response to unification
Soviet attempt to “reunite” Berlin
struggle over Venezuela
targets of terrorism
Wall Street crash
withdrawal from Berlin
Unity Treaty (1990)
University of Berlin
Unter den Linden
Unthan, Carl Hermann
Urbach, Peter
Urban, Rudolf
Urban renewal
Alexanderplatz
beautification of Berlin
Berlin as Germania
federal buildings
Friedrichstrasse
Honecker’s restorations
of divided Germany
Pariser Platz
postunification Berlin
Reichstag
Schloéplatz
Spreebogen
West Berlin
USPD.
Van Lengen, Karen
Variations for Orchestra(Schonberg)
Varnbiiler, Axel von
Varzin
Vasconi, Claude
Vassiltchikov, Marie
Vaugh, Harry
Veidt, Conrad
Vercors, Hélène
Via Triumphalis
Victoria, Princess
Victoria, Queen of England
Viertel, Berthold
Vietnam War
Villa Wannsee(fig.)
Violence
Nazi-KPD conflicts
Night of the Long Knives
student protests
Virchow, Rudolf
Vizetelly, Henry
Vogel, Hans-Jochen
Vogel, Wolfgang
Voigt, Wilhelm
Volksbiihne Volksturm (civilian army)
Volmer, Ludwig
Vorstell, Wolf
Wagenbach, Klaus
Wagner, Richard
Waigel, Theodor
Walden, Herwarth
Waldersee, Alfred von
Waldoff, Claire
Walker, Jimmy
Wall Street crash
Wallot, Paul
Walser, Martin
Walter, Bruno
Wangenheim, Fritz
Wannsee Conference
War bonds
Warsaw Pact
Wassermann, Jakob
Wehrmacht
Weidling, Karl
Weigand, Karl von
Weigel, Helene
Weill, Kurt
Weimar Republic
coup attempts
cultural life
decadent nightlife
economic destabilization
modernization and rebuilding
right-wing rioting
Weinert, Erich
Weiss, Berhard
Weiss, Peter
Weizsäcker, Richard von
Wells, H.G.
Weis, Otto
Die Weltbuhne
Wenck, Walther
Wender, Wim
Werfel, Franz
Werner, Anton von
Werner, Arthur
Wertheim (department store)
Wessel, Horst
West Africa Conference (1884-1885)
West Germany.
Weyland, Paul
Wiene, Robert
Wildenbruch, Ernst
Wilder, Billy
Wilhelm I
Wilhelm II
antipathy towards Friedrich
beautification of Berlin
Bismarck’s relations with
cultural capabilities
declaration of war
dislike of Berlin
dislike of Reichstag
effect on cultural life
first automobile
hotel construction
Industrial Exposition
labor strikes
naval spending bills
push into exile
relations with Great Britain, France, and Russia
resentment of Edward VII
sexual issues
on wartime morality
on women’s roles
Wilhelmsplatz
Wilhelmstrasse
Wilmersdorf Wilson
Woodrow
Winkler Heinrich
Wolf, Christa
Wolf, Friedrich
Wolf, Markus (Mischa)
Wolfe, Thomas
Wolff, Theodor
Wolgemuth, Wolfgang “Wo Wo,”
Wollenberger, Vera Women
and Allied troops
as entertainers
as labor force(fig.)
as WWII conscripts
espionage work
food riots
prostitution
rape by Russian soldiers
Rosenstrasse resistance
Wooding, Sam
Work camps
World Jewish Congress
World War I
declaration of war
defeat and revolution
philosophy and ideology during
postwar misery in Berlin
shortages of food and manpower
World War II
Allied conquest of Berlin
declaration of war
deportation of Jews
Hitler’s preparations for
official end
postponement of Germania construction
World Youth Games
Wortley, Edward Stuart
Wrangel, Friedrich von
Wright, Orville
Wyden, Peter
Xenophobia
Young, James E.
Young Plan
Zaisser, Wilhelm
Zehlendorf
Zeppelin, Ferdinand von
Zetkin, Clara
Zeughaus
Zhukov, Georgi
Ziegler, Adolf
Zille, Heinrich
Zilli, Timo
Zionism
Zola, Emile
Zolling, Theophil
Zuckmayer, Carl
Zweig, Arnold
Zweig, Stefan
A NOTE ON THE AUTHOR
David Clay Large, professor of history at Montana State University, is a specialist in modern German history. Among his books are
A NOTE ON THE TYPE
This book was typset in Caslon 540, a typeface derived from William Caslon’s eighteenth century types. The popularity of these types led to a practically endless range of Caslon copies; among them Caslon 540, from American Type Founders in 1902, and Caslon 3, a slightly bolder face also from ATF in 1905, which was later modified for use with Intertype and Linotype technologies. Both designs have the warm, solid, straightforward style that has made Caslon popular for over 200 years; these Caslons, however, have shorter descenders, and higher contrast, features that enable them to hold up better with the faster presses and the new varieties of paper introduced at the turn-of-the-century.