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  1. The peace resolution was, however, a first step towards inter-party cooperation and full parliamentarisation of the Reichstag. The combination of political Catholicism, the workers' movement, and liberalism became a driving force behind the moderate outcome of the Revolution of 1918–1919 and in the political development of the Weimar Republic.

  2. Article 48 of the constitution of the Weimar Republic of Germany (1919–1933) allowed the Reich president, under certain circumstances, to take emergency measures without the prior consent of the Reichstag. This power came to be understood to include the promulgation of emergency decrees. It was used frequently by Reich President Friedrich ...

  3. 1925 German presidential election. Presidential elections were held in Germany on 29 March 1925, with a runoff on 26 April. [1] They were the first direct elections to the office of President of the Reich ( Reichspräsident ), Germany 's head of state during the 1919–33 Weimar Republic. The first President, Friedrich Ebert, who had died on 28 ...

  4. La República de Weimar (en alemán: Weimarer Republik; ( pronunciación en alemán: /ˈvaɪ̯maʁɐ ʁepuˈbliːk/ ⓘ )), nominalmente conservando el nombre de Imperio alemán, fue el régimen político y, por extensión, el período de la historia de Alemania comprendido entre 1918 y 1933, tras la derrota del país en la Primera Guerra Mundial.

  5. The Reichstag could be dissolved by the emperor or, after the abdication of Wilhelm II in 1918, the president of Germany. With the Weimar Republic 's Constitution of 1919, the voting system changed from single-member constituencies to proportional representation.

  6. The Constitution of the Weimar Republic established a bicameral parliament consisting of the Reichstag and the Reichsrat. The Reichsrat (Reich Council) was the body by which the German federal states (German: Länder) participated in the formation of legislation at the national level.

  7. The Reichstag (" Diet of the Realm "), [2] officially the Greater German Reichstag (German: Großdeutscher Reichstag) after 1938, was the national parliament of Nazi Germany from 1933 to 1945. Following the Nazi seizure of power and the enactment of the Enabling Act of 1933, it functioned purely as a rubber stamp for the actions of Adolf Hitler ...