Definition, Meaning & Anagrams | English word DVP


DVP

Definitions of DVP

  1. Initialism of Don Valley Parkway.

3
DPV
PVD
VPD

Number of letters

3

Is palindrome

No

2
DV
VP

3

4

10
DP
DPV
DV
DVP
PD
PV
PVD
VD
VP
VPD

Examples of Using DVP in a Sentence

  • He founded the German People's Party (DVP) and, despite his own monarchist beliefs, came to grudgingly accept Weimar democracy and became open to working with the centre and the left.
  • Unlike the nationalist-conservative German National People's Party (DNVP), the DVP was not directed destructively against the Weimar Republic but combined its criticisms with proposals for reform that stayed within the system.
  • On 30 November 1923, Marx formed his minority first cabinet based on the Centre Party, the right-liberal German People's Party (DVP), the conservative Catholic Bavarian People's Party (BVP) and the center-left liberal German Democratic Party (DDP).
  • The strong upsurge of the Nazi Party (NSDAP) that began in 1930 did not affect the BVP to the same extent as other middle class parties – the German National People's Party (DNVP), German People's Party (DVP) and the German Democratic Party (DDP; later DStP) – since it had a rural Catholic core electorate with solid local structures that proved largely resistant to the emerging National Socialist movement.
  • In the second round of voting in the 1925 presidential election, the Weimar Coalition parties all supported the candidacy of the Centrist former chancellor Wilhelm Marx, who was narrowly defeated by Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg, supported by a centre-right coalition of the DVP, the German National People's Party (DNVP), and the Bavarian People's Party (BVP).
  • The pro-Marx forces styled themselves the Volksblock (People's Bloc) in response to the Reichsblock which supported Hindenburg, comprising the DNVP, DVP, BVP, other bourgeois parties, and right-wing nationalist organisations such as the Stahlhelm.
  • After the formation of the coalition of FDP / DVP, SPD and All-German Bloc/League of Expellees and Deprived of Rights (BHE) under his leadership, simultaneous to the creation of the new state of Baden-Württemberg in 1952, the Hesse FDP Association requested the expulsion of Maier and the state chairman Wolfgang Haussmann (1903-1989) from the party along with the separation of the DVP from the FDP, but the coup was not successful.
  • The inter-bank messaging part is used by applications like electronic funds transfer (EFT), real time gross settlement systems (RTGS), delivery versus payments (DVP), centralised funds management systems (CFMS) and others.
  • The first meeting was attended by Heinrich Class of the Pan-German League, Franz Seldte of the Stahlhelm, a veterans' association closely associated with the DNVP, Martin Schiele (DNVP) and Karl Hepp (DVP) for the Agricultural League, and, thanks to Hugenberg's invitation, Adolf Hitler of the NSDAP.
  • Four parties contributed a representative: DVP (Gustav Stresemann), Centre Party (Heinrich Brauns), DNVP (Martin Schiele) and BVP (Karl Stingl).
  • Richard Heyne (27 September 1882, (Offenbach am Main) - 18 March 1961, (Offenbach am Main)) was a Hessian DVP politician and former member of the Landtags des Volksstaates Hessen in the Weimar Republic.
  • The DNVP, German People's Party (DVP), Centre Party and Bavarian People's Party (BVP) agreed to Marx's conditions, but the German Democratic Party (DDP) refused to join the coalition because it found their school policy too favourable towards denominational schools.
  • At the Landtags first meeting its Members elected Karl Gengler (CDU) as President of the Landtag and Fritz Fleck (SPD) and Karl Kübler (DVP) as his first and second deputy respectively.
  • The cabinet was a grand coalition made up of the Social Democratic Party, German Democratic Party (DDP), Centre Party, German People's Party (DVP) and Bavarian People's Party (BVP).
  • The resulting cabinet was made up of members of seven parties – 4 Centre Party, 2 German Democratic Party (DDP), 2 German People's Party (DVP) 1 Reich Party of the German Middle Class (WP), 1 Bavarian People's Party (BVP), 1 DNVP and 2 KVP – plus one independent.
  • On 18 March 1930, the Second Law for the Protection of the Republic passed in the Reichstag with 265 votes in favour (SPD, German Democratic Party (DDP), German People's Party (DVP), Bavarian People's Party (BVP), Centre and German Peasants' Party), and 150 votes against (the German National People's Party (DNVP), Reich Party of the German Middle Class, German-Hanoverian Party, Nazi Party and Communist Party (KPD)).



Search for DVP in:






Page preparation took: 324.50 ms.