Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dreissiger> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 53 of
53
with 100 triples per page.
- Dreissiger abstract "The term Dreissiger (German Dreißiger) (Thirtiers) refers to liberal intellectuals who left Germany and came to the United States in the 1830s to escape political repression.In a broader sense, it refers to immigrants from across Germany, and including members of every social and economic class, who emigrated to the USA during this period.The French July Revolution of 1830, the Hambacher Fest of 1832 and the failure of the Frankfurter Wachensturm of 1833 were followed by restrictions on press freedom and academic freedom. At the instigation of the chancellor of the Austrian Empire, Prince Metternich, the Central Federal Bureau of Investigations (German: Bundeszentralbehörde für Untersuchungen) was set up after the revolt against the reign in the Free City of Frankfurt by the States of the German Confederation dominated through the Austrian monarchy.Leaders including Paul Follenius and Friedrich Münch organized the Giessen Emigration Society to help Germans move to a \"new and free Germany in the great North American Republic.\" The Dreissiger were generally more cautious than the later forty-eighters, who emigrated to the USA after the failed European revolutions of 1848.The more liberal of the Dreissiger formed societies dedicated to supporting equality and justice, but the more conservative Catholic Germans were uncomfortable with this activism.".
- Dreissiger thumbnail Friedrich-Münch.jpg?width=300.
- Dreissiger wikiPageID "29351565".
- Dreissiger wikiPageLength "3577".
- Dreissiger wikiPageOutDegree "35".
- Dreissiger wikiPageRevisionID "697930713".
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Academic_freedom.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Austrian_Empire.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Botany.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Category:1830s_in_Germany.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Category:German-American_history.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Category:German_American.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Emigration.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Ferdinand_Lindheimer.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Forty-Eighters.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Frankfurter_Wachensturm.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Free_City_of_Frankfurt.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Freedom_of_the_press.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Friedrich_Münch.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink German_Americans.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Germany.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Gießener_Auswanderungsgesellschaft.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Gustav_Bunsen.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Gustav_Koerner.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Habsburg_Monarchy.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Hambach_Festival.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Intellectual.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink July_Revolution.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Klemens_von_Metternich.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Liberalism_in_Germany.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Paul_Follen.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Political_repression.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Revolutions_of_1848.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink States_of_the_German_Confederation.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Texas_Revolution.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink Theodor_Engelmann.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink United_States.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLink File:Friedrich-Münch.jpg.
- Dreissiger wikiPageWikiLinkText "Dreissiger".
- Dreissiger wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Lang-de.
- Dreissiger wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Dreissiger subject Category:1830s_in_Germany.
- Dreissiger subject Category:German-American_history.
- Dreissiger subject Category:German_American.
- Dreissiger comment "The term Dreissiger (German Dreißiger) (Thirtiers) refers to liberal intellectuals who left Germany and came to the United States in the 1830s to escape political repression.In a broader sense, it refers to immigrants from across Germany, and including members of every social and economic class, who emigrated to the USA during this period.The French July Revolution of 1830, the Hambacher Fest of 1832 and the failure of the Frankfurter Wachensturm of 1833 were followed by restrictions on press freedom and academic freedom. ".
- Dreissiger label "Dreissiger".
- Dreissiger sameAs Q1258286.
- Dreissiger sameAs Dreißiger.
- Dreissiger sameAs m.0ds4sb_.
- Dreissiger sameAs Q1258286.
- Dreissiger wasDerivedFrom Dreissiger?oldid=697930713.
- Dreissiger depiction Friedrich-Münch.jpg.
- Dreissiger isPrimaryTopicOf Dreissiger.