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  1. This article argues that the German Confederation — deutscher Bund — (1815–66)was a form of rule built on early modern republican political theory. It was a ‘Compound Republic’ form of rule constructed to prevent the emergence of a system of sovereign German states as well as a single sovereign German state.

    • Michael Jonas
  2. 1 de ene. de 2002 · Gregor Walter-Drop. PDF | This paper reconsiders German unification during the period 1815-1871. First, it makes explicit the comparison between the German Empire and the... | Find, read and...

  3. Introduction. In 1815 the remains of the Holy Roman Empire, embarrassed by Napoleon’s conquest of their land, organized into the German Confederation. Thirty-nine independent countries were struggling to restore themselves after Napoleon’s defeat at Waterloo and chart their future.

  4. On 28 March 1849, a year of deliberations reached its conclusion when 405 members of the first freely elected parliament for the whole of Germany, gathered in St Paul’s Church, Frankfurt am Main, appended their signatures to a modern, liberal constitution – the Frankfurt Constitution. It was far ahead of its time.

  5. The German Confederation was an association of 39 predominantly German-speaking sovereign states in Central Europe. It was created by the Congress of Vienna in 1815 as a replacement of the former Holy Roman Empire, which had been dissolved in 1806 in reaction to the Napoleonic Wars.

  6. German Federal Act (June 8, 1815) Abstract The general agreement between the German states on the founding of the German Confederation was first signed by thirty-five individual states and four free cities (Lübeck, Hamburg, Bremen, and Frankfurt) on June 8, 1815, during the Congress of Vienna. Soon thereafter, Baden, Württemberg, and Hesse-

  7. 2 The German Empire,c.1024–1125 17 3 Europe at the time of the Reformation 35 4 Germany after the Peace of Westphalia, 1648 61 5 The growth of Brandenburg-Prussia to 1786 80 6 The German Confederation in 1815. (After M. Hughes, NationalismandSociety:Germany1800–1945(London: Edward Arnold, 1988)) 102