Germany was finally unified by Prussia, where was Prussia strong?

Updated on history 2024-05-04
7 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    Prussia has obvious militaristic tendencies, belligerent, as long as the war must be successful, especially the then king Frederick II was even more vigorous, during his reign, Prussia's national strength was strengthened. All of this will eventually lead to the unification of Germany.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    The most important reason why Prussia was able to unify Germany was that it had the iron-blooded Chancellor Bismarck, who led an army that was disciplined and capable of fighting. These are things that other countries do not have.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    First of all, the power and status of the Prussian king was very high, and all the other inhabitants had great trust in this king.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    The German Empire (German: deutsches kaiserreich), also known as the Second German Empire (the First Empire was the Holy Roman Empire), refers to Germany from the unification of Germany on January 18, 1871 (the unification of the Germanic regions except for the Austrian Empire by the Kingdom of Prussia) to the abdication of Wilhelm II, the last emperor of the Hohenzollern dynasty, in November 1918. Its official name, Deutsches Reich, was also the official name of the Weimar Republic and Nazi Germany.

    Kingdom of Prussia (German: preu en; Old Prussian: prūsa; English:

    Prussia ) was a feudal state in central Europe. The Kingdom of Prussia rose and unified all the German states except the Austrian Empire, establishing the Second German Reich, so Prussia is sometimes synonymous with the spirit and culture of the German Empire.

    In 1701, Frederick III (son of Frederick William), Marquis of Brandenburg and Duke of Prussia, supported the Habsburgs of Austria who ruled the Holy Roman Empire and declared war on the Bourbons of France in exchange for the title of king. On January 18, Frederick III was crowned King Frederick I of Prussia in Königsberg, thus ending more than 200 years of the illustrious history of the Kingdom of Prussia.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Prussia was a vassal state in Germany.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Similar to the relationship between the Qin Kingdom and the Qin Empire, although Prussia did not impose its name on Germany as a whole.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Europe was not present in the Middle Ages.

    Germany, at that time, Germany was called the German Confederation, it was composed of more than a dozen loose confederation of small countries, the most powerful of which was called the Kingdom of Prussia, basically all the German Confederation respected the Kingdom of Prussia as the head. Later, as Austria continued to control some small federal kingdoms in Germany, the two sides were often at war until the Kingdom of Prussia produced a prime minister named Bismarck, who was very courageous, defeated Austria, completely unified all the German confederation, and established Germany. You'll want to be succinct, so that's probably it.

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