About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 60. Chapters: Thomas Mann, Willy Brandt, Gustav Radbruch, Heinrich Mann, Thomas Baltzar, Wilhelm Mohnke, Erich Muhsam, Justus Muhlenpfordt, Helmuth Brinkmann, Hans Blumenberg, Johann Friedrich Overbeck, Erich Vermehren, August Hermann Francke, Felix Carlebach, Gustav Falke, Duke Christian of Oldenburg, Godfrey Kneller, Hans-Joachim Jabs, Haim Cohn, Dorothea von Rodde-Schlozer, Adolf Busemann, Luis Camnitzer, Turiya Hanover, Bertrand Freiesleben, Franz Tunder, Joachim Jungius, Johann Lorenz von Mosheim, Ernst Curtius, Bastian Sick, Dirk Skreber, Emanuel Geibel, Benjamin Block, Andreas Kneller, Arnold Brecht, Erasmus Finx, Wilhelm Bousset, Hermann Pister, Jorg Ziercke, Paul Both, Rudolf Brehmer, Werner Bergengruen, Bjorn Engholm, Georg Kaibel, Hanns Hopp, Gulcan Kamps, Heinrich Meibom, Bernt Notke, Georg Curtius, Claus Dethloff, Ephraim Carlebach, Robert Christian Ave-Lallemant, Johann Christian Friedrich Heidmann, Christian Friedrich Heinecken, Rotger Feldmann, Johann Bernhard Wilhelm Lindenberg, Johann Wilhelm Petersen, Heinrich Jacob Aldenrath, Matthias Hofs, Johann Julius Walbaum, Knut Hohne, Friedrich Matthias Claudius, Julius Leopold Eduard Ave-Lallemant, Paul Behrens, Justus von Dohnanyi, Benedikt Dreyer, Wolfgang Ne kovi, Karl Boy-Ed, Hermann Ludemann, Amalie Malling, Hermen Rode, Johann Wilhelm Cordes, Franz Ziehl, Alexander Hagen, Marie-Louise Drager, Christian Ahrendt, Juan Bruggen Messtorff. Excerpt: Willy Brandt, born Herbert Ernst Karl Frahm (German pronunciation: 18 December 1913 - 8 October 1992), was a German politician, Mayor of West Berlin 1957-1966, Chancellor of West Germany 1969-1974, and leader of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) 1964-1987. Brandt's most important legacy was Ostpolitik, a policy aimed at improving relations with East Germany, Poland, and the Soviet Union. This policy caused con...