 Nov 2009
Author: mrallsop
Who supported or opposed the Weimar constitution?
Who supported or opposed the Weimar constitution?
3:08
Little Big History - The Weimar Constitution
Part of a series of levels planned by S4 Standard Grade History Pupils about the situation...
published: 23 Aug 2011
Author: littlebighistory
Little Big History - The Weimar Constitution
Part of a series of levels planned by S4 Standard Grade History Pupils about the situation facing Germany after WW1. This level is about the Weimar Constitution.
8:33
German History Revision Episode 1 - A 'Bissy' Background
Part of our series focusing on Germany from 1870 - 1945. Useful for GCSE and A-Level Histo...
published: 14 Feb 2012
Author: TalkHistory
German History Revision Episode 1 - A 'Bissy' Background
Part of our series focusing on Germany from 1870 - 1945. Useful for GCSE and A-Level History revision as well as general interest!
0:50
1931 Germans celebrate Constitution Day
August 11, 1931. Following the end of World War I, a German National Assembly gathered in ...
published: 09 Mar 2009
Author: skoblinI
1931 Germans celebrate Constitution Day
August 11, 1931. Following the end of World War I, a German National Assembly gathered in the town of Weimar, in the state of Thuringia, in January 1919 to write a constitution for the Reich. The nation was to be a democratic federal republic, governed by a president and parliament. The constitution was drafted by the lawyer and liberal politician Hugo Preuss, who was then state secretary in the Ministry of the Interior, and later became Minister of the Interior. Disagreements arose between the delegates over issues such as the national flag, religious education for youth, and the rights of the provinces (Länder) that made up the Reich. These disagreements were resolved by the August of 1919, though sixty-seven delegates abstained from voting to adopt the Weimar Constitution. The Republic's first President, Friedrich Ebert, signed the new German constitution into law on August 11, 1919, henceforth known as Constitution Day. The first article of the constitution stated that "The power of the state emanates from the people." The fundamental tenet of the Weimar Constitution was that Germany was to be a republic on the parliamentary model with a parliament elected using proportional representation. Universal suffrage was established, with a minimum voting age of 20.
2:51
call and response Weimar
How to teach the Weimar Constitution to GVSE students...
published: 29 Mar 2011
Author: jumbogabby
call and response Weimar
How to teach the Weimar Constitution to GVSE students
2:44
Weimar Bonn Berlin: Milestones in German History I
Part 1: 90th Anniversary - Weimar Constitution: Women Get the Right to Vote...
published: 20 Apr 2009
Author: magazinedeutschland
Weimar Bonn Berlin: Milestones in German History I
Part 1: 90th Anniversary - Weimar Constitution: Women Get the Right to Vote
8:58
Can'dan Kanadoğlu'na Hukuk Dersi II
Sabih Kanadolu liyakatını ve bilgisini 2009 yılı problemlerini Almanya...
published: 28 Jan 2010
Author: Youtubist007
Can'dan Kanadoğlu'na Hukuk Dersi II
Sabih Kanadolu liyakatını ve bilgisini 2009 yılı problemlerini Almanyanın lavedilmiş 1919 Anayasıyla çözmeye kalkarak bir kere daha ıspat etti. Her dediğini kanun gibi kabul edip alkışlayan tiplere alışık olduğu için, söylediklerini sorgulayan biri karşısında Kanadoğlu sık sık ufladı puffladı. Bu gün yapılan bu dediği şeyler aca şimdimi yapılmaya başladı yoksa şimdi ellerinden çıkmaya başladığı için mi çığlık çığlığa. Weimar Yasaları Wikipedia'dan: en.wikipedia.org Origin Following the end of World War I, a German National Assembly gathered in the town of Weimar, in the state of Thuringia, in January 1919 to write a constitution for the Reich. The nation was to be a democratic federal republic, governed by a president and parliament. The constitution was drafted by the lawyer and liberal politician Hugo Preuss, who was then state secretary in the Ministry of the Interior, and later became Minister of the Interior. Disagreements arose between the delegates over issues such as the national flag, religious education for youth, and the rights of the provinces (Länder) that made up the Reich. These disagreements were resolved by August 1919, though sixty-seven delegates abstained from voting to adopt the Weimar Constitution. The Republic's first President, Friedrich Ebert, signed the new German constitution into law on August 11, 1919. The first article of the constitution stated that "The power of the state emanates from the people." The fundamental tenet of the Weimar <b>...</b>
7:36
Can'dan Kanadoğlu'na Hukuk Dersi I
Sabih Kanadolu liyakatını ve bilgisini 2009 yılı problemlerini Almanya...
published: 28 Jan 2010
Author: Youtubist007
Can'dan Kanadoğlu'na Hukuk Dersi I
Sabih Kanadolu liyakatını ve bilgisini 2009 yılı problemlerini Almanyanın lavedilmiş 1919 Anayasıyla çözmeye kalkarak bir kere daha ıspat etti. Her dediğini kanun gibi kabul edip alkışlayan tiplere alışık olduğu için, söylediklerini sorgulayan biri karşısında Kanadoğlu sık sık ufladı puffladı. Bu gün yapılan bu dediği şeyler aca şimdimi yapılmaya başladı yoksa şimdi ellerinden çıkmaya başladığı için mi çığlık çığlığa. Weimar Yasaları Wikipedia'dan: en.wikipedia.org Origin Following the end of World War I, a German National Assembly gathered in the town of Weimar, in the state of Thuringia, in January 1919 to write a constitution for the Reich. The nation was to be a democratic federal republic, governed by a president and parliament. The constitution was drafted by the lawyer and liberal politician Hugo Preuss, who was then state secretary in the Ministry of the Interior, and later became Minister of the Interior. Disagreements arose between the delegates over issues such as the national flag, religious education for youth, and the rights of the provinces (Länder) that made up the Reich. These disagreements were resolved by August 1919, though sixty-seven delegates abstained from voting to adopt the Weimar Constitution. The Republic's first President, Friedrich Ebert, signed the new German constitution into law on August 11, 1919. The first article of the constitution stated that "The power of the state emanates from the people." The fundamental tenet of the Weimar <b>...</b>
14:36
German History Revision Episode 3 - Wilhelmine Germany Part 1
Part of our series focusing on Germany from 1870 - 1945. Useful for GCSE and A-Level Histo...
published: 14 Feb 2012
Author: TalkHistory
German History Revision Episode 3 - Wilhelmine Germany Part 1
Part of our series focusing on Germany from 1870 - 1945. Useful for GCSE and A-Level History revision as well as general interest!
8:47
German History Revision Episode 2 - Who Ran Germany?
Part of our series focusing on Germany from 1870 - 1945. Useful for GCSE and A-Level Histo...
published: 14 Feb 2012
Author: TalkHistory
German History Revision Episode 2 - Who Ran Germany?
Part of our series focusing on Germany from 1870 - 1945. Useful for GCSE and A-Level History revision as well as general interest!
10:28
German History Revision Episode 5 - Wilhelmine Foreign Policy
Part of our series focusing on Germany from 1870 - 1945. Useful for GCSE and A-Level Histo...
published: 14 Feb 2012
Author: TalkHistory
German History Revision Episode 5 - Wilhelmine Foreign Policy
Part of our series focusing on Germany from 1870 - 1945. Useful for GCSE and A-Level History revision as well as general interest!
3:35
Wehrmacht Tribute
signup.thewarinc.com Cerdit goes to people who posted clips of the German Army Cerdit goes...
published: 21 Jan 2010
Author: HalftrackProduction
Wehrmacht Tribute
signup.thewarinc.com Cerdit goes to people who posted clips of the German Army Cerdit goes people who made these awsome music All do is use randoms clips put them together (make them fit the music) and add a song to it. i did not steal these videos, they came from my old account Jonny992 which youtube banned. Cerdit ww2 soldiers Music: please tell me if u know the aurthor, i do not know. Before the rise of the NSDAP, the term Wehrmacht generically described the domestic armed forces, of any nation, being used as the "home defence" version of the German Streitmacht or foreign war forces, thus, Britische Wehrmacht denoted "British defence forces". The term is in Article 47 of the 1919 Weimar Constitution, establishing that "Der Reichspräsident hat den Oberbefehl über die gesamte Wehrmacht des Reiches" ("The National President holds supreme command of all armed forces of the nation). From 1919 until its renaming to Wehrmacht in 1936, the German armed force had been known as the Reichswehr ("National Defence"). After World War II, and under Allied occupation, the Wehrmacht was abolished in Germany. In 1955, when the western Federal Republic of Germany re-militarized, its armed forces were named the Bundeswehr ("Federal Defence"). In 1956, upon formal establishment, the armed forces of the eastern German Democratic Republic (GDR) were named the Nationale Volksarmee (National People's Army), some of whom, with materiel, were incorporated to the present-day Bundeswehr when the <b>...</b>
9:11
German History Revision Episode 6 - Balkan Crisis
Part of our series focusing on Germany from 1870 - 1945. Useful for GCSE and A-Level Histo...
published: 14 Feb 2012
Author: TalkHistory
German History Revision Episode 6 - Balkan Crisis
Part of our series focusing on Germany from 1870 - 1945. Useful for GCSE and A-Level History revision as well as general interest!
Vimeo results:
2:45
Weimar Bonn Berlin: Milestones in German History II
60th Anniversary Basic Law West Germany Turns toward Europe...
published: 22 Apr 2009
Author: Deutschlandonline
Weimar Bonn Berlin: Milestones in German History II
60th Anniversary Basic Law West Germany Turns toward Europe
2:40
Weimar Bonn Berlin: Milestones in German History I
Part 1: 90th Anniversary - Weimar Constitution: Women Get the Right to Vote...
published: 20 Apr 2009
Author: Deutschlandonline
Weimar Bonn Berlin: Milestones in German History I
Part 1: 90th Anniversary - Weimar Constitution: Women Get the Right to Vote
4:14
Region Around the Heart
As an immigrant from Germany who has lived in England before coming to Canada, the questio...
published: 12 Sep 2010
Author: Stephanie Weimar
Region Around the Heart
As an immigrant from Germany who has lived in England before coming to Canada, the question of where is home and to find a home has become an intriguing subject and obsession for me.
Where is home and what is home when the place of origin is no longer the place where one feels one belongs but nevertheless constitutes a big part of identity? When I speak to people with similar histories, I find that a sense of being in more than one place in the same time is a very common experience.
For this documentary, I talked to four individuals about their experiences of home: My mother from Germany, who has never left the town she was born in; Mitra, a woman from Iran; Di, a woman from China and Kennedy, a man from Uganda.
Although my personal experience is closest to those of the three immigrants, it was my mother who finally provided an answer to my question ‘Where and what is home?’
8:40
Ich Lubbe Berlin!
www.reakt.org/ich_lubbe_berlin
The Reichstag fire, a pivotal event in the establishment o...
published: 18 Apr 2008
Author: aksioma
Ich Lubbe Berlin!
www.reakt.org/ich_lubbe_berlin
The Reichstag fire, a pivotal event in the establishment of Nazi Germany, began at 9:14 PM on the night of February 27, 1933, when a Berlin fire station received an alarm that the Reichstag building, assembly location of the German Parliament, was ablaze. The fire seemed to have been started in several places, and by the time the police and firemen arrived a huge explosion had set the main Chamber of Deputies in flames. Looking for clues, the police quickly found Marinus van der Lubbe, shirtless, inside the building. Van der Lubbe was a Dutch insurrectionary council communist and unemployed bricklayer who had recently arrived in Germany.
Adolf Hitler and Hermann Göring arrived soon after, and, when they were shown van der Lubbe, Göring immediately declared the fire was set by the Communists and had the party leaders arrested. Hitler declared a state of emergency and encouraged aging president Paul von Hindenburg to sign the Reichstag Fire Decree, suspending the basic rights provisions of the Weimar constitution.
The Nazi leaders were determined to demonstrate the Reichstag Fire was a deed of the Comintern.
In December 2005 SilentCell Network burns the Reichstag again!
--------------------
Subject: Re: Akt!
Action: Ich Lubbe Berlin!
Location: Reichstag, Berlin, Germany
Date: December 23th 2005
Author: SilentCell Network (M. Bulc, J. Janša, B. Kunst, I. Stromajer)
Production: Intima, Aksioma, No-History
www.intima.org
www.aksioma.org
www.nohistory.org
www.silentcellnetwork.org
www.reakt.org
Supported by the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Slovenia
Youtube results:
7:36
Review: 15mm Late War German Infantry Heavy Weapons | Plastic Soldier Company | Flames of War
Visit our website: www.modelloursworkshop.com Facebook: www.facebook.com BattleFoam: www.b...
published: 22 May 2012
Author: MoWoFoW
Review: 15mm Late War German Infantry Heavy Weapons | Plastic Soldier Company | Flames of War
Visit our website: www.modelloursworkshop.com Facebook: www.facebook.com BattleFoam: www.battlefoam.com Beasts of War: www.beastsofwar.com Steele Series: steelseries.com Wehrmacht From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia The Wehrmacht (German pronunciation: [ˈveːɐ̯maxt] (Defence Force) -- from German: wehren, to defend and Macht, power, force, cognate to English might) was the unified armed forces of Nazi Germany from 1935 to 1945. It consisted of the Heer (army), the Kriegsmarine (navy) and the Luftwaffe (air force). Before the National Socialist German Workers' (Nazi) Party assumed control of the German government in 1933, the term Wehrmacht generically described a nation's "home defence" forces, analogous to the German Streitmacht foreign war forces, thus, Britische Wehrmacht denoted "British defence forces." The term Wehrmacht is in Article 47 of the 1919 Weimar Constitution, establishing that: Der Reichspräsident hat den Oberbefehl über die gesamte Wehrmacht des Reiches ("The National President holds supreme command of all armed forces of the nation"). From 1919, Germany's national defence force was known as the Reichswehr, until its renaming as the Wehrmacht on 16 March 1935. After World War II (1939--45), the Allies abolished the Wehrmacht. In 1955, when the western Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) remilitarized, its armed forces were named the Bundeswehr ("Federal Defence"). In 1956, upon formal establishment, the armed forces of the Communist, east German <b>...</b>
9:48
German History Revision Episode 7 - The Road to War
Part of our series focusing on Germany from 1870 - 1945. Useful for GCSE and A-Level Histo...
published: 14 Feb 2012
Author: TalkHistory
German History Revision Episode 7 - The Road to War
Part of our series focusing on Germany from 1870 - 1945. Useful for GCSE and A-Level History revision as well as general interest!
1:44
1932 Chancellor Dr. Brüning celebrates Hindenburg's victory
April 1932. Chancellor Dr. Heinrich Brüning celebrates President Paul von Hindenburg&...
published: 18 Mar 2009
Author: skoblinI
1932 Chancellor Dr. Brüning celebrates Hindenburg's victory
April 1932. Chancellor Dr. Heinrich Brüning celebrates President Paul von Hindenburg's re-election victory over Adolf Hitler in the April 20th runoff election for German President. Hitler hoped to use the presidency to aid him in his goal of over-throwing the democratic system and establishing a totalitarian regime. In the 1925 election Hindenburg had been the candidate of the political right and had been strenuously opposed by much of the moderate left and political centre. However in 1932 this part of the political spectrum decided to unite with the moderate right in supporting Hindenburg, in order to prevent Hitler's election. The support of the moderate 'Weimar coalition' was also encouraged by the fact that, contrary to fears expressed at the time of his election in 1925, Hindenburg had not used his office in an attempt to over-throw the Weimar constitution, as Hitler now aimed to do.
6:12
Review: 15mm WWII German Infantry Campany Late War | Wargames Factory | Flames of War
Visit our website: www.modelloursworkshop.com Facebook: www.facebook.com BattleFoam: www.b...
published: 12 Aug 2012
Author: MoWoFoW
Review: 15mm WWII German Infantry Campany Late War | Wargames Factory | Flames of War
Visit our website: www.modelloursworkshop.com Facebook: www.facebook.com BattleFoam: www.battlefoam.com Beasts of War: www.beastsofwar.com Steele Series: steelseries.com Wehrmacht From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia The Wehrmacht (German pronunciation: [ˈveːɐ̯maxt] (Defence Force) -- from German: wehren, to defend and Macht, power, force, cognate to English might) was the unified armed forces of Nazi Germany from 1935 to 1945. It consisted of the Heer (army), the Kriegsmarine (navy) and the Luftwaffe (air force). Before the National Socialist German Workers' (Nazi) Party assumed control of the German government in 1933, the term Wehrmacht generically described a nation's "home defence" forces, analogous to the German Streitmacht foreign war forces, thus, Britische Wehrmacht denoted "British defence forces." The term Wehrmacht is in Article 47 of the 1919 Weimar Constitution, establishing that: Der Reichspräsident hat den Oberbefehl über die gesamte Wehrmacht des Reiches ("The National President holds supreme command of all armed forces of the nation"). From 1919, Germany's national defence force was known as the Reichswehr, until its renaming as the Wehrmacht on 16 March 1935. After World War II (1939--45), the Allies abolished the Wehrmacht. In 1955, when the western Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) remilitarized, its armed forces were named the Bundeswehr ("Federal Defence"). In 1956, upon formal establishment, the armed forces of the Communist, east German <b>...</b>