Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In: Der Monat, Berlin, 19th year, issue 227, August 1967, pp. 24–29; expanded as a report on the “incitement to arson” - July 1967 / March 1968 in: Peter Szondi: About a “free (i.e. free) university”. Opinions of a philologist. Suhrkamp Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 1973 (series: es 620) pp. 34–54.
The government of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam maintains that between 2 September 1945 and 2 July 1976 only the Democratic Republic of Vietnam and the Republic of South Vietnam were legitimate governments and that any rival governments were illegal ("reactionary" or "counter-revolutionary") organisations.
During the years in which Frankfurt was a "Free City", the traditional Frankfurt Trade Fair was of little importance. Nevertheless, Frankfurt rose to be one of the major centres for trade and finances in Europe. The most important banking house in Frankfurt belonged to the Rothschild family, who established banking and finance houses all over ...
Aside from indicating that the Nixon administration might be willing to resume full-scale bombing of North Vietnam, the operation did not achieve very impressive results. [4]: 203 The VPAF campaign aimed precisely at countering the U.S. air interdiction campaign to which the President had keyed all his hopes for success, in making North Vietnam give up the fight and negotiate and in giving ...
This page was last edited on 10 February 2024, at 21:11 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Frankfurt was a city state, the Free City of Frankfurt, for nearly five centuries, and was one of the most important cities of the Holy Roman Empire, as a site of Imperial coronations; it lost its sovereignty upon the collapse of the empire in 1806, regained it in 1815 and then lost it again in 1866, when it was annexed (though neutral) by the ...
Ngô Đình Cẩn (Vietnamese: [ŋo˧ ɗɨ̞̠n˦˩ kəŋ˦˩]; 1911 – 9 May 1964) was the younger brother and confidant of South Vietnam's first president, Ngô Đình Diệm, and an important member of the Diệm government.
Fort Ino, a former Russian coastal fortress in the Gulf of Finland; Ino, Kōchi, a town in Kochi Prefecture, Japan; Inó, the Hungarian name for Inău village, Someș-Odorhei Commune, Sălaj County, Romania; Ino, Alabama, an unincorporated community, United States; Ino, Wisconsin, an unincorporated community, United States