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On 5 January 1919, the German Workers' Party (DAP) was founded in Munich in the hotel Fürstenfelder Hof by Anton Drexler, [4] along with Dietrich Eckart, Gottfried Feder and Karl Harrer. It developed out of the Freien Arbeiterausschuss für einen guten Frieden (Free Workers' Committee for a Good Peace) league, a branch of which Drexler had ...
In 1940, the already powerless German Football Association was finally wound up. [17] Following the 1938 Munich Agreement and the liquidation of Czechoslovakia as a state, the ethnic Sudeten German football teams played in the Gauliga Sudetenland. The NSRL formed two groups in 1939, which were raised to three in 1941.
This category includes articles on football clubs in Germany that were part of the workers' sports associations Arbeiter-Turn- und Sportbund (ATSB, en:Workers' Gymnastics and Sports Federation) or Kampfgemeinschaft für Rote Sporteinheit, which were active through the 1920s and into the early 1930s until banned by the Nazis as politically undesirable in 1933.
The Workers' Party of Germany (German: Partei der Arbeit Deutschlands, abbr. PdAD) was a minor political party in Germany. It saw its mission in overcoming the left-right political divide via the Querfront strategy. [2] [3] The party modeled itself around the Workers' Party of Korea and its Juche ideology, which it viewed as national communist. [4]
The Nazi Party, [b] officially the National Socialist German Workers' Party (German: Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei [c] or NSDAP), was a far-right [10] [11] [12] political party in Germany active between 1920 and 1945 that created and supported the ideology of Nazism.
20 May: As in the previous two Reichstag elections, the Social Democratic Party, the right-wing German National People's Party and the Catholic Centre Party are the top three vote getters. [82] 28 May: After the collapse of the Marx government, Hermann Müller of the Social Democratic Party becomes chancellor for the second time. [31]
Workers' and soldiers' councils, for which the term "soviets" (German: Räte, singular Rat) was coined, were first set up during the Russian Revolution.The increasingly straitened living standards of German workers under the hardships of World War I made political parties such as the Independent Social Democrats (USPD), which opposed the war, more and more appealing.
Ferdinand Lassalle (11 April 1825 – 31 August 1864) was a German socialist activist and politician who founded the first German workers' party, the General German Workers' Association (ADAV), in 1863.