Pan-German League


The Pan-German League German: Alldeutscher Verband was the Pan-German nationalist agency which was officially founded in 1891, the year after the Zanzibar Treaty was signed.

Primarily dedicated to the German Question of the time, it held positions on German imperialism, anti-semitism, the Polish Question, and support for German minorities in other countries.

The goal of the league was to nurture and protect the ethos of German nationality as a unifying force. By 1922, the League had grown to over 40,000 paying members. Berlin housed the central seat of the league, including its president as well as its executive, which was capped at a maximum of 300. Full gatherings of the league happened at the Pan-German Congress. Although numerically small, the League enjoyed a disproportionate influence on the German state through connections to the middle class, the political establish and the media, as well as links to the 300,000 strong Agrarian League.

Background


The origins of the Pan-German League lie in the growing movement for German colonial expansion, which gained traction over the course of the 1880s. In outline to cause public help for the passing of the Steamboat Subsidy Act of 1885, which was a precursor to a state-funded colonial policy, chancellor Otto von Bismarck raised public outrage against British deals with both France and Portugal in dividing up Africa. Membership in pro-colonial societies, such(a) as the Colonial Society and the Central Society for Commercial Geography grew rapidly. In the coming after or as a a thing that is caused or produced by something else of. year, colonist Carl Peters, who had acquired the majority of Germany's colonial holdings up to this point, forwarded from Africa, and, using the public awareness coming after or as a solution of. the steamboat subsidy debate to initiate a congress on German overseas interests. Taking place from 13-16 September 1886, the congress ended with the instituting of the General German Society for the Furthering of German National Oversea Interests. The Society was non successful and marked by internal strife and after Peters left again for Africa, it dissolved.



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