1920 in Germany - Deaths

Deaths

Years in Germany (1871–present)
  1. 1871
  2. 1872
  3. 1873
  4. 1874
  5. 1875
  6. 1876
  7. 1877
  8. 1878
  9. 1879
  10. 1880
  11. 1881
  12. 1882
  13. 1883
  14. 1884
  15. 1885
  16. 1886
  17. 1887
  18. 1888
  19. 1889
  20. 1890
  21. 1891
  22. 1892
  23. 1893
  24. 1894
  25. 1895
  26. 1896
  27. 1897
  28. 1898
  29. 1899
  30. 1900
  31. 1901
  32. 1902
  33. 1903
  34. 1904
  35. 1905
  36. 1906
  37. 1907
  38. 1908
  39. 1909
  40. 1910
  41. 1911
  42. 1912
  43. 1913
  44. 1914
  45. 1915
  46. 1916
  47. 1917
  48. 1918
  49. 1919
  50. 1920
  51. 1921
  52. 1922
  53. 1923
  54. 1924
  55. 1925
  56. 1926
  57. 1927
  58. 1928
  59. 1929
  60. 1930
  61. 1931
  62. 1932
  63. 1933
  64. 1934
  65. 1935
  66. 1936
  67. 1937
  68. 1938
  69. 1939
  70. 1940
  71. 1941
  72. 1942
  73. 1943
  74. 1944
  75. 1945
  76. 1946
  77. 1947
  78. 1948
  79. 1949
  80. 1950
  81. 1951
  82. 1952
  83. 1953
  84. 1954
  85. 1955
  86. 1956
  87. 1957
  88. 1958
  89. 1959
  90. 1960
  91. 1961
  92. 1962
  93. 1963
  94. 1964
  95. 1965
  96. 1966
  97. 1967
  98. 1968
  99. 1969
  100. 1970
  101. 1971
  102. 1972
  103. 1973
  104. 1974
  105. 1975
  106. 1976
  107. 1977
  108. 1978
  109. 1979
  110. 1980
  111. 1981
  112. 1982
  113. 1983
  114. 1984
  115. 1985
  116. 1986
  117. 1987
  118. 1988
  119. 1989
  120. 1990
  121. 1991
  122. 1992
  123. 1993
  124. 1994
  125. 1995
  126. 1996
  127. 1997
  128. 1998
  129. 1999
  130. 2000
  131. 2001
  132. 2002
  133. 2003
  134. 2004
  135. 2005
  136. 2006
  137. 2007
  138. 2008
  139. 2009
  140. 2010
  141. 2011
  142. 2012

Read more about this topic:  1920 In Germany

Famous quotes containing the word deaths:

    This is the 184th Demonstration.
    ...
    What we do is not beautiful
    hurts no one makes no one desperate
    we do not break the panes of safety glass
    stretching between people on the street
    and the deaths they hire.
    Marge Piercy (b. 1936)

    There is the guilt all soldiers feel for having broken the taboo against killing, a guilt as old as war itself. Add to this the soldier’s sense of shame for having fought in actions that resulted, indirectly or directly, in the deaths of civilians. Then pile on top of that an attitude of social opprobrium, an attitude that made the fighting man feel personally morally responsible for the war, and you get your proverbial walking time bomb.
    Philip Caputo (b. 1941)

    Death is too much for men to bear, whereas women, who are practiced in bearing the deaths of men before their own and who are also practiced in bearing life, take death almost in stride. They go to meet death—that is, they attempt suicide—twice as often as men, though men are more “successful” because they use surer weapons, like guns.
    Roger Rosenblatt (b. 1940)