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13 Kommentare

  1. InThePast8080 on

    Hitler popular in rural areas apparently. Doesn’t exactly fit with the later nazi-propaganda videos of him at factories, speaking in the big cities etc..

  2. kaiserkeller_ on

    Things had already gone to shit by this point. If only Hindenburg had lost the 1925 presidential election (he won by <3 percentage points), maybe Zentrum’s Wilhelm Marx (Christian democrat-ish) would have won reelection in 1932 and never appointed Hitler as chancellor.

  3. Interesting how Masurians (Polish-speaking minority in Prussia) voted for Hitler.

  4. GustavoistSoldier on

    Hindenburg was first elected as the anti-Weimar candidate, but his main opponent for reelection was literally Hitler

  5. It’s interesting that under a post about AFD gaining steam in eastern Germany, that I was told Prussia didn’t support the Nazi Party in their rise when clearly they did. Like I said, eastern Germany was more right wing than the west before and it wasn’t just an effect of the Eastern Bloc.

  6. Accomplished_Newt604 on

    Thats pretty much a confession map of catholics and lutherans in Germany

  7. henrikilled on

    if you overlap this map with terrotories controlled by Prusia prior to the formation of the modern german state, is there a correlation?

  8. GroundbreakingBag164 on

    For anyone curious, this is basically a catholicism/lutheranism map and not that much more

    The catholics were conservative but they generally didn’t like the nazi party

  9. General-Ninja9228 on

    Look how big Germany was back then, yet they complained that they needed “Lebensraum” in the East with eyes on Ukraine. When they lost the war they also lost East Prussia, West Prussia, Upper and Lower Silesia, and parts of Pomerania. Germans that lived in those areas as well as ethnic Germans from other Eastern countries, were expelled and stuffed into a greatly shrunken Germany.

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