Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q702157> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 63 of
63
with 100 triples per page.
- Q702157 subject Q6419136.
- Q702157 subject Q7023851.
- Q702157 subject Q8797905.
- Q702157 subject Q8880303.
- Q702157 abstract "The Fourth Reich (German: Viertes Reich) is a theoretical future German empire that is the successor to Nazi Germany (1933–1945). The term Third Reich, originally coined by Arthur Moeller van den Bruck as the title of his 1923 book Das Dritte Reich, was used by the Nazis for propaganda purposes to legitimize their regime as a successor state to the retroactively-renamed First Reich (the Holy Roman Empire, 962–1806) and the Second Reich (Imperial Germany, 1871–1918). The terms First Reich and Second Reich were never used by historians.The term "Fourth Reich" has been used in a variety of different ways. Some neo-Nazis have used it to describe their envisioned revival of Nazi Germany, while others have used the term derogatorily, such as conspiracy theorists who have used it to refer to what they perceive as a covert continuation of Nazi ideals, and by critics who believe that Germany exercises a dominant role in the European Union.".
- Q702157 thumbnail Karte_des_Deutschen_Reiches,_Weimarer_Republik-Drittes_Reich_1919–1937.svg?width=300.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q10647.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q1194333.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q12548.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q12802.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q128135.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q12908.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q151250.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q1542328.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q155.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q157136.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q159.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q159535.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q16957.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q1768525.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q177266.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q183.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q210534.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q215421.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q217197.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q223200.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q22649.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q2628.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q27353.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q318471.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q3259469.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q327656.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q36.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q408.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q43287.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q458.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q46.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q489268.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q5226389.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q5413809.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q55917.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q56022.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q5605472.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q567.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q57442.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q6186.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q6419136.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q664.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q7023851.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q718909.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q7318.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q7518942.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q77466.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q785378.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q823945.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q8268.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q855.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q8797905.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q8880303.
- Q702157 wikiPageWikiLink Q960541.
- Q702157 comment "The Fourth Reich (German: Viertes Reich) is a theoretical future German empire that is the successor to Nazi Germany (1933–1945). The term Third Reich, originally coined by Arthur Moeller van den Bruck as the title of his 1923 book Das Dritte Reich, was used by the Nazis for propaganda purposes to legitimize their regime as a successor state to the retroactively-renamed First Reich (the Holy Roman Empire, 962–1806) and the Second Reich (Imperial Germany, 1871–1918).".
- Q702157 label "Fourth Reich".
- Q702157 depiction Karte_des_Deutschen_Reiches,_Weimarer_Republik-Drittes_Reich_1919–1937.svg.