Christian Democratic Union (GDR)
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Christian Democratic Union (GDR)
Summary
Christian Democratic Union (GDR) is a political party[1]. Christian Democratic Union (GDR) ranks in the top 5% of political_party entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (382 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR) is in the country of German Democratic Republic[3].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s instance of is recorded as political party[4].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s instance of is recorded as bloc party[5].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s flag image is recorded as Flagge der CDU (Ost).svg[6].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s logo image is recorded as Logo der CDU (DDR).svg[7].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s headquarters location is recorded as East Berlin[8].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s headquarters location is recorded as Otto-Nuschke-Haus[9].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 153335910[10].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s GND ID is recorded as 1010501-3[11].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as n80119879[12].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s Commons category is recorded as Christlich-Demokratische Union Deutschlands (GDR)[13].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s sRGB color hex triplet is recorded as 216CE5[14].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s chairperson is recorded as Gerald Götting[15].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s chairperson is recorded as Andreas Hermes[16].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s chairperson is recorded as Jakob Kaiser[17].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s chairperson is recorded as Otto Nuschke[18].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s chairperson is recorded as August Bach[19].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s chairperson is recorded as Wolfgang Heyl[20].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s chairperson is recorded as Lothar de Maizière[21].
- +1945-06-26T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Christian Democratic Union (GDR)[22].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR) was dissolved in +1990-10-03T00:00:00Z[23].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s Freebase ID is recorded as /m/01xmgb[24].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s NL CR AUT ID is recorded as ko2003163576[25].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s topic's main category is recorded as Category:Christian Democratic Union (East Germany)[26].
- Christian Democratic Union (GDR)'s political ideology is recorded as Christian democracy[27].
Body
Founding
+1945-06-26T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Christian Democratic Union (GDR)[22].
Identity
Short names include {'lang': 'de', 'text': 'Ost-CDU'}[28] and {'lang': 'ru', 'text': 'ХДС ГДР'}[29].
Leadership
Chairpersons include Gerald Götting[15], a politician[30], 1923–2015[31], of Germany[32], awarded the Banner of Labor[33], specialised in politics[34]; Andreas Hermes[16], a politician[35], 1878–1964[36], of Germany[37], awarded the Great Cross with Star and Sash of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany[38]; Jakob Kaiser[17], a politician[39], 1888–1961[40], of Germany[41], awarded the honorary citizen of Berlin[42]; Otto Nuschke[18], a journalist[43], 1883–1957[44], of German Democratic Republic[45]; August Bach[19], a journalist[46], 1897–1966[47], of German Democratic Republic[48], awarded the Banner of Labor[49]; and Wolfgang Heyl[20], a politician[50], 1921–2014[51], of Germany[52], awarded the Banner of Labor[53].
Operations
Headquarters locations include East Berlin[8], a big city[54], in German Democratic Republic[55], founded in 1949[56] and Otto-Nuschke-Haus[9], a building[57], in Germany[58], founded in 1985[59].
Dissolution
Christian Democratic Union (GDR) was dissolved in +1990-10-03T00:00:00Z[23].
Why It Matters
Christian Democratic Union (GDR) ranks in the top 5% of political_party entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (382 views/month).[2] Christian Democratic Union (GDR) has Wikipedia articles in 19 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[60] Christian Democratic Union (GDR) is known by 14 alternative names across languages and contexts.[61]