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  2. The First Schleswig War (German: Schleswig-Holsteinischer Krieg), also known as the Schleswig-Holstein Uprising (German: Schleswig-Holsteinische Erhebung) and the Three Years' War (Danish: Treårskrigen), was a military conflict in southern Denmark and northern Germany rooted in the Schleswig-Holstein Question: who should control the Duchies of ...

    • 24 March 1848-8 May 1852
    • Danish victory
    • Schleswig and Jutland
    • Status quo ante bellum
  3. The Second Schleswig War ( Danish: Den anden slesvigske krig; German: Deutsch-Dänischer Krieg or German Danish War ), also sometimes known as the Dano-Prussian War or Prusso-Danish War, was the second military conflict over the Schleswig-Holstein Question of the nineteenth century.

  4. German-Danish War, (1864), the second of two conflicts over the settlement of the Schleswig-Holstein question, a complex of problems arising from the relationship of the duchies of Schleswig and Holstein to Denmark, to each other, and to the German Confederation. Involved in it were a disputed.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Aug 26, 2022 · 15K. 675K views 1 year ago. Get a NordVPN with a 2-year plan plus 4 additional months with a huge discount and 30-day money back guarantee: https://nordvpn.com/realtimehistory The two Schleswig...

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  6. The military intervention of the Kingdom of Prussia supported the uprising: the Prussian army drove Denmark's troops from Schleswig and Holstein, beginning the First Schleswig War (1848–1851), which ended in a Danish victory at Idstedt; with the London Protocol, the international community agreed on the duchies' status.

  7. A section of the Danewirk, near Dannewerk, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. Prussia and Austria declared war upon Denmark. Their action was governed by a request on January 16, 1864, for Denmark to rescind its November 1863 constitution; within days, Denmark refused to do so.

  8. Aug 28, 2014 · At approximately 4:45 a.m. on September 1, 1939, Germany began a massive invasion of Poland. The first shots—fired at Danzig—came not from one of Hitler’s modern weapons of war, but from the SMS Schleswig-Holstein, a three-decades-old German battleship on a “good will” visit to Danzig’s harbor.

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