Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The German Confederation replaced the Holy Roman Empire in Central Europe. After the Holy Roman Empire fell, Germany had fallen into over 300 different small kingdoms. In 1815, the Congress of Vienna decided that these weak kingdoms were not strong enough to keep France from trying to take them over, which it had already done once under Napoleon.

  2. The Constitution of the German Confederation or German Federal Act ( German: Deutsche Bundesakte) was the constitution enacted the day before the Congress of Vienna 's Final Act, which established the German Confederation of 39 states, created from the previous 360 states of the Holy Roman Empire, under the presidency of the Emperor of Austria.

  3. Liechtenstein. The German Confederation ( German: Deutscher Bund) wis a luise association o 39 German states in Central Europe, creatit bi the Congress o Vienna in 1815 tae coordinate the economies o separate German-speakin kintras an tae replace the umwhile Haly Roman Empire. [1]

  4. The North German Confederation (red). The southern German states that joined in 1870 to form the German Empire are in orange. Alsace–Lorraine, the territory annexed following the Franco-Prussian War of 1870, is in tan. The red territory in the south marks the original princedom of the House of Hohenzollern, rulers of the Kingdom of Prussia.

  5. The Reichstag ( German: [ˈʁaɪçstaːk] ⓘ) of the North German Confederation was the federal state's lower house of parliament. The popularly elected Reichstag was responsible for federal legislation together with the Bundesrat, the upper house whose members were appointed by the governments of the individual states to represent their ...

  6. South German Confederation. Germany between the War of 1866 and the Franco-Prussian War of 1870/71. From 1866 to 1869, the South German Confederation or Südbund, was the idea that the southern German states of Bavaria, Württemberg, Baden and Hesse-Darmstadt would form a confederation of states. Article 4 of the Peace of Prague after the ...

  7. ITUC, ETUC, TUAC. Website. www.dgb.de. The German Trade Union Confederation ( German: Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund; DGB) is an umbrella organisation (sometimes known as a national trade union center) for eight German trade unions, in total representing more than 6 million people (31 December 2011). It was founded in Munich, 12 October 1949.