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William II |
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William II (1859–1941)Emperor of Germany from 1888, the son of Frederick III and Victoria, daughter of Queen Victoria of Britain. In 1890 he forced Chancellor Bismarck to resign in an attempt to assert his own political authority. The result was an exacerbation of domestic and international political instability, although his personal influence declined in the 1900s. He was an enthusiastic supporter of Admiral Tirpitz's plans for naval expansion. In 1914 he first approved Austria's ultimatum to Serbia and then, when he realized war was inevitable, tried in vain to prevent it. In 1918 he fled to Doorn in the Netherlands after Germany's defeat and his abdication. William II (1792–1849)King of the Netherlands 1840–49, son of William I. He served with the British army in the Peninsular War and at Waterloo. In 1848 he averted revolution by conceding a liberal constitution. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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This enables him to make the past really present, to describe moments as our parents lived them: when blitzkrieg and Auschwitz and Hiroshima could not be imagined; when Nazis were not what we now know them to be; when the Rockefeller Foundation was funding the work of racialist scientists at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute; when respectable people were advancing monstrous ideas; when monstrous ideas were respectably taking institutional form. His works have been exhibited in many museums, including the Archivio del Progetto of the University of Parma and the National Gallery of Modern Art in Rome, (both in Italy); the Museum of Modern Art in New York City; three museums in Germany: the Kaiser Wilhelm Museum in Krefeld, the Kunstmuseum in Dusseldorf and the Museum fur Kunst and Gewerbe of Hamburg; the Modern Museum of Otherwise, your page tends to look, as my grandfather would have said, as if the paragraphs were Dutch soldiers and you were Kaiser Wilhelm. |
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