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  2. Parentification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parentification

    [2] [3] For example, some parents ask their children for advice about the parents' own romantic relationships, or expect their children to support and manage the parents' emotions, or push children into the role of mediators and peacemakers in the family. [2] Emotional parentification is more harmful than instrumental parentification. [2]

  3. Biographical Portal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biographical_Portal

    The Biographical Portal (German: Biographie-Portal) is a free online index to biographical reference works in the German language area.Intended to facilitate access to reliable biographical information, it contains entries for more than 160,000 biographies of persons from all social backgrounds and nearly all periods of German, Austrian, Swiss, Slovenian and South-East European history.

  4. Claus von Bülow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claus_von_Bülow

    His father was accused, though later cleared, of being a Nazi collaborator for his activities during the Second World War in the German occupation of Denmark. [5] After graduating from university with a degree in law and becoming an apprentice in the legal profession, Claus chose to be known by his maternal surname, Bülow, instead of his ...

  5. Lebensborn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lebensborn

    Lebensborn was established by Heinrich Himmler, and provided welfare to its mostly unmarried mothers, encouraged anonymous births by unmarried women at their maternity homes, and mediated adoption of children by likewise "racially pure" and "healthy" parents, particularly SS members and their families.

  6. Portrait Diptych of Dürer's Parents - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portrait_Diptych_of_Dürer...

    Portrait Diptych of Dürer's Parents (or Dürer's Parents with Rosaries) is the collective name for two late-15th century portrait panels by the German painter and printmaker Albrecht Dürer. They show the artist's parents, Barbara Holper ( c. 1451–1514 ) and Albrecht Dürer the Elder ( c. 1427–1502 ), when she was around 39 and he was 63 ...

  7. Westermarck effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westermarck_effect

    The Westermarck effect, also known as reverse sexual imprinting, is a psychological hypothesis that states that people tend not to be attracted to peers with whom they lived like siblings before the age of six.

  8. Family of Angela Merkel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Family_of_Angela_Merkel

    The family of Angela Merkel, the former Chancellor of Germany, is of German and Polish descent. Merkel was born Angela Dorothea Kasner on 17 July 1954 in Hamburg. The Kasner name is derived from Jan Kaźmierczak, a Pole from Poznań who lived in the 18th century. Merkel's grandfather changed the name to Kasner in 1930.

  9. Meyer v. Nebraska - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meyer_v._Nebraska

    Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 U.S. 390 (1923), was a landmark decision by the United States Supreme Court that held that the "Siman Act", a 1919 Nebraska law prohibiting minority languages as both the subject and medium of instruction in schools, violated the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. [1]

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