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Monarchy Concordance

Concordance status: generated from processed OCR/PDF text. Treat these as source-location aids until each passage is checked against the scan.

19 hits

Total text matches across processed Steinmetz sections.

1 sources

Sources containing at least one matched alias.

5 sections

Chapters, lectures, sections, or report divisions with matches.

Monarchy, monarchy

SourceHitsSections
America and the New Epoch195
SectionSourceHitsWorkbenchLocation
Chapter 6: Germany in the Individualistic EraAmerica and the New Epoch9Workbenchlines 2776-3206
Chapter 11: Democracy and MonarchyAmerica and the New Epoch5Workbenchlines 5060-5327
Chapter 1: Eras in the World’s HistoryAmerica and the New Epoch2Workbenchlines 234-626
Chapter 7: The Other European Nations in the Individualistic EraAmerica and the New Epoch2Workbenchlines 3207-3740
Chapter 2: The Epoch of the French RevolutionAmerica and the New Epoch1Workbenchlines 627-873
Chapter 6: Germany in the Individualistic Era - 9 hit(s)

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... weakened and died before the rising tide of socialistic labor organization. Bismarck endeavored to attach the young So- cialist party to the assistance of the monarch- ical government, but nothing but complete surrender of the monarchy to democratic so- cialism would have satisfied the early Socialists, while the movement was not yet suflSciently strong to cause Bismarck to offer material con- cessions. Thus a three-cornered fight con- tinued. With the consol ...
Chapter 11: Democracy and Monarchy - 5 hit(s)

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XI DEMOCRACY AND MONARCHY As seen in the preceding chapters, a reorgan- jLa. ization of our nation's industrial-political system is inevitable, if we hope to retain and extend our industrial prosperity against the highly organized and efficient co-op ...
Chapter 1: Eras in the World’s History - 2 hit(s)

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... re revolutionary character. On the Continent, feudalism once more tri- umphed over the industrial city. With increasing subdivision and specializa- tion of classes, feudalism finally reached its last development in the absolute monarchy. The "retainers" of the lord of the manor became the army of mercenaries of the duke or king. The king thus became independent of the vol- untary service of the feudal lords, the noblemen. Against the army of mercenaries, ...
Chapter 7: The Other European Nations in the Individualistic Era - 2 hit(s)

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... when Russia joined England the large in- vestments in Russian loans needed protection, and thus France joined the Allies. Russia has not yet approached the individ- ualistic era, but is still deep in feudalism. An autocratic monarchy, discouraging and oppos- ing intelligence and education, a small intellec- tual minority, fully as educated, intelligent, and able as the intellectual classes in any other country, but helpless and not backed by a nation; over ...
Chapter 2: The Epoch of the French Revolution - 1 hit(s)

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II THE EPOCH OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION THE fire which consumed feudalism was kindled in the French parliament, called together when the feudal monarchy, bankrupt by ineflSciency and extravagance, had arrived at the end of its rope. The declaration of the rights of man, made in the August night of 1789, ranges with the Magna Charta and our Declaration of Independence as ...