| The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-07. |
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| Quidde, Ludwig |
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(l t´v kh kv d´ ) (KEY) , 18581941, German pacifist and historian. He was elected (1907) to the Bavarian diet, was a member (191922) of the national assembly at Weimar, and later served in the Reichstag. Indefatigable in his attacks on German imperialism, he was briefly imprisoned for his brochure, Caligula: eine Studie über römischen Cäsarenwahnsinn [Caligula: a study in Roman Caesarean madness] (1894), an obvious polemic in which Caligula represented Emperor William II. A leading supporter of the League of Nations, Quidde shared the 1927 Nobel Peace Prize with Ferdinand Buisson. He lived in exile in Switzerland during World War I and again after Hitlers rise to power. |
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| | | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2007 Columbia University Press. |
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