Seltene Vintage-Fotografien: Einblicke in das Leben in Deutschland der 1910er Jahre .H
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from the 1910s.
Working class quarters, c. 1910. In Germany, industrialization and urbanization went hand in hand, as individuals and entire families left the countryside and moved to cities in search of work. Living conditions were often miserable: working-class housing was dank, cramped, and overcrowded, with little fresh air or natural light. Entire families lived in narrow rooms without indoor plumbing. One such quarter on Berlin’s Liegnitzer Straße is depicted here. The rent for this type of space would have consumed a large portion of a family’s income. |
Here, a group of lower-middle-class children, who were probably part of an organized day-care group, can be seen in front of a row of houses in the Borsigwalde district of Berlin Advertisement
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The first International Women’s Congress, held in Paris in 1878, was a step towards creating a transnational women’s movement. Although activists sought to improve the condition of women internationally, they remained committed to pragmatic reform within their own respective political systems. This photograph was taken at a meeting of German activists during the International Women’s Congress in Berlin in 1914. It shows (clockwise, from left): Hedwig Heyl, Alice Salomon, Anna Pappritz, Dona Martin, ? Hanning, Annette Hamminck-Schepel, Helene Lange, and Gertrud Bäumer. |