"The women in germany 1918 1939" Essays and Research Papers

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    attempt to explain why some women got the vote in 1918 by discussing male and female spheres‚ the emergence of the suffrage societies and the similarities and differences between them. It shall proceed to discuss anti-suffrage‚ the role of politics‚ discuss how the war affected the women’s movement and finally the 1918 Representation of the People Act. It shall conclude was a summary of the points discussed. To understand the reasons behind some women getting the vote in 1918‚ one must look back at

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    Flu 1918

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    In my personal option when people walked down any given street in the year 1918 between the months of June and December‚ I’m sure one would have taken notice to the coffins that lined the sidewalks. Nobody was on the streets‚ and dead bodies were stuffed into every available space. The Flu Epidemic not only was the most devastating event of the twentieth century but the most deadliest. In the ten months 675‚000 Americans died of influenza and pneumonia. When compared to the number of Americans killed

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    Easter 1918

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    are living where life consist of a mixture of colors like the dress of a jester. But glorious and terrible change happens suddenly.       In the second stanza Yeats presents the story of people participated in the revolution. In a rising‚ beautiful women are grown shrewd. School teachers; Pearse‚ Thomas MacDonagh and personal enemy of the poet John MacBride‚ the man whom Maud Gonne married forsake their individual roles and fight with an unified aim-that of winning freedom for their country. They sacrificed

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    Why all women got the right to vote by 1928. In 1928‚ all women finally got the right to vote. It took them 78 years to do it‚ but all their hard work had paid off. The women campaigning tried everything‚ for example‚ they got themselves arrested‚ they went on hunger strikes while in prison‚ they tried to get noticed by the media and many more. Some of the main things that really helped women get the vote were The Suffragists‚ The Suffragettes‚ Legislation and War Effort. The suffragists used

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    Germany

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    allies of Britain‚ France and Russia winning the war successfully. There were many reasons to why the Allies won the war. Some of the reasons were the effects of the long war on the German Economy‚ the Alliance Systems‚ The Allied Naval Blockade on Germany and the entry of the U.S.A. At the start of the war two alliances had formed‚ the triple Entente which consisted of France‚ Russia and Great Britain. The Germans saw this alliance forming‚ and realised they had possible enemies on both fronts. In

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    Why did women get the vote in 1918? The government had a problem because men fighting in the war would not be able to vote in the election. The government changed the law so that the soldiers could vote. Women’s groups saw their opportunity and began to put pressure on the government to include votes for women in the changed law. David Lloyd George‚ the Prime Minister‚ was a supporter of women voting but not the use of violence. The Suffragettes stopped campaigning in the beginning of the war and

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    1914-1939 Timelien

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    US–German relationships were going away fast over submarine warfare. With the possibility of a German-supported attack by Mexico‚ the isolationists was defeated and lost ground and on 6 April 1917 resulting in Congress entering World War I against Germany. 1922-The American Professional Football League is formed in 1920 with Jim Thorpe as its president and eleven teams. It would change its name to the National Football League in 1922. (domestic) -The NFL was officially formed on August 20th 1920

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    Duncan Influenza In 1918

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    The Spanish Flu of 1918 was an influenza that swept the globe killing more people then World War One‚ World War Two‚ the Korean War‚ and the Vietnam War combined. The virus’s victims were between the ages of nineteen and twenty eight‚ an unusual range compared to expected ages of deaths from a normal flu. The Forsete‚ a ship that set sail from Norway’s northern coast‚ was hit with an outbreak of the Spanish Flu on September 21‚ 1918. Within the next two weeks‚ seven people died‚ and were buried in

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    important and integral factor in the downfall of the Weimar Republic and in turn‚ the ensuing failure of democracy in Germany in the period 1918-1934. The sense of loyalty and devotion to ones nation‚ which the German citizens had felt in their militaristic past‚ was ultimately devastated by WWI and its consequences. Although nationalism was a major cause of the failure of democracy in Germany‚ there were many other factors adding to the stress upon the countrys government at this time. This included the

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    Spanish Influenza 1918

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    deaths and the severity and geographic reach of this disease‚ it merits little attention in the history books. Today one of our greatest medical threats is AIDS. The Spanish Flu is exponential compared to AIDS casualties (Gloria). The Spanish Flu of 1918-19 affected our world like no other disease in history. It changed the ways people sought medical help‚ the ways physicians treated illness‚ the role of medical researchers and how society‚ particularly medical and political leaders respond to pandemic

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