Want this question answered?
Sardar Patel had nothing to do with German Unification; he was primarily responsible for helping to promote Indian Unification.
German
Sardar Patel had nothing to do with German Unification; he was instrumental in Indian Unification.
Yes.
Kaiser means emperor in German and and what kaiser Wilhelm wanted was to make Europe a part of his empire.
He was a German admiral who became famous for his memo to Kaiser Wilhelm II.
The German word for re-unification is Wiedervereinigung.
The establishment of the German empire began in 1871. During the Franco - Prussian war, four southern states agreed to unification with Prussia. In January of 1871, at Vesailles, Bismarck proclaimed William I as the emperor or " Kaiser" of the new German empire.
Sardar Patel had nothing to do with German Unification; he was primarily responsible for helping to promote Indian Unification.
Gosh No ! Kaiser is the German word for Caesar: Kaiser Wilhelm was the German king in WW1.
Kaiser = emperor
The process of German unification began in the 18th century with the rise of Prussia as a dominant German power. However, the formal unification of Germany into a single nation-state occurred in 1871 following the Franco-Prussian War.
The Franco-Prussian War in 1870-1871 led to the creation of the German state. It concluded with the defeat of France by Prussia and its allies, resulting in the unification of various German states into the German Empire, with Wilhelm I of Prussia being proclaimed as Kaiser.
Yes. Kaiser is the German version of Caesar.
Wilhelm II was a German kaiser.
in 1866
Vereinigung