What Was Germany Trying to Create at the End of the 19th Century?

  • Introduction & Quick Facts
    • Relief
      • The Central German Uplands
        • Southern Federal republic of germany
        • The barrier arc
        • The northern fringe of the Central German Uplands
      • The Due north German Plain
      • The coasts
      • The Alps and the Alpine Foreland
    • Drainage
    • Soils
    • Climate
    • Plant and creature life
      • Plants
      • Animals
    • Indigenous groups
    • Languages
    • Faith
    • Settlement patterns
      • Rural settlement
      • Urban settlement
    • Demographic trends
      • Migration
      • Population structure
      • Population distribution
    • Mod economic history: from sectionalisation to reunification
      • The Westward German organisation
      • The East German system
      • Economic unification and beyond
    • Agriculture, forestry, and fishing
      • Agriculture
      • Forestry
      • Fishing
    • Resources and power
    • Manufacturing
    • Finance
      • The central banking system
      • The private banking sector
      • Public and cooperative institutions
    • Trade
    • Services
    • Labour and taxation
    • Transportation and telecommunications
      • Waterways
      • Seaports
      • Railways
      • Highways
      • Air send
      • Telecommunication
    • Constitutional framework
    • Regional and local government
    • Justice
    • Political process
      • The electorate
      • Political parties
        • The Christian Democratic parties
        • The Social Democrats
        • The Free Democrats
        • The Greens
        • The Left Party
        • Fringe parties
    • Security
    • Health and welfare
      • Insurance and services
      • Additional benefits
      • War reparations
      • Standards of living
    • Housing
    • Education
      • Preschool, simple, and secondary
      • Higher education
      • Problems of transition
    • Cultural milieu
    • Daily life and social customs
    • The arts
      • Authorities and audience support
      • Literature and theatre
      • Music and dance
      • The visual arts
      • Compages
      • Film
      • Arts festivals
    • Cultural institutions
      • Museums and galleries
      • Libraries
    • Sports and recreation
      • Sporting culture
      • Leisure activities
    • Media and publishing
      • Broadcasting
      • The press
      • Publishing
    • Ancient history
      • Coexistence with Rome to ad 350
      • The migration period
    • Merovingians and Carolingians
      • Merovingian Germany
      • The rising of the Carolingians and Boniface
      • Charlemagne
      • The emergence of Germany
        • The kingdom of Louis the German
        • Rise of the duchies
    • Germany from 911 to 1250
      • The 10th and 11th centuries
        • Conrad I
        • The accession of the Saxons
        • The eastern policy of the Saxons
        • Dukes, counts, and advocates
        • The promotion of the German language church
        • The Ottonian conquest of Italy and the royal crown
        • The Salians, the papacy, and the princes, 1024–1125
          • Papal reform and the High german church
          • The discontent of the lay princes
          • The civil war against Henry IV
          • Henry Five
      • Germany and the Hohenstaufen, 1125–1250
        • Dynastic competition, 1125–52
        • Colonization of the due east
        • Hohenstaufen policy in Italy
        • The autumn of Henry the Lion
        • Hohenstaufen cooperation and conflict with the papacy, 1152–1215
        • Frederick II and the princes
        • The empire afterward the Hohenstaufen catastrophe
    • Germany from 1250 to 1493
      • 1250 to 1378
        • The extinction of the Hohenstaufen dynasty
        • The Slap-up Interregnum
        • The ascent of the Habsburgs and Luxembourgs
          • Rudolf of Habsburg
          • Adolf of Nassau
          • Albert I of Habsburg
          • Henry Vii of Luxembourg
        • The growth of territorialism under the princes
        • Constitutional conflicts in the 14th century
          • Charles IV and the Golden Bull
          • Decline of the German monarchy
        • The connected ascendancy of the princes
          • Southern Federal republic of germany
          • Cardinal Germany
          • Northern Germany
          • Eastern Frg
          • Continued dispersement of territory
      • 1378 to 1493
        • Internal strife among cities and princes
          • Wenceslas
          • Rupert
          • Sigismund
        • The Hussite controversy
          • January Hus
          • The Hussite wars
        • The Habsburgs and the regal office
          • Albert II
          • Frederick III
        • Developments in the individual states to about 1500
          • The princes and the Landstände
          • The growth of central governments
        • German society, economic system, and civilisation in the 14th and 15th centuries
          • Transformation of rural life
          • The nobility
          • Urban life
          • The refuse of the church
          • Trade and manufacture
          • Cultural life
    • Deutschland from 1493 to c. 1760
      • Reform and Reformation, 1493–1555
        • The empire in 1493
        • Imperial reform
        • The Reformation
        • Imperial ballot of 1519 and the Nutrition of Worms
        • The revolution of 1525
        • Lutheran church system and confessionalization
        • Religious war and the Peace of Augsburg
      • The confessional age, 1555–1648
        • German society in the later 1500s
        • Religion and politics, 1555–1618
        • The Thirty Years' State of war and the Peace of Westphalia
      • Territorial states in the age of absolutism
        • The empire after Westphalia
        • The consolidation of Brandenburg-Prussia and Austria
        • The age of Louis XIV
        • The competition between Prussia and Austria
    • Germany from c. 1760 to 1815
      • Further rise of Prussia and the Hohenzollerns
      • The cultural scene
      • Enlightened reform and benevolent despotism
      • The French Revolutionary and Napoleonic era
        • End of the Holy Roman Empire
        • Flow of French hegemony in Germany
        • The Wars of Liberation
      • Results of the Congress of Vienna
    • The historic period of Metternich and the era of unification, 1815–71
      • Reform and reaction
      • Evolution of parties and ideologies
      • Economical changes and the Zollverein
      • The revolutions of 1848–49
      • The 1850s: years of political reaction and economical growth
      • The 1860s: the triumphs of Bismarck
        • The defeat of Austria
        • Bismarck'due south national policies: the restriction of liberalism
        • Franco-German conflict and the new German Reich
    • Germany from 1871 to 1918
      • The High german Empire, 1871–1914
        • Domestic concerns
        • The economy, 1870–90
        • Foreign policy, 1870–90
        • Politics, 1890–1914
        • The economy, 1890–1914
        • Foreign policy, 1890–1914
      • Globe War I
    • Germany from 1918 to 1945
      • The rise and fall of the Weimar Republic, 1918–33
        • Defeat of revolutionaries, 1918–nineteen
        • The Treaty of Versailles
        • The Weimar constitution
        • Years of crisis, 1920–23
        • The Weimar Renaissance
        • Years of economic and political stabilization
        • The end of the republic
      • The 3rd Reich, 1933–45
        • The Nazi revolution
        • The totalitarian country
        • Foreign policy
        • Earth War Two
    • The era of partition
      • Allied occupation and the formation of the two Germanys, 1945–49
        • Formation of the Federal Commonwealth of Germany
        • Formation of the High german Democratic Commonwealth
      • Political consolidation and economic growth, 1949–69
      • Ostpolitik and reconciliation, 1969–89
    • The reunification of Deutschland
      • Helmut Kohl and the struggles of reunification
      • Chancellorship of Gerhard Schröder
      • The Merkel assistants

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Source: https://www.britannica.com/place/Germany/Germany-from-1871-to-1918

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