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Deutsche Reichspartei (German Empire Party) was a right-wing party, founded in 1950 from the previous Deutsche Rechtspartei (German Rights party), which had been set up in Pomerania in 1946 and had five members in the first German Parliament. In politics, right-wing, the political right, or simply the right, are terms which refer, with no particular precision, to the segment of the political spectrum in opposition to left-wing politics. ...
1950 was a common year starting on Sunday (link will take you to calendar). ...
Pomerania (Polish: Pomorze, German: Pommern and Pommerellen, Pomeranian (Kashubian): Pòmòrze and Pòmòrskô, Latin: Pomerania, Pomorania) is a geographical and historical region in northern Poland and Germany on the south coasts of the Baltic Sea between and on both sides of the Vistula and Oder (Odra) rivers...
1946 was a common year starting on Tuesday. ...
The Bundestag (Federal Diet) is the parliament of Germany. ...
The initial founders of the party were among others: Alexander Andrae, Oskar Lutz, Hans Bernd von Grünberg, Wilhelm Meinberg, Wilhelm Gutmann, Otto Heß, Hans Schikora, Heinrich Kunstmann, Adolf von Thadden. In 1949 the Socialist Reich Party split off of it, as the Empire Party was not at that point neo-Nazi, and prefered to distance itself from Adolf Hitler. The party, however, moved to the right in 1952, when the SRP was outlawed by the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany and much of its membership joined the Empire Party. The membership of Hans-Ulrich Rudel in 1953 was seen as marking out the party as the new force of neo-Nazism. 1949 is a common year starting on Saturday. ...
The Socialist Reich Party (German: Sozialistische Reichspartei) was a German political party founded in the aftermath of the Second World War, in 1949, as an openly National Socialist and Hitler-admiring split from the Deutsche Rechtspartei. ...
The terms Neo-Nazism and Neo-Fascism refer to any social or political movement to revive Nazism or Fascism, respectively, and postdates the Second World War. ...
Adolf Hitler? (April 20, 1889âApril 30, 1945) was the Chancellor of Germany from 1933, and Führer und Reichskanzler (Leader and Chancellor) of Germany from 1934, to his death. ...
1952 was a leap year starting on Tuesday (link will take you to calendar). ...
The Federal Constitutional Court (in German: Bundesverfassungsgericht, BVerfG) is a special court established by the German Constitution, the Grundgesetz (Basic Law). ...
Hans Rudel Hans-Ulrich Rudel (July 2, 1916 - December 18, 1982) was a highly decorated German Stuka dive-bomber pilot during World War II. // Biography Rudel was born to a Protestant minister in Konradswaldau (Silesia), Germany (Polish after 1945). ...
1953 is a common year starting on Thursday. ...
The terms Neo-Nazism and Neo-Fascism refer to any social or political movement to revive Nazism or Fascism, respectively, and postdates the Second World War. ...
Despite this the party suffered through a lean period in the 1950s, which continued until a revival in the regional elections of 1959. By then, however the Empire party was already in the process of going out of existence, as chairman Adolf von Thadden wanted to form a more broad based force on the right. The party held its final conference in 1964 when it was symbolically dissolved. It was quickly replaced by the Nationaldemokratische Partei Deutschlands. 1959 was a common year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
1964 was a leap year starting on Wednesday (link will take you to calendar). ...
The National Democratic Party (German: Nationaldemokratische Partei Deutschlands, NPD) is a far right political party in Germany that was founded in the early 1960s as a successor to the German Empire Party: (German: Deutsche Reichspartei, DRP). ...
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