Two Aspects of the German ConstitutionYale Publishing, 1894 - 39 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 12
Page 7
... interpreted only in the way Laband does , that the twenty - five states enumer- ated in the Article are the members of the union . 1 Ibid . , p . 20 . 2 Dr. Georg Meyer : Der Anteil der Reichsorgane an der Reichs - Gesetzge- bung , p ...
... interpreted only in the way Laband does , that the twenty - five states enumer- ated in the Article are the members of the union . 1 Ibid . , p . 20 . 2 Dr. Georg Meyer : Der Anteil der Reichsorgane an der Reichs - Gesetzge- bung , p ...
Page 9
... interpretation of the question . As to that I can say this much . Whenever the Imperial Chancellor has to defend the Imperial policy in the Imperial Diet , he does so " in the name of the allied governments " , as can be seen from ...
... interpretation of the question . As to that I can say this much . Whenever the Imperial Chancellor has to defend the Imperial policy in the Imperial Diet , he does so " in the name of the allied governments " , as can be seen from ...
Page 10
... interpretation and with the view of the publicists that the people of Germany call the emperor the monarch and the sovereign of the empire . That this is the case everybody can see for himself who takes the trouble of reading a German ...
... interpretation and with the view of the publicists that the people of Germany call the emperor the monarch and the sovereign of the empire . That this is the case everybody can see for himself who takes the trouble of reading a German ...
Page 11
... interpretation of the Con- stitution . The framers of the Constitution did not intend to make the king of Prussia the monarch and sovereign of Ger- many . It is well known that they chose for him the title " German Emperor " instead of ...
... interpretation of the Con- stitution . The framers of the Constitution did not intend to make the king of Prussia the monarch and sovereign of Ger- many . It is well known that they chose for him the title " German Emperor " instead of ...
Page 12
... interpretation of the Constitu- tion . One wished to give the governments the feeling that they together were the empire , that the two conceptions , the empire and the allied governments , were identical . The phrase of Bismarck's ...
... interpretation of the Constitu- tion . One wished to give the governments the feeling that they together were the empire , that the two conceptions , the empire and the allied governments , were identical . The phrase of Bismarck's ...
Common terms and phrases
allied governments Article 17 assemblies Bavaria Constitution of to-day constitutional monarchy contrast DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Empire of to-day eral Council executive organ factor of Imperial Federal Coun Federal Council represents Federal Council resolves feudalism to absolutism framers Georg Meyer German Constitution German Emperor German Empire German Imperial offices German monarchy German princes government bills Ibid Impe Imperial bills Imperial Chancellor Imperial government Imperial laws Imperial legislation Imperial ministry Imperial policy Imperial sovereign initiative king of Prussia Laband legislative House legislative power majority resolutions means ment monarch and sovereign monarch of Germany name of Prussia North German Federation Number orthodox view Paragraph perial Diet perial government peror pire prepared in German princes and senates Prof propose bills Prussian Constitution Prussian members Prussian ministerial department Prussian prime minister publicists reigning princes represents the sovereign rial Diet second resolution sovereignty stitutional three free cities tion union upper House written Constitution
Popular passages
Page 4 - And the use of all of these terms, 'treaty', 'agreement', 'compact', show that it was the intention of the framers of the Constitution to...
Page 2 - The presidency of the union belongs to the King of Prussia who, in this capacity, shall be entitled German Emperor.
Page 3 - Chief Executive with a general power to direct and control the administrative acts of subordinate federal officers. Any powers exercised by the President in this area, therefore, must emanate from statutory delegations or the clear implication of a course of legislative action. Consistent...
Page 1 - Bavaria, etc., as far as I know. I say as far as I know, because the meetings of the Federal Council are secret.
Page 1 - The Federal Council consists of the Representatives of the members of the Confederation, amongst whom the votes are divided according to the rules for the full assembly of the late Germanic Confederation, so that Prussia, with the late votes of Hanover...
Page 11 - Diet in the name of the emperor according to the resolutions of the Federal Council".