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Journal articles on the topic 'Swabian War'

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1

Mentzel, Peter. "The German Minority in Inter-War Yugoslavia." Nationalities Papers 21, no. 2 (1993): 129–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00905999308408280.

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The Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes inherited a considerable number of Germans along with its ex-Habsburg territories when it was established in December 1918. The two most important German communities in inter-war Yugoslavia were the Germans of Slovenia and the Germans of the Vojvodina and Croatia-Slavonia, the so-called Donau Schwaben (Swabians). There were also scattered pockets of ethnic Germans in Bosnia-Hercegovina. The Yugoslavian ethnic Germans (Volksdeutsche), like the other Yugoslavian non-Slav minorities, were objects of discrimination by the Yugoslavian government. The Sl
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2

Schwartz, Agatha. "Narrating the Danube Swabian Identity and Experience from Women's Perspective." Hungarian Cultural Studies 16 (September 6, 2023): 92–108. http://dx.doi.org/10.5195/ahea.2023.484.

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This article uses selected memoirs by American women who came from the Danube Swabian minority in present-day Hungary and Serbia (former Yugoslavia). The entire ethnic group was expelled from the region at the end of World War II. All five memoirs were published in the new millennium. This article examines how the narratives frame memories of a prewar happy childhood from young women’s perspective. The childhood memories are presented in stark contrast to the authors’ postwar experiences of expulsion, sexual violence, genocide, flight, and the eventual building of a new life in a new country.
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3

Spira, Thomas. "Worlds Apart: The Swabian Expulsion from Hungary after World War II." Nationalities Papers 13, no. 2 (1985): 188–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00905998508408021.

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The German expulsion is a sad chapter of post-World War II Hungrian history. After 1945, hundreds of thousands of Hungary's German-speaking citizens (popularly known as Swabians) were expelled as traitors. They were accused of having joined the Nazi-oriented Volksbund, or of having “volunteered” in the Third Reich's SS forces. The legality, morality, and rationality of the Hungarian government's action will be disputed for many years to come. More useful, however, might be an exploration of this apparently arbitrary and cruel expulsion of German-speaking Hungarian citizens. This essay surveys
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4

Riedmann, Tobias. "„den fliegenden maͤren zeglauben kein ursach sîe“ – Das Mandat Maximilians I. vom 22. April 1499 in seiner propagandistischen Dimension." historia.scribere, no. 11 (June 17, 2019): 177. http://dx.doi.org/10.15203/historia.scribere.11.803.

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This paper deals with the propaganda used by Emperor Maximilian I during the Swiss/Swabian War of 1499, and in particular the mandate of April 22nd. In accordance with the genuine communication situation of the Early Modern period, it was necessary to adapt the respective framework conditions to the corresponding time segment through a theoretical determination of the communication situation. Based on these theoretical premises, this study analyses original sources according to their propagandistic dimensions and investigates the context, the addressed audience and the declared purpose corresp
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5

Sea, Thomas F. "The Swabian League and Peasant Disobedience before the German Peasants' War of 1525." Sixteenth Century Journal 30, no. 1 (1999): 89. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2544901.

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6

Spira, Thomas. "The Volksdeutsche Kameradschaft and the Swabian Demands On the Eve of World War II." East Central Europe 12, no. 2 (1985): 146–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187633085x00126.

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7

Gärtner, Kurt, and Florian Mittenhuber. "A Bernese Fragment of Brother Philipp's 'Marienleben' Ein Berner Fragment von Bruder Philipps 'Marienleben'." Zeitschrift fuer deutsches Altertum und Literatur 150, no. 3 (2021): 328–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.3813/zfda-2021-0011.

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Brother Philipp's 'Marienleben' (written around 1300) is the most widespread religious verse epic in Middle High German literature. Up to now, 120 textual witnesses have been known. The new fragment documents a slightly modified version that circulated in East Swabian around the middle of the 14 th century, it is therefore informative for the early reception of the work in this region. Bruder Philipps 'Marienleben' (entstanden um 1300) ist das am weitesten verbreitete geistliche Versepos der mittelhochdeutschen Literatur. Bis heute sind 120 Textzeugen bekannt. Das neue Fragment bezeugt eine le
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8

Friederike Delouis, Anne. "A French Minority in the Banat? Post-war Redefinitions of Swabian Cultural Heritage and Ethnic Belonging." Südost-Forschungen 79, no. 1 (2020): 263–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/sofo-2020-790114.

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9

Balogh, András F. "Imagination und Wissen über die Nachbarvölkerin der rumäniendeutschen Literatur nach dem ersten Weltkrieg." Studia Universitatis Babeș-Bolyai Philologia 66, no. 3 (2021): 35–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.24193/subbphilo.2021.3.02.

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"Imagination and Knowledge about the Neighbouring Peoples in the German Literature in Romania after the First World War. The starting point of this paper consists in adapting the ideas formulated by the cultural turn, according to which culture is a product of a dynamic process. After the First World War, a new cultural field was formed through a very fast process in the micro-society of German-speaking people in Transylvania and Banat. This cultural field was mostly influenced by the newspapers and cultural periodicals (Klingsor, Siebenbürgisch-Deutsches Tageblatt, Temeswarer Zeitung), by ecc
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10

Tircsi, Richárd. "The History of the Germans from Mérk and Vállaj, Deported to the Soviet Union for Forced Labour 1945–1949." Acta Universitatis Sapientiae, European and Regional Studies 7, no. 1 (2015): 61–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/auseur-2015-0006.

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Abstract The deportation - in German: Verschleppung - was a ‘taboo' for a long time. However, the works born since the change of regime provide an excellent and overall picture about this painful historical act. At the same time, it is desirable to get a more precise picture by examining the detailed history of the deportation in the case of the individual settlements. Merk and Valla), the Swabian settlements in the Szatmar region, in the eastern part of the country, lie on the periphery in several aspects. Still, considering the numerical proportion of their population, the most displaced per
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11

Erwert, Helmut. "Das Schicksal der Donauschwaben in Südosteuropa mit besonderer Berücksichtigung der deutschen Minderheit in Jugoslawien nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg. Versuch eines Überblicks." Europäisches Journal für Minderheitenfragen 15, no. 3-4 (2022): 323. http://dx.doi.org/10.35998/ejm-2022-0015.

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12

Phayer, Michael. "Totalitarianism: Questions about Catholic Resistance." Church History 70, no. 2 (2001): 328–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3654456.

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After the war was over leading Catholic laity and the lower clergy pointed their finger at their bishops, faulting them for not having the backbone and willpower to stand up to Hitler. Was this fair? Bishops said they tempered their criticism of Nazism because Hitler punished their priests rather than them. Were the bishops being candid and forthright with this statement? If so, was this the right strategy? Jesuits urged the bishops to become active in the Kreisau Circle of resistance. They did not. Should they have? Pope Pius XII gave the German bishops freedom to do as they saw fit regarding
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13

Gentile, Carlo, and Francesco Corniani. "Zur Geschichte der italienisch-faschistischen Division Monterosa im deutsch besetzten Italien 1944–1945." Quellen und Forschungen aus italienischen Archiven und Bibliotheken 102, no. 1 (2022): 417–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/qufiab-2022-0019.

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Abstract This paper develops out of a specific event. In 2020, the town of Münsingen in the Swabian Alps commissioned its authors to write a historical report on the Italian Fascist Monterosa Division, focusing on its function and role in the German occupation of Italy from 1944 to 1945. The issue to be clarified was the extent to which the division was involved in war crimes during this period. The background to the request was a monument erected in 1986 in the Ehrenhain, Münsingen’s „grove of honour“, by the division’s veterans’ association (Associazione degli appartenenti alla divisione Mon
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14

Szilágyi, Levente. "Competing Nationality Politics Targeting German Communities at the Hungarian-Romanian Border Zone after the Great War." Ethnographica et Folkloristica Carpathica 1, no. 22 (2020): 71–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.47516/ethnographica/1/22/8213.

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In my study, I focus on the events that took place in the short period after the Great War ended (1918) and before the consolidation of Romanian power in the Hungarian-Romanian Border Commission (1922) from the point of view of the artificially created ethnic category: the Satu Mare Swabians or Sathmar Swabians. The historiography related to the “ethnographic” aspects of these events have appeared multiple times and in several contexts and forms in the years since. However, the question of ethnicity has not arisen in relation to the population of German descent, but rather in relation to the H
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15

Sreenivasan, G. P. "THE SOCIAL ORIGINS OF THE PEASANTS' WAR OF 1525 IN UPPER SWABIA." Past & Present 171, no. 1 (2001): 30–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/past/171.1.30.

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16

Márkus, Éva, and Maya Lo Bello. "Mihály Lieb or Mihály Munkácsy? Developing Cultural Identity in Hungary’s German National Minority Schools." Hungarian Cultural Studies 14 (July 16, 2021): 20–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.5195/ahea.2021.426.

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In the Carpathian Basin, German-speaking peoples have lived alongside Hungarians for hundreds of years, resulting in many, shared points of cultural intermingling. (Although commonly referred to as svábok [‘Swabians’], this is not the correct term for Hungary’s German minorities since their origins differ from those of Swabians living in Germany today). After World War II, thousands of Hungarian Germans were deported to Germany. Those who remained could not use their native language and dialect in public. Today, young generations reconnect with their German roots in state-funded, national mino
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17

Fischer-Galati, Stephen. "National Minority Problems in Romania: Continuity or Change?" Nationalities Papers 22, no. 1 (1994): 71–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/00905999408408310.

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The national minorities question in Romania has been one of crises and polemics. This is due, in part, to the fact that Greater Romania, established at the end of World War I, brought the Old Romanian Kingdom into a body politic (a kingdom itself relatively free of minority problems), with territories inhabited largely by national minorities. Thus, the population of Transylvania and the Banat, both of which had been constituent provinces of the defunct Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, included large numbers of Hungarians and Germans, while Bessarabia, a province of the Russian empire, included large
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18

Close, Christopher W. "Augsburg, Zurich, and the Transfer of Preachers during the Schmalkaldic War." Central European History 42, no. 4 (2009): 595–619. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0008938909991002.

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In summer 1546, armed conflict erupted in the Holy Roman Empire. The war pitted the Catholic Emperor Charles V against the Schmalkaldic League, an alliance of Protestant imperial estates led by Landgrave Philip of Hesse and Prince-Elector John Frederick of Saxony. While the conflict's most famous and final battle took place in Thuringia at Mühlberg, the Schmalkaldic War's first military action occurred in southern Germany in the Danube River basin. This area housed numerous evangelical imperial cities, several of which sat south of the Danube in eastern Swabia. When hostilities began in July 1
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19

Günther-Diringer, Detlef. "AR-applications with historical maps." Abstracts of the ICA 2 (October 9, 2020): 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/ica-abs-2-34-2020.

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Abstract. In cooperation with the Badische Generallandesarchiv (GLA) Karlsruhe, the officially archive of the former state Baden, various projects in the field of virtual and augmented reality (VR/AR) have been carried out.The VR project “Danube - Floating Spaces” refers to an exhibition by the GLA Karlsruhe in cooperation with the Institute for Danube Swabian History and Regional Studies, Tübingen. The entire exhibition was constructed in the third dimension and can now be experienced using different devices (offline PC version, WebGL version for Internet access or VR version for the HTC-Vive
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20

Etényi, Nóra G. "Broadsheets with Engravings in a Manuscript Chronicle from Ulm: Visual Representations of the Hungarian Kingdom on German Political Leaflets during the War of Reconquest (1683–1699)." Radovi Instituta za povijest umjetnosti, no. 43 (December 31, 2019): 91–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.31664/ripu.2019.43.07.

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The news about the war of expulsion against the Ottoman Empire was presented by a multi-central propaganda. A manuscript chronicle written in Ulm demonstrates the literacy of the broadsheets’ readership. The writer, Eberhard Gockel (1636–1703), a physician from Ulm, wrote a diary on the most important occurrences and affairs of the Turkish war from 1678 to 1703. He attached to his chronicle broadsheets and engravings on the recaptured Hungarian fortresses and the great victories against the Turks. Gockel had good sense for high quality engravings, and he chose the works of publishing houses wi
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21

Spiridon, Olivia. "„Schilf wächst darüber, Schilf wächst immer darüber“ Heimatliche Donaulandschaften in den deutschsprachigen Literaturen Südosteuropas nach 1945." Germanistische Beiträge 46, no. 1 (2020): 70–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/gb-2020-0003.

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Abstract Danubeland scapes have been a recurrent topic in the German-language literature of Southeastern Europe, especially in German literature from Romania, which was the only one to survive the end of the Second World War in the Eastern Bloc. They developed different forms on both-sides of the Iron Curtain. In the West, the Danubeservedas a frame work for the consolidation of a common identity of many disparate groups of former German minorities from Southeastern Europe under the collective name “Danube Swabians”. Additionally, writers from Romania who emigrated to the West recalled in thei
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22

Khan, A. M., and R. Taj. "To assess the extent of psychological impact on IDP's residing in the camps of Shahmansoor, Swabi, Khyber Pukhtun Kha, Pakistan." European Psychiatry 26, S2 (2011): 1205. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0924-9338(11)72910-8.

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RationaleThe northern area of Pakistan is hosting the terrorist actively involved in terrorism across the country and in neighboring country of Afghanistan. Government with support of international community initiated a war against terrorism which resulted in migration of huge number of population in the effected areas which was accommodated in refugee camps mainly established in Khyber Pukhtun Kha province.ObjectiveTo assess the extent of psychological impact on IDP's residing in the camps of ShahmansoorMethodThe sample of the study was taken from the Shahmansoor camp, Swabi and was comprised
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23

Ament-Kovács, Bence. "Naiste patschker, meeste kapca. Lõuna-Ungari saksa vähemuse käsitsi kootud jalakatted / Women’s patschker and men’s kapca. The hand-knitted hosiery and footwear of the German minority in Southern Hungary." Studia Vernacula 14 (November 14, 2022): 72–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.12697/sv.2022.14.72-97.

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The present study deals with the traditional knitted hosiery and footwear of the German minority living along the river Danube (Danube Swabians) in Southern Hungary.
 The national costume worn by the ethnic Germans who had settled in East-Central Europe in the 18th century had changed significantly by the 20th century in ways that differed from the changes that had taken place in clothing in Germany itself. The garments worn by populations coming from the various German provinces were unified in a way analogous to linguistic levelling, and by the 19th century they corresponded to the mult
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24

Hartkamp, Arthur, and Beatrijs Brenninkmeyer-De Rooij. "Oranje's erfgoed in het Mauritshuis." Oud Holland - Quarterly for Dutch Art History 102, no. 3 (1988): 181–232. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187501788x00401.

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AbstractThe nucleus of the collection of paintings in the Mauritshuis around 130 pictures - came from the hereditary stadholder Prince William v. It is widely believed to have become, the property of the State at the beginning of the 19th century, but how this happened is still. unclear. A hand-written notebook on this subject, compiled in 1876 by - the director Jonkheer J. K. L. de Jonge is in the archives of the Mauritshuis Note 4). On this basis a clnsor systematic and chronological investigation has been carried out into the stadholder's. property rights in respect of his collectcons and t
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25

Siter, Daniel. "Švabsko-nemška kulturna zveza in vloga njenih članov na Slovenskem v letih 1922–1945." Kronika 70, no. 1 (2022). http://dx.doi.org/10.56420/kronika.70.1.08.

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Drawing on scientific literature and primary sources, the article analyses the activity of the Swabian-German Cultural Association on Slovenian soil as one of the key formations of the fifth column. The Kulturbund became radicalized and Nazified, especially after Hitler and Nazism rose to power. Long before the war, members of the Kulturbund spread Nazi propaganda and demagoguery throughout Slovenian territory, pasted Nazi symbols and flags, collected classified and sensitive information on the country and those who acted against the Germans and Germany. Based on that, lists of allegedly suspi
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26

Panu, Mihai Adrian. "Identităţi etno-culturale şi mecanisme ale etnicității în contextul securitar interbelic: comunităţile de şvabi din România Mare / Ethno-cultural identities and mechanisms of ethnicity in the interwar security context: Swabian communities in Greater Romania." Analele Banatului XXIX 2021, January 1, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.55201/onsl2936.

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In the first decades of the 20th century Europe was marked by important systemic transformations which decisively affected various societal and political factors. The outbreak of World War I caused the collapse of entire European empires and prepared the path for the emergence of a new political order dominated by new established nation-states. The rise of Greater Romania occurred in this particular context, fulfilling therefore a much-needed national objective, namely the unification of all the historical provinces inhabited mostly by ethnic Romanians. Soon after the Great Union the young Rom
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27

Albert, Carmen. "Ocupaţia sârbă din Banat în memorialistica bănăţeană / Serbian Occupation in Banat Memories (1918–1919)." Analele Banatului XIX 2011, January 1, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.55201/davz7668.

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Great events often cause brutal confrontation within history and biography that always create tension – at least inmodern history – a memorialistic wave. As such, the quantity of Banat library memoirs about World War I andpro-union action in the province is not surprising.These include numerous passages concerning the entry and presence of Serb forces in the Banat. This occurredin the eastern and central part of Banat, an area with an absolute majority of Romanian inhabitants. The referencesare more valuable the less they are about these events in our historiography.In this study, things are s
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