It was not a new nation, it was a nation new to democracy. They excluded the Jews by taking away their German citizenship.
Nationalism is one's pride in their nation. Nationalism applied to Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan. Nationalism had nothing to do with communist aggression during the cold war.
Germany and austria were never ONE nation, but austria was a part of austria-Hungary. austria might have been part of the German empire way back in the middle ages.
the unified nation states of germany led by an elected emperor was called
In 1938 the Anschluss was signed. Anschluss is the German word for "union." The treaty united Germany and the country of Austria.
Nationalism
Austria
Hitler claimed that the Jews needed to be eliminated for Germany to survive as a nation
Nationalism is one's pride in their nation. Nationalism applied to Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan. Nationalism had nothing to do with communist aggression during the cold war.
In the poem "To the Flower of Heidelberg," nationalism is expressed through the speaker's deep sense of love and admiration for his homeland, Germany. The speaker reflects on the beauty and longevity of the flower as a symbol of the enduring spirit of the German people. The poem celebrates German culture and heritage, evoking feelings of pride and loyalty towards the nation.
Depends what you mean by 'nation'. In the middle ages all of what is now Switzerland and Austria was considered part of the German nation and was ruled by the German emperor; so Germany must be considered the oldest.
Germany. it is a German freeway ----
Normally nationalism comes first, then the nation. Where the nation exists first, (e.g Belgium) any sense of nationalism is less strong.
The notion that Germany became a nation in 1648 is nonsense. An awareness German national cultural identity is older. However, Germany didn't become a nation-state still with a central Germany government till 1871.
That is a very good question. That question can be split into two other questions : "Can there be a nation without nationalism?" and "Can there be nationalism without a nation?" Looking at these two questions, I would say that nationalism comes first.
Nationalism was in the past often used to get people to 'defend their nation' 'revenge the insults to the national honor'(as when France started the Franco-Prussian war in 1870 or when Germany started WW 2), or to unite countries that were 'destined'to be one nation as for instance in the case of 19th century Germany and Italy.
Nationalism comes from the Lating word Nasci, which means "to be born"
The motto of the German nation is "Unity and Justice and Freedom".In German "Einigkeit und Recht und Freiheit"