Social Sciences, asked by shivkhera22, 3 months ago

plz answer fast and according to 10th class ​

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Answered by sahuaryan618
0

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10 mein aa gya ab tk ye nhi pata

Answered by InstaPrince
47

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Frankfurt National Assembly, formally German National Assembly, German Frankfurter Nationalversammlung or Deutsche Nationalversammlung, German national parliament (May 1848–June 1849) that tried and failed to create a united German state during the liberal Revolutions of 1848.

A preliminary parliament (Vorparlament) met in Frankfurt am Main in March 1848 at the instigation of liberal leaders from all the German states (including Austria), and it called for the election of a national assembly (Nationalversammlung). The elections were duly held, though the electoral laws and methods varied considerably from state to state, and on May 18 the national assembly met in the Church of St. Paul (Paulskirche) in Frankfurt.

Moderate liberals held a majority in the assembly, though the entire political spectrum was represented among its deputies. The liberal Heinrich von Gagern was elected president of the parliament.

The Frankfurt National Assembly spent much time debating various plans for a unified Germany, but it also had to decide on immediate practical problems, such as the nature of the executive power and Germany’s territorial extent.

Archduke John of Austria, a comparatively liberal uncle of the Austrian emperor Ferdinand, was appointed regent of Germany and head of the assembly’s (putative) executive power on June 29. Yet it soon became clear that the executive appointed by the assembly had no power except such as was granted to it by the governments of the individual states.

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