Home
Architecture
Art
Beauty/Health
Beer
Business/Economy
Cars
Celebrities
Christmas
Dictionaries
Education
Fashion/Clothes
Food
Galleries
Gays/Lesbians
Genealogy
German Names
Germans Abroad
History
Holidays
Homework Help
Learn German
Law
Literature
Loveparade
Movies
Music
Nazi
News
Oktoberfest
Philosophy
Today in History
Traditions
Travel to Germany
Wines
More topics...
Facts About Germany
Armed Forces
Education
Economy
History
Geography
Mass Media
Politics
Society
German History
Early History
Medieval History
Thirty Years' War
Weimar Republic
Third Reich
Postwar
Honecker Era
Berlin Wall
Bismarck
German Recipes
Salads
Main Dishes
Desserts
Baking
German Chocolate Cake
Easter Dishes
Halloween Dishes
Christmas Dishes
How To in Germany
Articles
Quizzes
|
March 29 in German History
--------------------------------- March 29, 1735
Birth of Johann Karl August Musäus in
Jena, Germany. Musäus was a writer known for his satire and
his fairy tales. His Volksmärchen der Deutschen (5
vols. 1782-86) was a vehicle for his satirical bent.
March 29, 1824
Birth of Ludwig Büchner in Darmstadt,
Germany. Ludwig Büchner was the younger brother of the
dramatist, Georg Büchner. He was a physician in Darmstadt,
but achieved his position in history through his atheistic
and materialistic writings. In his Kraft und Stoff (1855)
he denied God, creation by a divine being, and free will. He
was convinced that humans are completely material beings.
Other publications by Büchner include, Natur und Geist
(1857) and Die Stellung des Menschen in der Natur (1869).
March 29, 1826
Birth of Wilhelm Liebknecht in Giessen,
Germany. Liebknecht was one of the founders of the Social
Democratic Party (SPD). When the revolution of 1848 broke out
in Paris, Liebknecht went to participate. He then returned to
Germany to join in the German uprisings. He was arrested and
imprisoned. He then moved to Switzerland, but his leadership
of the workers movement there resulted in his expulsion. He
moved to London in 1849, where he worked closely with Marx
and Engels. In 1862 he returned to Berlin, but in 1865 he was
expelled by Otto von Bismark. He then settled in Leipzig and
joined the Deutscher Arbeiterverein. In 1869 in Eisennach he
and his friend August Bebel formed the Sozialdemokratische
Arbeiterpartei. After repression by Bismark's Anti-Socialist
Law of 1878 the party reformed in 1891. In that year at a
party meeting in Erfurt it adopted a new charter and took on
the name, German Social Democratic Party. That party is the
direct forerunner of the present day Social Democratic Party
(SPD).
March 29, 1895
Birth of Ernst Jünger in Heidelberg,
Germany.
March 29, 1912
Birth of Hanna Reitsch in Hirschberg,
Germany. Reitsch was an aviator who became the first German
woman to gain a captain's license, the first woman helicopter
pilot and the first woman test pilot. She was one of the test
pilots of the rocket plane developed during World War II. She
was the first woman to be awarded the Iron Cross (1942). She
was one of the last people to see Hitler in his bunker and
flew the last German combat plane out of Berlin. She
continued her flying career and continued to set records
after the war. She wrote an autobiography in 1951, Fliegen,
mein Leben.
March 29, 1934
Death of Otto Hermann Kahn in New York
(born in Mannheim, Germany). A banker, Kahn was stationed at
the London branch of the Deutsche Bank. In 1893 he moved to
the United States and became a partner in the firm of Kuhn,
Loeb and Co. He became a key figure in railroad financial
reorganization. When the Metropolitan Opera encountered
financial difficulties, he became involved and was a heavy
donor. It was he who brought Arturo Toscanini to the company.
March 29, 1982
Death of the composer, Carl Orff, in
Munich, Germany.
Back to Today in German History Calendar
|
|