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History of Germany

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Content

Main article: Germany

  • History of Berlin in the article Berlin

2022: Aid to Ukraine during Russia's special operation

Aid from Ukraine's donor countries to their GDP between February 24 and March 27, 2022

2021

Olaf Scholz - New German Chancellor

On December 8, 2021, Olaf Scholz was officially elected the new Chancellor of Germany. In this post, he replaced Angela Merkel, who has been chancellor for the past 16 years. Read more here.

SDP wins Bundestag elections with 25.7%

According to official preliminary data, the Social Democratic Party of Germany wins the parliamentary elections in Germany, gaining 25.7% of the vote.

The second largest faction in the German parliament is formed by the bloc of the Christian Democratic and Christian Social Unions - 24.1%.

1988

Three Italian aircraft collided at an air show at Ramstein Air Base, Germany, on 28 August 1988.

1985

GDR, 1985.

1982

Arrested punk, GDR, 1982.
Yard solarium, GDR, 1982.

1972

Meeting of Secretary General L. Brezhnev with German Chancellor V. Brandt in Bonn

Leonid Brezhnev, German Chancellor Willy Brandt and his wife Ruth Brandt, Bonn, 1972.

The Last Death Penalty

Data at the end of 2018

1967

One of the best riders of all time and peoples Jim Clark died on the Hockenheimring track. The official version - lost control on the wet road. An alternative version is the breakdown of the suspension, according to her, the owner of the team hid the fact of the breakdown, not wanting to spoil relations with Lotus. April 7, 1967 Germany.

1964

Gardener's breakfast at the botanical exhibition in Stuttgart, 1964. He uses a sheet of giant lotus as a table.
Fashionable hairstyles. Prize-winners of the Munich Festival in 1964

1963: US President Kennedy's visit to Germany

Fans of US President John F. Kennedy during his visit to Berlin. 1963

1962

A tamer who performs a dangerous trick in the mouth of a lion at a performance in Hamburg, 1962.

1960

A German girl advertises a heater, Germany, in 1960.

1959

A police dog during a match in Cologne (Germany) is not very happy with the players, 1959
Germany. Photo of 1959.

1950

Elephant escape from monorail carriage. Germany. 1950 Elephant lived after this event for another 40 years.

1949

Pamir in 1949 - German four-masted barque built in 1905; the last ship to make merchant voyages, skirting Cape Horn; one of the last two sailing ships in regular commercial operation. September 21, 1957 hit Hurricane Curry and sank off the Azores.

1948: Creation of a dividing line in Berlin

Main article: Berlin

Marking between the Soviet and British sectors of Berlin in the Potsdamerplatz district, August 21, 1948.

Before the construction of the wall, the border between the western and eastern parts of Berlin was relatively open. The dividing line with a length of 44.75 km (the total length of the border of West Berlin with the GDR was 164 km) passed directly through streets and houses, canals and waterways.

Officially, there were 81 street access points, 13 crossings in the metro and on the city railway. In addition, there were hundreds of illegal routes. Every day, 300 to 500 thousand people crossed the border between both parts of the city for various reasons.

The lack of a clear physical border between the zones led to frequent conflicts and mass leakage of specialists to West Berlin. Many East Germans preferred to work in West Berlin, where the salary was significantly higher.

1946

Margrethe Zimmermann on a tightrope over the ruins of Cologne, Germany, in 1946.

1945

FSB releases new archive documents on Hitler's suicide

At the end of April 2022, the FSB of Russia published an archive on the suicide at the end of April 1945 of the founder of Nazi Germany, the chairman of the NSDAP (National Socialist German Workers' Party) Adolf Hitler. We are talking about documents from the investigation case against Hitler's former personal pilot, SS Gruppenführer, police lieutenant general Hans Baur, which is stored in the FSB department in the Novgorod region. Read more here.

Defeat and losses in World War II

Main article: World War II

The share of residents of European countries killed in World War II.

1941: "Hunger Plan"

At the end of June 2023, the Russian Military Historical Society published the full version of the "Hunger Plan" - a document developed by Hitler's Germany to destroy the peoples of the USSR. Read more here.

1940

German firefighters at a training session to find a sound source in the dark. Germany. 1940.

1939

Unleashing World War II

Visit of Prince Regent of Yugoslavia Paul with his wife Olga

In early June 1939, a noble couple invited by Hitler arrived in Berlin from Yugoslavia on a state visit: Prince Regent of Yugoslavia Pavel with his wife Olga.

Born Princess of Greece and Denmark, she was the sister of Duchess Mary of Kent, a close relative of British King George VI. This kinship played a part in the invitation. In addition, for the first time, a member of the reigning dynasty paid a visit to the Fuhrer of the National Socialist State.

This visit, according to his pomp, was overshadowed even by the arrival of Mussolini in his time. The Führer ordered in advance that the Bellevue Palace in Tiergarten be rebuilt and converted into a residence for guests of honor of the imperial government.

Prince Pavel of Yugoslavia, left, and Hermann Göring inspect the fighter wing fighter jet Richthofen in Doberitz in a suburb of Berlin. 04.06.1939 g.

Hitler twice wished to be alone with the guests. On the second day, he arranged a dinner in their honor in his apartment, and on the third - a tea party in the new greenhouse of the Imperial Chancellery. He believed that during conversations in a narrow circle there are more opportunities to influence guests. The Führer strongly hoped that the content of his conversations with them on pre-selected topics would be transmitted to the British, although he did not yet know that the Prince Regent and his wife would go directly from Berlin to London to see their relatives at the British court.

Adolf Hitler during a conversation with Princess Olga of Greece, 1939.

The program of the visit also included the Wagnerian opera "Nuremberg Meistersingers" at the State Opera on Unter den Linden; Herbert von Karoyan was to conduct. Hitler was disappointed with this performance. He was dissatisfied with the inaccurate introductions of the orchestra, and also considered it audacious for a young musician to conduct a great creation without a score. Like, even the famous Wilhelm Furtwängler himself did not allow himself this.

The more magnificent the external framework of this visit, the greater Hitler was dissatisfied with its results, because he could not find contact with his guests.

Hitler's visit to Memel (Klaipeda)

Adolf Hitler during an inspection of German troops at Theatre Square in Memel, Germany (later Klaipėda in Lithuania), March 1939.

1938

A burning synagogue in Bielefeld during Kristallnacht. Germany, November 10, 1938.

The seizure of the territory of the Czech Republic according to the Munich conspiracy

The Munich Agreement of 1938 (also called the Munich Agreement) between, Germany, and Britain, France Italy drawn up Munich on September 29, 1938 and signed on the night of September 29-30 of that year by Reich Chancellor Germany Adolf Hitler, Prime Minister Great Britain Neville Chamberlain, Prime Minister France Eduard Daladier and Prime Minister Benito Italy Mussolini. The agreement stipulated that Czechoslovakia would liberate and cede the Sudetenland to Germany within 10 days.

Under pressure from Poland and Hungary, annexes were added to the Munich agreement requiring Czechoslovakia to resolve territorial disputes with these countries as soon as possible. Representatives of the Czechoslovak delegation Hubert Masarzyk and Vojtech Mastny were present, but were not invited to discuss the terms of the agreement, and only signed the finished document. On the morning of September 30, Czechoslovak President Benes accepted the terms of this agreement, without the consent of the National Assembly.

On October 1, German troops crossed the border of Czechoslovakia and by October 10 occupied the entire territory of the Sudetenland of Czechoslovakia.

German troops cross the border with Czechoslovakia after the transfer of the Sudetenland. October 1938
German officers watch the capture of the town of Bohumin. Partition of Czechoslovakia. 1938

On the same day, Czechoslovakia accepted Poland's ultimatum to cede to it the Cieszyn region, which was occupied by Polish troops on October 2.

Sudeten Germans living in the Czechoslovak city of Khomutov meet German troops. October, 1938

Shortly after the signing of the Munich Agreement on November 2, 1938, the First Vienna Arbitration took place, which separated from Czechoslovakia in favor of Hungary, the territory in southern Slovakia and southern Subcarpathian Rus, and to Poland the territory of Czechoslovakia in the north.

In March 1939, the First Slovak Republic was proclaimed, and shortly after the creation of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, Germany completely took control of the remaining Czech territories.

The Munich Agreement is considered the culmination of the British-French policy of appeasement. The war in Europe that Hitler wanted to provoke was averted. Great Britain and France made it clear to the Czechoslovak government that if Germany's demands were rejected, no help should be expected. To avoid war, Czechoslovakia accepted the terms of the agreement. Because of the circumstances, the agreement is also called Munich collusion.

German greeting card from the Third Reich, 1938.
Carnival in the Third Reich. Cologne. 1938

Anschluss of Austria - inclusion in the German Reich

March 13, 1938 at 19 o'clock Hitler solemnly entered Vienna

On March 12-13, 1938, the Anschluss ("accession," "union") took place - Austria's inclusion in Germany.

Territory of Austria and German Reich (12 March 1938).
Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun, 1938.
Joseph Goebbels plays with children Hilda, Helmut and Helga (from left to right), 1938
The annual oath of Nazi troops, 1938.

1937: The crash of the Hindenburg airship in the USA

On 3 May 1937, "Hindenburg" departed Germany for the United States. There were 97 people on board the vessel. The airship left Germany at about eight o'clock in the evening, flew safely to Manhattan on May 6 and flew further, to the main aeronautical base of the US Navy in Lakehurst, reaching there at four o'clock in the afternoon. A couple of hours after receiving permission to land, the Hindenburg airship dropped the mooring ropes. And a few minutes later, the ship filled with fire hazardous hydrogen caught fire and crashed. In just 34 seconds, the Hindenburg burned to the ground.

Explosion on the Hindenburg airship, 1937.

The disaster killed 35 of the 97 people on board, as well as one member of the ground team.

The crash of the Hindenburg airship, USA, 1937.

And although in terms of the number of victims, Hindenburg is not the largest disaster of the airship, the death of this aircraft received a great resonance.

The crash site of the Hindenburg airship, May 1937.
A reminder to the hostesses, what needs to be replenished. Koenigsberg, 1930s.

1936

Militarization of the Rhineland

The troops of the Entente powers remained in the Rhineland until 1930. After Hitler came to power (1933), the Saar (1935) returned to Germany, and the Rhineland underwent unilateral militarization (1936). This became a prologue to the outbreak of World War II.

German troops in the Rhineland. 1936

Summer Olympics in Berlin

Main article: Olympic Games

Opening of the Summer Olympic Games in Berlin. 1936.
Helga Goebbels with Adolf Hitler's dog, Germany, 1936.
Joseph Goebbels leaves Weimarhall in Weimar after the opening of "German Book Week." 1936
The airship LZ-129 the Hindenburg at Lakehurst Airfield, New Jersey, USA, 1936.
On March 4, 1936, the Hindenburg airship made its first flight. His accident a year later ended the "golden age" of airships.
Adolf Hitler sledges, Germany, 1936

1935

Adolf Hitler and Joseph Goebbels in Berghof, listen to a radio on the occasion of a plebiscite about the reunification of the Territory of the Saar Basin with Germany. 1935
Party congress of the NSDAP in Nuremberg, 1935.
Review of SS troops in full field uniforms, 1935.
Members of the German youth organization Hitler Youth at a rally at the stadium. 14.09.1935 g.
Children from the Hitler Youth Organization in Saarbrücken. The photo was taken around 1935.
Price controls in Nazi Germany, 1935

'The shop is closed by police because the prices are too high. The owner of the store - on re-education in Dachau. "]]

A German man charged in connection with a Jewish woman. The inscription is "I am a desecrator of race." Germany, 1935.
The wife of NSDAP politician Joseph Goebbels Magda Goebbels reads with his daughters Hilda and Helga. 1935
A parrot salesman teaches them to sing songs by gramophone. Germany. 1935

1934

VI Congress of the NSDAP. Nuremberg. Germany. 1934.
Hitler at a Nazi rally, Germany, 1934
Car and armored designer Ferdinand Porsche (far left) shows Hitler a model of the first Volkswagen Beetle car (Volkswagen Beetle). Germany, 1934.
The airship "Graf Zeppelin" is being repaired in the air en route to Rio. 1934 The airship was built in Germany in 1928 and became at that time the largest and most advanced airship in the world

1933

The wedding of the National Assembly of the political leader Karl Ernst and Freulein M. Volf, which was attended by the National Assembly officials, including Hermann Goering, in Grunewald, Berlin, September 19, 1933.
Torchlight Procession, 1933, Berlin
Nazis burn Germanophobic books. Germany. May 10, 1933
Priests salute Hitler during the Catholic Youth Assembly, Berlin, 1933.

1932

Adolf Hitler on his birthday on a plane. April 20, 1932.
Adolf Hitler delivers a speech during the election campaign. April 5, 1932 Germany
Adolf Hitler communicates with the people during the 1932 election campaign.
Construction of the Hindenburg airship, 1932.

1930: NSDAP receives 18.3% of the vote in the Reichstag elections

Adolf Hitler and Joseph Goebbels sign autographs, 1930

On September 14, 1930, elections to the Reichstag were held. Results:

  • SPD - 24.5% (143 mandates),

  • The NSDAP received 18.3% of the vote (110 seats) (in the previous elections of 1928 it had 2.6% of the vote),

  • Communist Party of Germany - 13.1% (77 mandates),

  • Center Party - 11.8% (68 mandates),

  • The German National People's Party DNVP - 7% (41 mandates).

  • Bavarian People's Party, BVP (this is, in fact, the Bavarian branch of the Center Party) - 3% (19 mandates).

The rest of the parties did not play a big role.

A bulletproof vest option for the police. Germany, 1930.
Albert Einstein plays the violin, circa 1930.

1929

Permanent curling. Germany, 1929.

1928

A member of the German vagabond movement created as a movement to unite and support the homeless in the 1920s. Their communes also attracted artists, poets and people who felt alienated from society. They influenced anarcho-syndicalists. They were banned by the Nazis in 1933.

1925

German soldiers push tank dummies. Rubber, wooden and even reed tanks were actively used in the war to outwit the enemy. Mock-ups of combat vehicles could decide the outcome of the battle. 1925.

1924

Adolf Hitler was released from prison ahead of schedule. Sentenced for state treason to 5 years in prison, he was released after 9 months in prison. Bavaria. December 20, 1924

1923: Default

Keynes realized that Germany's new financial obligations after World War I were unrealizable and an attempt to demand their fulfillment would not lead to anything good. In December 1919, he published "The Economic Consequences of Peace," a book in which, giving a detailed account of the past negotiations, he literally begged the allied countries to reduce reparations from Germany. His proposal was regarded as foolishness, and foolishness dangerous, tantamount to a desire to shake up the established rules of the international financial system - the foundations of stability and peace.

Keynes' prognosis, however, proved prophetic. Germany, unable to restore the economy and, as a result, pay reparations, rolled towards a complete economic collapse - suffice it to say that the level of hyperinflation reached record levels for that time on the planet. In 1923, as Keynes had predicted, there was a default, and the Allies had to rewrite the terms of the reparations agreement.

1922: Hyperinflation

Children play in bundles of money during a period of hyperinflation. Germany, 1922.
Country RV. Germany, 1922.

1920: Loss of Tanganyika - a colony in Africa

Tanganyika, formerly a German colony, was transferred to English administration in 1920 as a mandated territory of the League of Nations.

Albert Einstein, 1920.

1919: Spartacist uprising led by Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg

In 1919, the Communists, led by Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg, seized the editorial offices of newspapers and printing houses in Berlin.

Karl Radek arrived from Moscow to support the rebels. In response, German Defense Minister Gustav Noske introduces troops into the capital. The uprising is crushed, Liebknecht and Luxembourg are killed. Radek was arrested and imprisoned in Moabit, but then deported to Moscow.

1918

End of World War I. Millions of victims in Germany

Main article: World War I

The total number of victims, according to various estimates, is from 9 to 18 million people.
Death toll as a proportion of countries' pre-war population, including deaths from hunger and disease

Supplies of grain, meat and sugar from Ukraine during the blockade of the country by Britain

In February 1918, by agreement with the government of the Central Rada, German and Austrian troops entered the territory of Ukraine. The governments of the central powers committed themselves to protecting the territory of the Ukrainian People's Republic from the troops of Soviet Russia and supplying coal and oil. In return, Kyiv politicians were supposed to help the German and Austrian military export food from Ukraine.

Thus, the government of the Central Rada pledged to supply Berlin and Vienna by July 31, 1918 1 million tons of grain, 400 million eggs, up to 50 thousand tons of cattle meat, lard, sugar.

For the Germans and Austrians, it was a matter of survival, food in these countries was sorely lacking due to the blockade arranged by Britain. Acorn coffee and margarine potatoes for a resident of Vienna or Berlin were a delicacy at the time.

1914: Entry into World War I

1913

German Emperor Kaiser Wilhelm I

Silesia, 1913.]]

1910

Feminists Clara Zetkin and Rosa Luxemburg, Magdeburg, Germany, 1910.

1904

High-rise building and its inhabitants, Hamburg, 1904. In 1833, Johannes Brahms was born in this house. In 1943, the building was destroyed during a bombing raid.
Germany, 1904

1899

Adolf Hitler 10 years old, school photo 1899

1898

French political caricature of the late 1890s. The pie represents China, which is shared by Queen Victoria of England, William II, Emperor of Germany (arguing with Victoria about a piece of pie, while plunging a dagger into the pie as a sign of his aggressive intentions), Nicholas II, Emperor of the Russian Empire, looking after a special piece, French Marianne (presented not taking part in the division of the pie, and close to Nicholas II as a sign of the Franco-Russian Union) and the Japanese emperor Meiji, who thought deeply about what pieces to take him. Behind them is a representative of the Qing court, who raised his hands to stop them, but to no avail.

1884

Albert Einstein at the age of 5. Munich, circa 1884

1795: Final partition of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth between Prussia, Russia and the Habsburg Monarchy

The division of the territory of the Polish-Lithuanian state (Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth) between the Kingdom of Prussia, the Russian Empire and the Habsburg monarchy occurred in 1772, 1793 and 1795.

1700

Main article: 1700

1618

1610: Witch Hunt

14th century: As part of the Holy Roman Empire

1230

600g

Languages spoken in Europe, North Africa and the Middle East in 600g (as of 2021)

V thousand BC: Megaliths

V.A. Trifonov, 2001

See also