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focus of this article should be when it was created, who was in it and when it had ended, etc. Unfortunately the whole thing concentrates more on the development of the social and economic structure
Germany. The next thing I find negative about it is a the liberal use of qualifying particles like "reactionary" or "regime" (which tends to have a negative conotation nowadays). I also find the use of the word "bourgeois" a bit problematic in this connection. The article also has a left bias and interpertation of events I find a bit disturbing. I think it should be reworked on that basis. --
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subjugation of the Vienna city council by
Austrian general Windischgrätz, he ran down that tricolour lying in the dust with his horse. That was the position of the Habsburg monarchy regarding that flag. Please don't confuse the Frankfurt National Assembly of 1848/49 with the German Confederation, which de facto didn't exist between 1848 and 1850.
1015:
I agree with
Ebralph and his 'A bit off topic' section in that the content of confederation activity is largely transmitted as an abstract battle between vague ideological forces. It is lacking in detail of the decisions made within the confederation, and the reach of these decisions. I would like to
938:
In the "Members" section it says "23 smaller and tiny member states shared five votes in the
Federal Assembly." Surely, given the size of the article and the importance of the subject, it would be worth the trouble to list those smaller states; I imagine I am not the only one to come to this article
651:
Hi I feel that this article is a bit off-topic. The topic should be the German
Confederation and not the social-economic development of Germany in the 19th century. While of course the social and economic development are important to understand the German Confederation, it is much too extensive. The
726:
Someone keeps removing the flag of the German
Confederation, which was used from 1848 onward, which was the black-red-yellow tricolour. If you do not believe this, look on the web for Flags of the World or FOTW and look at the historical flags of Germany, it will display the German Confederation as
488:
Eleven years later this still stands. I′ve just added a POV tag at this whole section, which seems to me to be only aimed at pinpointing how good and progressive were the French
Revolution and the French Empire, and how backwards were the German states before they were enlightened by the Napoleonic
1396:
for several reasons. The changes you're requesting are numerous and need to be specified exactly. As in, grab the source code for the table, do your modifications, and post the results here in the talk page for implementation. Also, you may need to back your changes with citations. Finally, such a
580:
The article says: "The late 18th century was a period of political, economic, intellectual, and cultural reform, the
Enlightenment (represented by figures such as Locke, Rousseau, Voltaire, and Adam Smith)". Locke hardly counts as either late 18th century or an enlightenment figure... he died in
755:
The black-red-gold tricolour was the flag of the revolutionists of 1848/49. During that time the German
Confederation wasn't active. The German Confederation was reestablished between 1850 and 1851 under Austrian Presidency. Habsburg Austria supressed the use of that tricolour, for example at the
530:
If you see it this way, George
Washington should be considered a famous British freedom fighter. 1797 Austria was NOT part of Germany, Austria was an independent country heading a loose confederation of german-speaking independent countries and was at that time referred to as Austria in the whole
1295:
Hello, I allow myself to ask a similar question as above. I think that a lot of the content is more about the years of 1815-1866 as a historical period, but not about the G.C. itself, what it did and how it worked. The general content about the period should be shortened in a nice summary. Kind
902:
I don't know who wrote this, but the states were already acting independently after the Peace of Westphalia of 1648. The rule of Napoleon was an exception.The German Confederation was some kind of NATO: It was about mutual defense, fortresses have been built to defend the territory. There was a
551:
There were no Emperors of Austria until 1804. All the other Emperors in Vienna until 1804 were always Roman German Emperors. And in Austria Austrians with German mother tongue were always registered as Germans until 1938. An "Austrian nation" became national doctrine only 1945 and didn't exist
542:
Not quite correct: Austria was part of the German Empire, and the Emperors of Austria (and Kings of Hungary) were simultaneously Emperors of the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation. They only relinquished the crown of the German Empire in 1806 when the Holy Roman Empire was dissolved.
1373:
For the table of states within the German Confederation listed under the 'History' tab: The states' government type (e.g. Kingdom, Grand Duchy, etc.) should be listed either in the same box as the name; or preferably in a column adjacent to it, so sorting by the type would be possible.
969:
According to the article in this link, the Duchy of Lauenburg is listed (Number 38) as one of the states of the German Confederation. However, this state is not listed as one of the signatories. Is this an omission, or did Lauenburg never sign but still become a confederation member?
903:
Federal Assembly in Frankfurt to coordinate the armies and the politics of the states, like the EU does, but there was no head of state or ruler of the confederation,which means the states were independent. Every state had it's own constitution and passed it's own laws.
616:. Thus the person who said that "The late 18th century... (represented by figures such as Locke, Rousseau etc.)" is having an error. Furthermore I extend this to the person who said that John Locke is not an enlightenment figure. Imagine he had thoughts about the
1259:
Back in the days the dividing line between germans and dutch weren't as clear as today, and the limburgish dialect is closely related to the dialects of the northern rhineprovice. i don't think one can count the dutchmen of Limburg as an ethinuc minority
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know to what extent the decrees of the assembly were evenly applied throughout the federation. The battle between liberalism and reaction type language should be cut as I'm sure many such discussions can be found in more pertinent articles.
918:"Every state had it's own constitution and passed it's own laws" guess what that is the case for every state of the US and every state of the Federal Republic of Germany as well, so I guess those states are independent as well, aren't they?
1431:
Lead's first sentence: "The German Confederation was an association of 39 predominantly German-speaking sovereign states in Central Europe. "Confederation" is part of the translated name, "association" is a definition of what it was.
515:
about who is considered German. In my opinion, Schubert was both German and Austrian. Austria was part of Germany when he was born in 1797, and when he died, there was no German country, but Austria was still a member of the
1321:
I've removed the mentioning of Schleswig. While there's very important history between them and the wars that ended in the annexation of both duchies by Prussia, these are details that should be discussed elsewhere.
666:
The North German Confederation was not changed to the German Empire. I corrected that. Limburg was not constituent member of the Federtaion, so I took it out of the paragraph, which was too complicated anyway.
1176:
Had that map been the infobox map, instead of being out of view at the tail end of the article, people would probably not have been wondering if this and that was part of the G. Confederation or not.--
1116:"except Istria, Salzburg, Styria, Tyrol, and Vorarlberg" is contradicting the maps, as well checked other articles of this. But maybe someone as well look on it and verify it, before removal. Thanks.(
854:
Three member states were ruled by foreign monarchs: the King of Denmark, the King of the Netherlands, and the King of Great Britain (until 1837) were members of the German Confederation; the first as
480:
The discussion, if one can call it that, of the Prussian reforms under Hardenberg and Stein is amazingly one-side and biased. I trust that someone better informed will re-write that section.
976:
3) Even if we add Lauenburg to the signatories and disregard "Denmark on account of Holstein", this still leaves us with a count of 40, but the article says the Confederation was made up of
681:
changed to the German Empire. According to Nelson Case the North German Confederation Reichstag changed the name to the German Empire on 10 December 1870. I have corrected your correction.
1318:
The articles on the duchies also make it clear that they truely were seperate duchies, with only Holstein being part of the HRE and Sleswig being a de jure and de factor Danish duchy.
1027:
since austria and prussia were both members of the confederation, it can hardly have been meant as a buffer between the two. therefore i removed that sentence.17:22, 25 May 2015 (UTC)
898:
These 5 years of independence mark the first and only time since the creation of the Holy Roman Empire in the 10th century when these states were free from higher political control.
815:
If the Netherlands, Denmark and England where part of the German Federation than why are they not part of it in the picture of the German Federation that comes with this article.
1161:
Well, the first map is already part of the article, I don't think the standard globe type infobox picture should be removed, since it identically-correctly shows the situation.(
1476:
1132:
The map seems ok, but why not use this one instead? It's in German but at least you see clearly what was in and what wasn't (Salzburg, Styria, Tyrol are in, but not Istria)--
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Yes, it should as it was part of Austria. In the German and French version of this article, the kingdom of Lombardy-Venetia is included in the German Confederation.
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It simply wasn't. The two might have been declared inseparable, de jure they weren't (and de facto, as it turned out, they were also not inseparable).
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I don't agree with Ebralph's objection to the words 'reactionary' or 'regime'. However, describing Prussia as 'backward' does sound inappropriate.
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Without entirely checking, theoretically/logically everything has to be listed that once was a member (and of course attribute the timeline).(
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I would even go so far to say that ethnic minorities were not exactly a matter for the Confederation, but more for the member states.
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2) Both Holstein and "Denmark on account of Holstein" are listed among the signatories. This seems redundant. Is this a mistake?
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Shouldn't Russia be mentioned in this section, with regard to the Kaliningrad enclave? It sure looks like it, based on the maps.
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They were not "part of the German Federation" with their complete lands, I think it is about Hannover, and the
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change might be controversial with other editors, so you should probably first seek consensus to make them.
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is "Age of Enlightenment"... for historians cannot agree on the time in which time that period in
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on Knowledge. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
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on Knowledge. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
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be shown on the map as "Territory of member states outside of the confederation"?
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ideas can be called "Age of Enlightenment". Actually, I can say that the rise of
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Themanwithoutapast, why don't you join the discussion on the List of Germans at
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before, although Austria created a fake history after 1945. 11:49 27-12-2012
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The Holstein note suggested that Schleswig was part of the Holstein duchy
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having this flag from 1848 to the confederation's dissolution in 1866.
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http://www.emersonkent.com/map_archive/german_confederation_1815.htm
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I think, the black-red-gold (tricolour) was not really "official".
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to find out who exactly the members of the Confederation were.
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states. Is there an explanation for this apparent disparity?
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His ideas actually influenced the later Enlightenment thinkers
632:. Is he the person you reject to be an enlightenment figure??
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Also this map from the Cambridge Modern History Atlas (1912):
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http://en.wikipedia.org/States_of_the_German_Confederation
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Flag of the German Confederation was the current tricolour
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Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 18 July 2023
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I have some questions regarding the list of signatories:
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206:, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of
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I cant remove it ... (do you see in article) ... --
836:and for Denmark the situation which lead to the
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1291:Topic of this article: the G.C. or the period?
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1477:Knowledge level-4 vital articles in History
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804:Flag_of_Germany#German_Confederation
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305:This article is within the scope of
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983:Thank you for your consideration.
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624:and other issues mostly about
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691:23:30, 10 November 2011 (UTC)
568:10:49, 27 December 2012 (UTC)
424:and see a list of open tasks.
325:Knowledge:WikiProject History
319:and see a list of open tasks.
220:Knowledge:WikiProject Germany
214:and see a list of open tasks.
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1507:WikiProject Germany articles
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1367:to reactivate your request.
1355:has been answered. Set the
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1285:20:47, 8 January 2022 (UTC)
1255:Dutchmen as ethnic minority
1200:Should the list include: -
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