Bundesrat (North German Confederation and German Empire)
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Bundesrat (North German Confederation and German Empire)
Summary
Bundesrat (North German Confederation and German Empire) is a representation of states in a federal system[1]. Bundesrat (North German Confederation and German Empire) draws 273 Wikipedia views per month (representation_of_states_in_a_federal_system category, ranking #2 of 2).[2]
Key Facts
- Bundesrat (North German Confederation and German Empire) is in the country of German Empire[3].
- Bundesrat (North German Confederation and German Empire) is in the country of North German Confederation[4].
- Bundesrat (North German Confederation and German Empire)'s instance of is recorded as representation of states in a federal system[5].
- Bundesrat (North German Confederation and German Empire)'s headquarters location is recorded as Reichstag[6].
- Bundesrat (North German Confederation and German Empire)'s Commons category is recorded as Bundesrat (German Empire)[7].
- Bundesrat (North German Confederation and German Empire)'s chairperson is recorded as Bundeskanzler (Norddeutscher Bund)[8].
- Bundesrat (North German Confederation and German Empire)'s chairperson is recorded as Reich Chancellor[9].
- 1871 marks the founding of Bundesrat (North German Confederation and German Empire)[10].
- Bundesrat (North German Confederation and German Empire) was dissolved in 1918[11].
- Bundesrat (North German Confederation and German Empire)'s described by source is recorded as Nordisk familjebok[12].
Body
Founding
1871 marks the founding of Bundesrat (North German Confederation and German Empire)[10].
Leadership
Chairpersons include Bundeskanzler (Norddeutscher Bund)[8], a position[13], in North German Confederation[14] and Reich Chancellor[9], a historical position[15], in German Reich[16], founded in 1871[17].
Operations
Bundesrat (North German Confederation and German Empire)'s headquarters location is recorded as Reichstag[6].
Dissolution
Bundesrat (North German Confederation and German Empire) was dissolved in 1918[11].
Why It Matters
Bundesrat (North German Confederation and German Empire) draws 273 Wikipedia views per month (representation_of_states_in_a_federal_system category, ranking #2 of 2).[2] Bundesrat (North German Confederation and German Empire) has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18] Bundesrat (North German Confederation and German Empire) is known by 5 alternative names across languages and contexts.[19]