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  1. 18 de may. de 2018 · Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg was the son of a prominent commercial and agrarian family. After a rather routine rise in German political life, he became Prussian minister of the interior in 1905 and the imperial secretary of state for the interior in 1907. In 1909, after the fall of Bernhard von Bülow, he became imperial chancellor.

  2. Theobald von Bethmann-Hollweg. Theobald von Bethmann-Hollweg (1856-1921) served as Chancellor of Germany from 1909-17, a period which included much of World War One, and during which he fought to maintain social and political coherency as the increasingly vocal liberal elite clashed with reactionary forces typified by the German military ...

  3. Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg. Theobald von Bethmann was a German imperial chancellor. He was highly influential in leading Germany into World War One and his rejection of the German policy of unrestricted submarine warfare . Bethmann Hollweg was born in 1856 in Hohenfinow, Brandenberg. He studied Law and joined the civil service.

  4. Theobald von Bethmann-Hollweg. Político alemán (Hohenfinow, Brandenburgo, 1856-1921). Procedente de una carrera burocrática en la Administración prusiana, en 1909 fue nombrado canciller del Reich alemán (primer ministro). Aunque de ideas conservadoras, comprendía la necesidad de modernizar el sistema político creado por Bismarck, dando ...

  5. Theobald Theodor Friedrich Alfred von Bethmann Hollweg (November 29, 1856 in Hohenfinow (nowadays in Brandenburg) – January 1, 1921 in the same place) was a German independent politician. He was Reich Chancellor ( Reichskanzler ) of the German Empire during the greatest part of World War I .

  6. Hohenfinow, 29 Nov. 1856; d. Hohenfinow, 1 Jan. 1921)German; German Chancellor 1909–17 Bethmann Hollweg was the son of a German landed estate owner whose family had produced a number of gifted lawyers, and a French Swiss officer's daughter. Having studied law he decided to join the civil service where his abilities were soon recognized.

  7. After Paul von Hindenburg and Erich Ludendorf were appointed to the 3rd Supreme Army Command (OHL), which represented a strengthening of nationalist forces, Bethmann Hollweg’s room for manoeuvre became increasingly restricted. After the conflicts with the OHL came to a head, Bethmann Hollweg was dismissed from office in July 1917.