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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Wilhelm_MarxWilhelm Marx - Wikipedia

    Wilhelm Marx (15 January 1863 – 5 August 1946) was a German judge, politician and member of the Catholic Centre Party. During the Weimar Republic he was the chancellor of Germany twice, from 1923–1925 and 1926–1928, and served briefly as the minister president of Prussia in 1925.

  2. Wilhelm Marx was a German statesman, leader of the Roman Catholic Centre Party, and twice chancellor during the Weimar Republic. Marx studied law and rose from a judgeship to the presidency of the senate of the Court of Appeal at Berlin (1922). He founded and was first president of the Catholic.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Wilhelm Marx (* 15. Januar 1863 in Köln; † 5. August 1946 in Bonn) war ein deutscher Jurist und Politiker ( Zentrum ). Marx war in den Jahren 1923/24 sowie 1926 bis 1928 Reichskanzler. Mit einer Amtszeit von insgesamt drei Jahren und einem Monat war er der am längsten amtierende Kanzler der Weimarer Republik .

  4. Wilhelm Marx. (b. 1863) Quick Reference. (b. Cologne, 15 Jan. 1863; d. Bonn, 5 Aug. 1946) German; Chancellor of Germany 1923–5, 1926–8, leader of Centre Party 1922–8 The son of an elementary school headmaster, Marx was brought up in a strongly Catholic home.

  5. www.wikiwand.com › en › Wilhelm_MarxWilhelm Marx - Wikiwand

    Wilhelm Marx was a German judge, politician and member of the Catholic Centre Party. During the Weimar Republic he was the chancellor of Germany twice, from 1923–1925 and 1926–1928, and served briefly as the minister president of Prussia in 1925.

  6. Wilhelm Marx (15 January 1863 – 5 August 1946) was a German lawyer and politician. He was the chancellor of Germany twice, from 1923 to 1925 and again from 1926 to 1928, as a member of the Centre Party.

  7. Karl Marx. The notion that history conforms to a “ dialectical ” pattern, according to which contradictions generated at one level are overcome or transcended at the next, was incorporated—though in a radically new form—in the theory of social change propounded by Karl Marx.