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Pan-Germanism

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German Confederation
Confederation of States in Germany from 1815 to 1866
unification of Germany
creation of a politically and administratively integrated nation state of German-speaking populations on 18 January 1871, in the form of the German Empire
Pan-Germanism
thumb|250px|Map of German dialects in Central Europe before 1938 Pan-Germanism ( or '), also occasionally known as Pan-Germanicism, is a pan-nationalist political idea. Pan-Germanism seeks to unify all ethnic Germans, German-speaking people, and possibly also non-German Germanic peoples – into a single nation-state known as Greater Germany'''.thumb|Distribution map - reconstruction attempt of Germanic settlement areas
Zollverein
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Georg Ritter von Schönerer
Austrian politician (1842-1921)
German question
mid-19th century debate over the establishment of major German-language dominated state in Central Europe
Sudeten German Party
political party
Greater Germanic Reich
official state name of the political entity that Nazi Germany tried to establish in Europe during World War II
Pan-German League
former German populist political organization (1893-1939) with nationalist and expansionist ideology
German People's Union
nationalist political party in Germany
German Empire of 1848/1849
German national state (in establishment) 1848/1849
areas annexed by Nazi Germany
areas annexed by Germany before and during the Second World War
Nordische Gesellschaft
organization
Devlag
The Deutsch-Vlämische Arbeitsgemeinschaft (, "German-Flemish Working Group"; ), better known as DeVlag, was a small radical pro-Nazi organization active in Flanders during the German occupation of Belgium. It was founded in 1936 by academics Jef Van de Wiele and Rolf Wilkening as a cultural association to strengthen the exchange of students and professors between the universities of Leuven and Cologne.
German Workers' Party
political party in Austria-Hungary
Flamenpolitik
thumb|A sign saying (in broken Dutch language|Dutch): "Flemings come on over, the Germans will not shoot." Flamenpolitik () is a policy practiced by German authorities occupying Belgium during World War I and World War II. The ultimate goals of these policies was the dissolution of Belgium into separate Walloon and Flemish components and Germanisation.
Franz Stein
Austrian journalist, politician and activist (1869-1943)
pan-Germanic language
zonal constructed language designed for communication amongst speakers of Germanic languages
Süddeutsche Monatshefte
magazine