Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Industrialization in Germany was the phase of the breakthrough of industrialization in Germany, beginning at the time from around 1815 to 1835. [1] [2] This period was preceded by the periods of pre-industrialization and early industrialization. In general, the decades between the 1830s and 1873 are considered the phase of industrial take off.
The Political Economy of Germany in the Twentieth Century (U of California Press, 2020). Henderson, William O. The State and the Industrial Revolution in Prussia, 1740-1870 (1958) Holborn, Hajo. A History of Modern Germany (3 vol 1959–64); vol 1: The Reformation; vol 2: 1648–1840; vol 3. 1840–1945; James, Harold.
The two key components of the German model is a national system for certifying industrial and artisan skills, as well as full union participation in the oversight of plant-based vocation training. [2] The German model of collective bargaining differs from the model common in other European countries and the United States. [3]
In Germany the shortage of food was an acute problem. According to the UNRRA in 1946–47 the average kilocalorie intake per day was estimated to be 1,080, [25] which according to Alan S. Milward was an amount insufficient for long-term health. [26] Other sources state that the kilocalorie intake in those years varied between as low as 1,000 ...
The Crystal Palace Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of all Nations, London, 1851 Early industrialisation in Germany, the city of Barmen in 1870. Painting by August von Wille. Aplerbecker Hütte, an industrialised area of Dortmund, Germany, c. 1910. The United Kingdom was the first country in the world to industrialise. [6]
Twenty million people were estimated to have moved to Germany from other countries in the 1900s, and the colonies would be a good place to hold some of the population. The leaders of the country made an effort to show the German people how the industry and its workers prospered from German imperialism. [2]
In the Soviet Union, only by 1927 had industrial output achieved approximately the 1913 levels under the Tsarist regime, [5] but Soviet exports to Germany increased to 433 million Reichsmarks annually by 1927 after trade agreements were signed between the two countries in the mid-1920s.
The "New Plan" was based on trade with less developed countries who would trade raw materials for German industrial goods saving currency. [70] Southern Europe was preferable to Western Europe and North America as there could be no trade blockades. [71] This policy became known as the Grosswirtschaftsraum ("greater economic area") policy.