997 resultados para Mexican War, 1846-1848.


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Boberach: Ein "konstitutioneller Diplomat" empfiehlt den Kleinstaaten, sich durch eine Defensivallianz zu schützen, nachdem die Annektion der Freien Stadt Krakau [1846] gezeigt hat, daß das Völkerrecht ihnen nicht helfen kann

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Boberach: Die revolutionäre Bewegung in Baden mußte unterdrückt werden, weil sie in ganz Deutschland eine Republik errichten wollte. - Welsch (Projektbearbeiter): Der Verfasser war zwischen 1846 und 1849 badischer Innenminister

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Welsch (Projektbearbeiter): Schilderung der Geschehnisse in Wien am 15. Mai 1848 anläßlich der Bewilligung der Forderungen der sogenannten Sturmpetition: Zurücknahme des Tagesbefehls der Nationalgarde vom 13. Mai 1848 (das Verbot der Mitgliedschaft im revolutionären Wiener Zentralkomitee betreffend), Änderung des Wahlgesetzes (Aufhebung der Beschränkungen des allgemeinen Wahlrechts), Einführung des Einkammersystems (Verzicht auf den Senat), gemeinschaftliche Besetzung der strategisch wichtigen Punkte Wiens durch Nationalgarde und Militär. Von einem Mitglied der Akademischen Legion

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Welsch (Projektbearbeiter): Erzherzog Johann ist der Vollender des Werkes der deutschen Einheit und Freiheit, das von Kaiser Joseph II. begonnen wurde, welcher " ... schon vor mehr denn 50 Jahren seinem Volke ... die Pforten der Freiheit öffnen wollte ... ". Dargestellt im Topos der Wiederauferstehung Josephs II., der seinem Neffen Ratschläge erteilt. Mit antiklerikaler Zielrichtung

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Welsch (Projektbearbeiter): Bekanntgabe des Bekenntnisses der Offiziere der Wiener Garnison zur konstitutionellen Monarchie und zu den konstitutionellen Volksrechten. Einladung der Nationalgarde, der Bürger und Studenten zur Verbrüderung mit dem Militär auf den folgenden Tag

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v.1: 4th ed., 1848; v.2: 3d ed., 1838; v.3: 3d ed., 1840; v.4: 2d ed., 1846; v.5: 1836; v.6: 1840.

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"Ever since the present political boundary separating Mexico and the United States was established in 1848 by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo and partially amended in 1853 by the Gadsden Purchase, there has been migration of Mexican citizens into the United States. In fact the border between the two nations was completely open until, with the passage of the Immigration Act of 1924, the Border Patrol was established and it became a felony to enter the United States illegally. No quota, however, was applied to immigration from Mexico until 1968. During that year legislation became effective which restricted total annual immigration from all Western Hemisphere nations to 120,000, with a maximum of 40,000 from any one country. Both these figures are regularly exceeded. In 1973, for instance, there were 173,123 legal immigrants from all Western Hemisphere nations, including 70,141 Mexicans. That the real flow exceeds the quotas is explained by the numerous exemptions allowed. With the exception of only three years since 1960, legal immigration from Mexico to the United States has exceeded that of every other nation in the world."

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Contains approximately 6800 manuscripts arranged chronologically by year for years 1752-1794. Approximately 100 are letters received or written by Lopez, his partner and father-in-law, Jacob Rodriguez Rivera, members of his family and company, and commercial agents pertaining to business activities and sailing orders for the captains of various ships. Several also refer to personal matters and acquaintances, including a series of six letters from Silas Cooke of White Hall (Middletown), R.I., to Aaron Lopez, asking his aid in returning a run-away slave (1776). The great majority of the collection consists of account records, bills of sale, orders, shipping agreements, lists of sailors on the various ships, repair records and cargo invoices. Of particular interest are a receipt for payment of a half-year's subscription to the "tzedakah" of Congregation Nefutzei Israel, Newport (1755) and several documents that reveal Lopez as a supplier of kosher meat and other religious articles to people in various parts of the colonies, Surinam, and Jamaica. Also included in this group are copies of sailing lists, documents pertaining to Lopez's naturalization which shed light upon the status of a Jew applying for citizenship in Massachusetts and a check to Lopez from the United States government for a loan made during the Revolutionary War (1779).