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Yiddish, or Jewish German? : the Holocaust, the Goethe-Institut and Germany’s neglected obligation to peace and the common cultural heritage
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Double trouble – visual and phonological impairments in English dyslexic readers
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Comparing journalism cultures in Britain and Germany: Confrontation, Contextualization, Conformity
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From London to Leipzig and back: (Post-)Punk, ‘Endzeit’ and Gothic in the GDR
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Early Arabic studies in western Europe : letters from Marcus Welser to Marquard Freher, 1611-1612, on Arabic epigraphy
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Detection of ground parrot vocalisation: a multiple instance learning approach
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‘These four letters s o l a are not there’: language and theology in Luther’s translation of the New Testament
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Ranked document selection
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In: http://www.dcc.uchile.cl/~gnavarro/ps/swat14.pdf (2014)
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The Introspective Sponger: Hamlet in the Poetry of Bertolt Brecht
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Colonial failure in the new world in the sixteenth century: a French and German comparison
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Cultural topography and emotional legacies in Durs Grunbein's Dresden poetry
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The scholar advocate: Rudolf Schlesinger's writings on Marxism and Soviet historiography
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Was Germany ever united? Evidence from intra- and international trade 1885–1933
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Wolf, Nikolaus. - : University of Warwick, Department of Economics, 2008
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Abstract:
When did Germany become economically integrated? Within the framework of a gravity model, based on a new data set of about 40,000 observations on trade flows within and across the borders of Germany over the period 1885 – 1933, I explore the geography of trade costs across Central Europe. There are three key results. First, the German Empire before 1914 was a poorly integrated economy, both relative to integration across the borders of the German state and in absolute terms. Second, this internal fragmentation resulted from cultural heterogeneity, from administrative borders within Germany, and from geographical barriers that divided Germany along natural trade routes into eastern and western parts. Third, internal integration improved, while external integration worsened after World War I and again with the Great Depression, in part because of border changes along the lines of ethno-linguistic heterogeneity. By the end of the Weimar Republic in 1933, Germany was reasonably well integrated.
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Keyword:
DD Germany; HC Economic History and Conditions
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URL: http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/1345/ http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/economics/research/workingpapers/publications/twerp_871.pdf http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/1345/1/WRAP_Wolf_twerp_871.pdf
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Reconciliation between the generations : the normalisation of the image of the ordinary German soldier in recent literature
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Uenuku : a Tainui taonga at the Te Awamutu District Museum ; Tainui taonga at the Te Awamutu District Museum
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Images of Germany: a theory-based approach to the classification, analysis, and critique of British attitudes towards Germany, 1890-1940
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