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Georg Michaelis

Georg Michaelis (8 September 1857 – 24 July 1936) was the chancellor of the German Empire for a few months in 1917. He was the first (and the only one of the German Empire) chancellor not of noble birth to hold the office. With an economic background in business, Michaelis' main achievement was to encourage the ruling classes to open peace talks with Russia. Contemplating that the end of the war was near, he encouraged infrastructure development to facilitate recovery at war's end through the media of Mitteleuropa. A somewhat humourless character, known for process engineering, Michaelis was faced with insurmountable problems of logistics and supply in his brief period as chancellor.

Georg Michaelis
Michaelis in 1932
Chancellor of Germany
In office
14 July 1917 – 1 November 1917
MonarchWilhelm II
DeputyKarl Helfferich
Preceded byTheobald von Bethmann Hollweg
Succeeded byGeorg von Hertling
Minister President of Prussia
In office
14 July 1917 – 1 November 1917
Preceded byTheobald von Bethmann Hollweg
Succeeded byGeorg von Hertling
Personal details
Born(1857-09-08)8 September 1857
Haynau, Province of Silesia, Kingdom of Prussia
Died24 July 1936(1936-07-24) (aged 78)
Bad Saarow, Province of Brandenburg, Nazi Germany
Political partyNone as Chancellor, later the German National People's Party
SpouseMargarete Schmidt
ChildrenElisabeth
Charlotte
Emma
Georg Sylvester
Wilhelm
Eva
Martha
Signature

Biography edit

Early life edit

Michaelis, born in Haynau in the Prussian Province of Silesia, grew up in Frankfurt (Oder). He studied jurisprudence at the University of Breslau, the University of Leipzig and the University of Würzburg from 1876 to 1884, becoming a Doctor of Laws.

From 1885-89, he lived and worked in Tokyo, Japan as a law professor of the Law School of the Society for German Sciences.[1]

After his return to Germany, he became a member of the Prussian administration. In 1909 he was appointed as undersecretary of state to the Prussian Treasury in Berlin. From 1915 onward, he headed the Imperial Grain Office, which was responsible for the administration of Prussian corn and wheat during World War I.[1]

Chancellor edit

After the Reichstag and the High Command (OHL) forced the resignation of Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg on 10 or 13 July 1917,[2] Michaelis emerged as the surprise candidate for both chancellor of Germany and Minister President of Prussia. Army commander Paul von Hindenburg agreed because Michaelis was the army's man.[citation needed]

He had visited the OHL on several occasions in his position as Undersecretary of State in the Prussian Ministry of Finance and Commissioner of Food Supplies, when his brusque manner had made a good impression on staff officers present.[3] “The truth was that anyone more radical than Bethmann would have been unacceptable to the High Command as Chancellor, while anyone more reactionary would have been unacceptable to the Reichstag; the only way out was to choose a nonentity.”[4]

Michaelis was described as "Germany's first bourgeois chancellor",[5][6] as he was the only non-titled person to serve as chief minister during the Hohenzollern monarchy's 400-year rule over Prussia and Germany. But the forces of the German General Staff remained in control behind the scenes.[7]

On 19 July, the Reichstag passed Erzberger's Peace Resolution for "a peace without annexations or indemnities", after the Chancellor's speech had "devalued" the resolution.[8] The inability of the government to impose controls on rising prices, demands for wage increases, strikes, and mounting economic chaos, drove the "political fixers" towards a military takeover of the reins of power. The Kaiser wanted a chancellor who could manage the Reichstag, and the army wanted a chancellor who would bring about a "German Peace".[citation needed]

On 25 July 1917, Michaelis told the crown prince that the devil was in the detail; "I have deprived it of its most dangerous features by my interpretation of it. One can make any peace one likes with this resolution", he reassured the heir to the throne. But it was a feint, and Michaelis’ role in the discreditable episode was designed to facilitate a permanent closure of the Reichstag.[citation needed]

The army perceived the majority parties as posing a threat to stability in Germany in the wake of the Bolshevik Revolution had brought an end to the Russian war effort. But this had left him very "uncertain" as to the place of the Central Powers. Knowing Austro-Hungary was bankrupted by the fighting, he understood their demand to sue for peace; but the military was unwilling to relinquish any power to the civilian authorities. The OHL hoped to destabilize Ukraine and the Baltic States so as to bring Russia's ailing Tsarist regime to the negotiations, while guaranteeing Germanic frontiers, in more than Michaelis' status quo ante bellum.[citation needed]

But Michaelis was a pragmatist and a realist, whatever the Kaiser might have believed about military victory.[citation needed]

Cabinet (July – October 1917)
Office Incumbent In office Party
Chancellor Georg Michaelis 14 July 1917 – 24 October 1917 None
Vice-Chancellor of Germany
Secretary of the Interior
Karl Helfferich 22 May 1916 – 23 October 1917 None
Secretary of Foreign Affairs Arthur Zimmermann 22 November 1916 – 6 August 1917 None
Richard von Kühlmann 6 August 1917 – 9 July 1918 None
Secretary of Justice Hermann Lisco 25 October 1909 – 5 August 1917 None
Paul von Krause 7 August 1917 – 13 February 1919 None
Secretary of the Navy Eduard von Capelle 15 March 1916 – 5 October 1918 None
Secretary of Economics Rudolf Schwander (Acting) 5 August 1917 – 20 November 1917 None
Secretary for Food Adolf Tortilowicz von Batocki-Friebe 26 May 1916 – 6 August 1917 None
Wilhelm von Waldow 6 August 1917 – 9 November 1918 None
Secretary of the Post Reinhold Kraetke 6 May 1901 – 5 August 1917 None
Otto Rüdlin 6 August 1917 – 19 January 1919 None
Secretary of the Treasury Siegfried von Roedern 22 May 1916 – 13 November 1918 None
Secretary for the Colonies Wilhelm Solf 20 November 1911 – 13 December 1918 None

The Chancellor chaired the Second Kreuznach Conference discussing the fate of Alsace-Lorraine on 14 August 1917.[9][10]

The proposal included one for an integrated Federal State coupled to socio-economic changes connecting the Prussian-Hessian railways across Germany. Alsace's connectivity was an extension of a war aims policy via Aachen into the Belgian occupied zones and across neutral Netherlands, as had already been achieved in Luxembourg. Longwiy was the centre of German Steel Association's industry. Located on the border of Belgium and Lorraine, it was at the contractual nexus of the Low Countries adjacent to the Dutch treaty town of Maastricht. German industrialists, including Thyssen and Krupp, wanted a guaranteed supply of coal from France and return to an answer to the Belgian Question, which monopolised the thinkers on the Western Front.[11]

On 29 August, it was in light of the Longwy-Briey Plan railway carriage meeting near Aachen that he was given "an impossible task" of perpetuating the war for "another ten years". But the economic plan Mitteleuropa depended on the Quadruple Alliance which was in trouble. The brains behind the second conference was the new Secretary of State, Max von Kuhlmann, with Czernin and Hohenlohe (Austria) chaired in chamber by Michaelis. But he underestimated Britain's economic determination to stay the course until the bitter end.[12]

The unenviable task to spell out the myth of a German victory fell to Michaelis, still obliged to the Kaiser and OHL in a report to the Conference.[13]

In the end the government won over the Reichstag with only one small party outstanding in its continual opposition to the plan. The Fatherland Party and the OHL, now under Ludendorff, demanded a rigorous pro-Kaiser pursuance of a Rumanian-Germany. Bessarabia, a rich and fertile agricultural basin, was ripe for the Central Powers to pick. Michaelis was sceptical of OHL's avowal of the closest relationship with Austria when another conference was called for 7 October. Still dominated by the obsession with seaports for the Reich, Michaelis demanded access in Dalmatia from the Austrians, as well as those on the Belgian coast. Through the vehicle of Mitteleuropa he sought to enable the Austrian economy to withstand the peace conditions he knew would be imposed on the German customs union.[14]

But the candidate chosen as the new Chancellor was the Army's and not that of the Reichstag. "We have lost a statesman and secured a functionary in his place", remarked Conrad Haussmann, a member of the Reichstag from the Progressive People's Party.[15]

Decline edit

In August, the naval mutinies at Wilhelmshaven led to executions. Michaelis blamed the socialists in the Reichstag hoping to split the coalition. But the Reichstag demanded his resignation. On 24 October 1917 the National Liberals three socialist parties in the coalition made representations to the Kaiser.[clarification needed] In his autobiography he laid the blame on his own refusal to bend to pressure for liberal electoral reforms. The deputies hoped to replace him with a Centre Party aristocrat, Georg von Hertling.[1]

He remained in this position until 1 November 1917, when he was forced to resign after coming under fire for refusing to commit himself by endorsing a resolution passed by the Reichstag favouring peace without annexation or indemnities. Michaelis attempted to retain his role as Prussian Minister President, but without success as Count Hertling was determined that the two posts could not be separated.[16] [17]

Late life and death edit

From 1 April 1918 to 31 March 1919 he served as Oberpräsident of the Prussian province of Pomerania.[1] After the end of World War I, he cooperated with the local workers' and soldiers' council. Nevertheless, the socialist-dominated government of Prussia soon replaced him.

Michaelis worked in the fields of economic lobbying, in student organizations, in the synod of the Evangelical Church of the old-Prussian Union and became a member of the monarchist/national conservative German National People's Party (DNVP). In 1921, he published his memoirs, Für Staat und Volk. Eine Lebensgeschichte (For State and People. A Life Story).

Georg Michaelis died on 24 July 1936 in Bad Saarow-Pieskow (Brandenburg) at the age of 78.

Works edit

  • Michaelis, Georg (1890). History of Economics (in Japanese) (Japanese ed.). Hakubunkan. doi:10.11501/799103 – via National Diet Library.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Chisholm 1922.
  2. ^ Strachan, Hew, "The First World War" (London 2003), p.263, 264, 266-67.
  3. ^ Michael Balfour, The Kaiser and His Times (1969), p. 380.
  4. ^ Balfour, pp. 380-81.
  5. ^ Daniel Hord (ed.), The Private War of Seaman Stumpf (London 1969), p. 345
  6. ^ Strachan, p. 266.
  7. ^ M. Kitchen, The Silent Dictatorship, pp. 170-71.
  8. ^ Strachan, p. 263.
  9. ^ Volksmann, p. 204
  10. ^ Fischer, p. 408
  11. ^ Fischer, pp. 401-21
  12. ^ Fischer, pp. 410-11
  13. ^ Fur Staat und Volk (Berlin 1922), p. 335
  14. ^ Fischer, pp. 436-39
  15. ^ Hanssen, "Diary of a Dying Empire", p. 231.
  16. ^ Michaelis, pp. 365-68
  17. ^ Fischer, pp. 439-40

Bibliography edit

  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1922). "Michaelis, Georg" . Encyclopædia Britannica (12th ed.). London & New York: The Encyclopædia Britannica Company.
  • Becker, Bert (2001). Georg Michaelis: Ein preußischer Jurist im Japan der Meiji-Zeit; Briefe, Tagebuchnotizen, Dokumente 1885–1889 [Georg Michaelis: A Prussian Jurist in Meiji Japan; Letters, Diary Notes, Documents 1885–1889] (in German). Munich: iudicum. ISBN 978-3891296509.
  • von Braun, Magnus Freiherr (1955). Von Ostpreussen bis Texas (in German). Holkamm.
  • Fischer, Fritz (1967). Germany's Aims in the First World War. New York: W.W. Norton. ISBN 9780393053470.
  • Kitchen, Martin (1976). The Silent Dictatorship: The Politics of the High Command under Hindenburg and Ludendorff 1916-1918. London: Holmes & Meier Publishers. ISBN 978-0841902770.
  • Michaelis, Georg (1922). Für Staat und Volk : Eine Lebensgeschichte [For State and People : A Life Story] (in German). Tübigen: Furche-Verlag.
  • Regulski, Christoph (2003). Die Reichskanzlerschaft von Georg Michaelis 1917: Deutschlands Entwicklung zur parlamentarisch-demokratischen Monarchie im Ersten Weltkrieg [The Imperial Chancellorship of Georg Michaelis in 1917: Germany's Development Towards a Parliamentary Democratic Monarchy in the First World War] (in German). Marburg: Tectum-Verlag.
  • Snell, John L. (July 1951). "Benedict XV, Wilson, Michaelis and German socialism". Catholic Historical Review.
  • Strachan, Hew (2003). First World War. London: Penguin Books.

External links edit

georg, michaelis, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, january, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Georg Michaelis news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Georg Michaelis 8 September 1857 24 July 1936 was the chancellor of the German Empire for a few months in 1917 He was the first and the only one of the German Empire chancellor not of noble birth to hold the office With an economic background in business Michaelis main achievement was to encourage the ruling classes to open peace talks with Russia Contemplating that the end of the war was near he encouraged infrastructure development to facilitate recovery at war s end through the media of Mitteleuropa A somewhat humourless character known for process engineering Michaelis was faced with insurmountable problems of logistics and supply in his brief period as chancellor Georg MichaelisMichaelis in 1932Chancellor of GermanyIn office 14 July 1917 1 November 1917MonarchWilhelm IIDeputyKarl HelfferichPreceded byTheobald von Bethmann HollwegSucceeded byGeorg von HertlingMinister President of PrussiaIn office 14 July 1917 1 November 1917Preceded byTheobald von Bethmann HollwegSucceeded byGeorg von HertlingPersonal detailsBorn 1857 09 08 8 September 1857Haynau Province of Silesia Kingdom of PrussiaDied24 July 1936 1936 07 24 aged 78 Bad Saarow Province of Brandenburg Nazi GermanyPolitical partyNone as Chancellor later the German National People s PartySpouseMargarete SchmidtChildrenElisabeth Charlotte Emma Georg Sylvester Wilhelm Eva MarthaSignature Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Chancellor 1 3 Decline 1 4 Late life and death 2 Works 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Bibliography 5 External linksBiography editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Georg Michaelis news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Early life edit Michaelis born in Haynau in the Prussian Province of Silesia grew up in Frankfurt Oder He studied jurisprudence at the University of Breslau the University of Leipzig and the University of Wurzburg from 1876 to 1884 becoming a Doctor of Laws From 1885 89 he lived and worked in Tokyo Japan as a law professor of the Law School of the Society for German Sciences 1 After his return to Germany he became a member of the Prussian administration In 1909 he was appointed as undersecretary of state to the Prussian Treasury in Berlin From 1915 onward he headed the Imperial Grain Office which was responsible for the administration of Prussian corn and wheat during World War I 1 Chancellor edit After the Reichstag and the High Command OHL forced the resignation of Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg on 10 or 13 July 1917 2 Michaelis emerged as the surprise candidate for both chancellor of Germany and Minister President of Prussia Army commander Paul von Hindenburg agreed because Michaelis was the army s man citation needed He had visited the OHL on several occasions in his position as Undersecretary of State in the Prussian Ministry of Finance and Commissioner of Food Supplies when his brusque manner had made a good impression on staff officers present 3 The truth was that anyone more radical than Bethmann would have been unacceptable to the High Command as Chancellor while anyone more reactionary would have been unacceptable to the Reichstag the only way out was to choose a nonentity 4 Michaelis was described as Germany s first bourgeois chancellor 5 6 as he was the only non titled person to serve as chief minister during the Hohenzollern monarchy s 400 year rule over Prussia and Germany But the forces of the German General Staff remained in control behind the scenes 7 On 19 July the Reichstag passed Erzberger s Peace Resolution for a peace without annexations or indemnities after the Chancellor s speech had devalued the resolution 8 The inability of the government to impose controls on rising prices demands for wage increases strikes and mounting economic chaos drove the political fixers towards a military takeover of the reins of power The Kaiser wanted a chancellor who could manage the Reichstag and the army wanted a chancellor who would bring about a German Peace citation needed On 25 July 1917 Michaelis told the crown prince that the devil was in the detail I have deprived it of its most dangerous features by my interpretation of it One can make any peace one likes with this resolution he reassured the heir to the throne But it was a feint and Michaelis role in the discreditable episode was designed to facilitate a permanent closure of the Reichstag citation needed The army perceived the majority parties as posing a threat to stability in Germany in the wake of the Bolshevik Revolution had brought an end to the Russian war effort But this had left him very uncertain as to the place of the Central Powers Knowing Austro Hungary was bankrupted by the fighting he understood their demand to sue for peace but the military was unwilling to relinquish any power to the civilian authorities The OHL hoped to destabilize Ukraine and the Baltic States so as to bring Russia s ailing Tsarist regime to the negotiations while guaranteeing Germanic frontiers in more than Michaelis status quo ante bellum citation needed But Michaelis was a pragmatist and a realist whatever the Kaiser might have believed about military victory citation needed Cabinet July October 1917 Office Incumbent In office PartyChancellor Georg Michaelis 14 July 1917 24 October 1917 NoneVice Chancellor of GermanySecretary of the Interior Karl Helfferich 22 May 1916 23 October 1917 NoneSecretary of Foreign Affairs Arthur Zimmermann 22 November 1916 6 August 1917 NoneRichard von Kuhlmann 6 August 1917 9 July 1918 NoneSecretary of Justice Hermann Lisco 25 October 1909 5 August 1917 NonePaul von Krause 7 August 1917 13 February 1919 NoneSecretary of the Navy Eduard von Capelle 15 March 1916 5 October 1918 NoneSecretary of Economics Rudolf Schwander Acting 5 August 1917 20 November 1917 NoneSecretary for Food Adolf Tortilowicz von Batocki Friebe 26 May 1916 6 August 1917 NoneWilhelm von Waldow 6 August 1917 9 November 1918 NoneSecretary of the Post Reinhold Kraetke 6 May 1901 5 August 1917 NoneOtto Rudlin 6 August 1917 19 January 1919 NoneSecretary of the Treasury Siegfried von Roedern 22 May 1916 13 November 1918 NoneSecretary for the Colonies Wilhelm Solf 20 November 1911 13 December 1918 NoneThe Chancellor chaired the Second Kreuznach Conference discussing the fate of Alsace Lorraine on 14 August 1917 9 10 The proposal included one for an integrated Federal State coupled to socio economic changes connecting the Prussian Hessian railways across Germany Alsace s connectivity was an extension of a war aims policy via Aachen into the Belgian occupied zones and across neutral Netherlands as had already been achieved in Luxembourg Longwiy was the centre of German Steel Association s industry Located on the border of Belgium and Lorraine it was at the contractual nexus of the Low Countries adjacent to the Dutch treaty town of Maastricht German industrialists including Thyssen and Krupp wanted a guaranteed supply of coal from France and return to an answer to the Belgian Question which monopolised the thinkers on the Western Front 11 On 29 August it was in light of the Longwy Briey Plan railway carriage meeting near Aachen that he was given an impossible task of perpetuating the war for another ten years But the economic plan Mitteleuropa depended on the Quadruple Alliance which was in trouble The brains behind the second conference was the new Secretary of State Max von Kuhlmann with Czernin and Hohenlohe Austria chaired in chamber by Michaelis But he underestimated Britain s economic determination to stay the course until the bitter end 12 The unenviable task to spell out the myth of a German victory fell to Michaelis still obliged to the Kaiser and OHL in a report to the Conference 13 In the end the government won over the Reichstag with only one small party outstanding in its continual opposition to the plan The Fatherland Party and the OHL now under Ludendorff demanded a rigorous pro Kaiser pursuance of a Rumanian Germany Bessarabia a rich and fertile agricultural basin was ripe for the Central Powers to pick Michaelis was sceptical of OHL s avowal of the closest relationship with Austria when another conference was called for 7 October Still dominated by the obsession with seaports for the Reich Michaelis demanded access in Dalmatia from the Austrians as well as those on the Belgian coast Through the vehicle of Mitteleuropa he sought to enable the Austrian economy to withstand the peace conditions he knew would be imposed on the German customs union 14 But the candidate chosen as the new Chancellor was the Army s and not that of the Reichstag We have lost a statesman and secured a functionary in his place remarked Conrad Haussmann a member of the Reichstag from the Progressive People s Party 15 Decline edit In August the naval mutinies at Wilhelmshaven led to executions Michaelis blamed the socialists in the Reichstag hoping to split the coalition But the Reichstag demanded his resignation On 24 October 1917 the National Liberals three socialist parties in the coalition made representations to the Kaiser clarification needed In his autobiography he laid the blame on his own refusal to bend to pressure for liberal electoral reforms The deputies hoped to replace him with a Centre Party aristocrat Georg von Hertling 1 He remained in this position until 1 November 1917 when he was forced to resign after coming under fire for refusing to commit himself by endorsing a resolution passed by the Reichstag favouring peace without annexation or indemnities Michaelis attempted to retain his role as Prussian Minister President but without success as Count Hertling was determined that the two posts could not be separated 16 17 Late life and death edit From 1 April 1918 to 31 March 1919 he served as Oberprasident of the Prussian province of Pomerania 1 After the end of World War I he cooperated with the local workers and soldiers council Nevertheless the socialist dominated government of Prussia soon replaced him Michaelis worked in the fields of economic lobbying in student organizations in the synod of the Evangelical Church of the old Prussian Union and became a member of the monarchist national conservative German National People s Party DNVP In 1921 he published his memoirs Fur Staat und Volk Eine Lebensgeschichte For State and People A Life Story Georg Michaelis died on 24 July 1936 in Bad Saarow Pieskow Brandenburg at the age of 78 Works editMichaelis Georg 1890 History of Economics in Japanese Japanese ed Hakubunkan doi 10 11501 799103 via National Diet Library See also editMichaelis cabinet Prussia Vienna Conference August 1 1917 Vienna Conference October 22 1917 Vienna Conference March 16 1917 References edit a b c d Chisholm 1922 Strachan Hew The First World War London 2003 p 263 264 266 67 Michael Balfour The Kaiser and His Times 1969 p 380 Balfour pp 380 81 Daniel Hord ed The Private War of Seaman Stumpf London 1969 p 345 Strachan p 266 M Kitchen The Silent Dictatorship pp 170 71 Strachan p 263 Volksmann p 204 Fischer p 408 Fischer pp 401 21 Fischer pp 410 11 Fur Staat und Volk Berlin 1922 p 335 Fischer pp 436 39 Hanssen Diary of a Dying Empire p 231 Michaelis pp 365 68 Fischer pp 439 40 Bibliography edit Chisholm Hugh ed 1922 Michaelis Georg Encyclopaedia Britannica 12th ed London amp New York The Encyclopaedia Britannica Company Becker Bert 2001 Georg Michaelis Ein preussischer Jurist im Japan der Meiji Zeit Briefe Tagebuchnotizen Dokumente 1885 1889 Georg Michaelis A Prussian Jurist in Meiji Japan Letters Diary Notes Documents 1885 1889 in German Munich iudicum ISBN 978 3891296509 von Braun Magnus Freiherr 1955 Von Ostpreussen bis Texas in German Holkamm Fischer Fritz 1967 Germany s Aims in the First World War New York W W Norton ISBN 9780393053470 Kitchen Martin 1976 The Silent Dictatorship The Politics of the High Command under Hindenburg and Ludendorff 1916 1918 London Holmes amp Meier Publishers ISBN 978 0841902770 Michaelis Georg 1922 Fur Staat und Volk Eine Lebensgeschichte For State and People A Life Story in German Tubigen Furche Verlag Regulski Christoph 2003 Die Reichskanzlerschaft von Georg Michaelis 1917 Deutschlands Entwicklung zur parlamentarisch demokratischen Monarchie im Ersten Weltkrieg The Imperial Chancellorship of Georg Michaelis in 1917 Germany s Development Towards a Parliamentary Democratic Monarchy in the First World War in German Marburg Tectum Verlag Snell John L July 1951 Benedict XV Wilson Michaelis and German socialism Catholic Historical Review Strachan Hew 2003 First World War London Penguin Books External links editNewspaper clippings about Georg Michaelis in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWPolitical officesPreceded byTheobald von Bethmann Hollweg Chancellor of Germany1917 Succeeded byGeorg Graf von HertlingPrime Minister of Prussia1917 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Georg Michaelis amp oldid 1213335086 Chancellor, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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