In the 19th century that was Prussia's Chancellor Otto von Bismarck.
No. But Prussia did engage in a series of wars with other countries in order to unite all the German states of Europe in the 1860s.
Yes, birth records from the 1860s for Tczew, which was part of Prussia during that time, may be available. These records are typically held in local civil registry offices or archives, such as the State Archives in Poland. Access to these records can vary, so it may be necessary to contact the relevant archive or consult online genealogical databases for availability.
George-Etienne Cartier
By the time of WWI Prussia no longer existed as an independent nation. Prussia was one of the largest of the "Germanic States" which were unified into a single nation in the 1860s. Prussia was also the most warlike of the several hundred Germanic city-states of varying sizes. But in some ways the Prussians were in fact very much involved in WWI. The German Kaiser, Wilhelm II, was of the Hohenzollern Dynasty. This was the ruling family of Prussia, which had become, with German unification, the ruling family of all Germany.
No, the 1860s are in the 19th century.
Yes it was invented in the 1860s
Prussia was fighting "internal" wars in the 1860s. The "Seven Weeks War" was one of them. These were "unification wars" (Civil Wars fought amongst the same peoples but utilizing different names...such as in the US...Confederates and Union forces or Rebels and Federal Forces...same same all were Americans...). Prussia later became Germany. The only real war was fought between 1870-1871 between France & Prussia called the "Franco-Prussian War." This war gave birth to the name Germany.
Germany was originally many different German-speaking kingdoms. During the 1860s, the most powerful of those kingdoms, Prussia, tried to unite all the German kingdoms under Prussia's king. In 1871, they created a unified Germany. That Germany was broken in half after World War II by the Soviet Union and united again in 1990.
Yes they ate salad in the 1860s.
Thomas Cook of Derbyshire, England opened the first travel agency (Thomas Cook & Son) in 1841, offering excursions around the United Kingdom. In 1850 he expanded to France, and in the 1860s, Switzerland, the United States, Egypt and Italy, creating the first holidays, or vacations. Obviously at the time, such trips were only available to the middle and upper classes of people.
The largest town in BC in the 1860s was Barkerville. It is stated that in the 1860s the population was 5,000 and it was designated the National Historic Site of Canada in the year 1924.
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