Social Sciences, asked by remanbiswas76, 10 months ago

explain the weimer constitution has some intermediate effects?​

Answers

Answered by ArjunHarshal
0

Answer:

article 48,that allowed president to take powers in hand

Answered by somyatiwaripb
1

Answer:

"Weimar Germany" redirects here. For the German city, see Weimar. For the Bonn Republic, the German state between 1949 and 1990, see West Germany. For the Berlin Republic, the current German state since 1990, see Germany.

German Reich

Deutsches Reich

1918–1933[1][2][3]

Flag of Weimar Republic

Flag

Coat of arms of Weimar Republic

Coat of arms

Motto: Einigkeit und Recht und Freiheit

Unity and Justice and Freedom

Anthem:

Das Lied der Deutschen

(Song of the Germans)

Germany in 1930

Germany in 1930

German states in 1920s (Free State of Prussia with its provinces shown in blue)

German states in 1920s (Free State of Prussia with its provinces shown in blue)

Capital Weimar, later Berlin (de facto)

Common languages Official:

German

Unofficial:

Religion

1925 census[4]

64.1% Protestant (Lutheran, Reformed, United)

32.4% Roman Catholic

0.9% Jewish

2.6% Other

Government 1919–30 Federal

semi-presidential

constitutional republic

1930–33 De facto authoritarian

presidential republic

President  

• 1919–1925

Friedrich Ebert

• 1925–1933

Paul von Hindenburg

Chancellor  

• 1919 (first)

Philipp Scheidemann

• 1933 (last)

Adolf Hitler

Legislature Reichstag

• State Council

Reichsrat

Historical era Interwar period

• Established

9 November 1918

• Government by decree begins

29 March 1930[5]

• Hitler appointed Chancellor

30 January 1933

• Reichstag fire

27 February 1933

• Enabling Act

23 March 1933[1][2][3]

Area

1925[6] 468,787 km2 (181,000 sq mi)

Population

• 1925[6]

62,411,000

Currency

   1919–23 "Papiermark" (ℳ)

   1923–33 Rentenmark

   1924–33 Reichsmark (ℛℳ)

Preceded by  Succeeded by

German Empire

Nazi Germany  

The Weimar Republic (German: Weimarer Republik  (About this soundlisten)) is an unofficial historical designation for the German state from 1918 to 1933. The name derives from the city of Weimar, where its constitutional assembly first took place. The official name of the republic remained Deutsches Reich ("German Reich") unchanged from 1871, because of the German tradition of substates. Although commonly translated as "German Empire", the word Reich here better translates as "realm", in that the term does not have monarchical connotations in itself. The Reich was changed from a constitutional monarchy into a republic. In English, the country was usually known simply as Germany.

Explanation:

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