>TFW you will never fight the greatest general of all time
>TFW you will never start German nationalism
>TFW you will never be seen as a German liberator.
So do the "Wars of Liberation" still get viewed that way in Germany? Or are they still so cucked by war guilt that any fond looking at military victories gets you called a Nahzee?
>are they still so cucked by war guilt that any fond looking at military victories gets you called a Nahzee Almost nobody would combine the wars of German unity as something connected to Nazis. Actually most people don't really care about them, especially the Prusso-Danish war and the Austro-Prussian war. They are seen as the prelude to the Franco-Prussian war, which is seen objectively as a smart political feat by Bismarck and the thing that united Germany. There really is no glorification of this. The focus is mainly on how Bismarck unified the Germans, not the wars.
Adrian Ortiz
The prussian reformers are the only allowed source of military tradition before 1945 besides the military resistance against the nazis.
Bentley Myers
>ywn live in a time when great military victories were widely celebrated by the whole nation as moments of glory and honour
Sad. A few months ago on Australian news they had a story about our PM visiting Israel to tour the site of a great Australian cavalry victory over the Ottomans in WWI, and I thought it was pretty fucking cool but all the news kept carrying on about was the emotional, sentimental side of the losses of the war. Fuck that, I like celebrating the glory of the victory.
Alexander Rivera
Why are you talking about the Wars of Unification, when this is a German/Napoleonic Wars thread?
Jacob Barnes
There wasn't glory in world war one, there were breif glimpses of the battles of honour and glory of yesteryear.
Ah shit, my bad. But you can say generally the same. The most important thing people care about is the Völkerschlacht bei Leipzig and in the context of German nationalistic rise and romanticism. Nazis don't really care about this as much.
Gabriel Collins
There was certainly glory at Tannenberg
Grayson Diaz
Nobody in Germany cares about Germany prior to 1933. It's sad, really
Adrian Jones
Why not?
Kevin Gray
>implying the states of the confederation of the rhine weren't more important than prussians in that regard
Kevin Watson
>21st century will see the rise of AI generals that will outclass every humans
Carson Flores
Leipzig really should be talked about more, Waterloo is a meme.
Sebastian Ross
thank the eternal anglo for that
Gabriel Bailey
>WAAAAAAAAAHHHHH
Jason Jenkins
I'm German and you're retarded. we have the same amount of history war affinity as every other country
Logan Jones
Unfortunately, I don't have a time machine to go back and be able to kill Creasy.
Wyatt Young
No, Germany is cucked to death and the only heroes of the Federal German Republic are Graf Stauffenberg(to some extent) and the "White Rose", this is because the subject of their doings was to fight Hitler, otherwise German history is unknown to almost every Person, they probably just think we went from Caveman to Germanic tribes to the Middle Ages then reached Industrialization and then finally went to beeing Nazis. The mainstream "historians" portrait Prussia as proto-Nazi-state and the media makes fun of traditional German culture,habits and values in documentaries that are semi-related to that.
Some Greenparty fags managed to prevent celeberations for the 200th anniversary of the Battle at Leipzig in 2013, they should get rounded up and shot as soon as possible.
They even said having German flags in public during football-seasons is "Nationalism" and thus bad.
Jack Reed
>Nazis don't really care about this as much. You again got something wrong, read what OP asked: >Or are they still so cucked by war guilt that any fond looking at military victories gets you called a Nahzee? He asked if looking fond at military victories gets you called a "Nahzee", which is correct for most conversations with, at least slightly, left-leaning people.
Blake Cook
You have to understand how much glorification of the past terrifies the current German government, which is made up of simpering globalist neoliberals. It was Germany's fascination with their glorious past that in part helped the Nazis rise to power. Hitler and his party played up the return to glorious Prussian supremacy, the return of Empire, and that really appealed to the downtrodden spirit of the people at the time. More than anything they are terrified of the populace becoming so disaffected with their incompetent government that they start flocking once again to the banner of nostalgia and past glories. They fear what might come of it.
I think though that they fear needlessly. The modern German is too many generations removed from the German who fought Napoleon, the glory is now dead and buried.
Andrew Harris
Really? Cause when I was in Germany, even bringing it up got you weird or uncomfortable looks. That or people just didn't know the shit.
Which is weird considering Nazism started in Bavaria
Brody Gonzalez
Well said except for this: >I think though that they fear needlessly. The modern German is too many generations removed from the German who fought Napoleon, the glory is now dead and buried.
We will get that glory back, make it ever lasting and get even more triumphant honour in which we can swiftly recover the deep-running wounds of shame and agony, we will get back what's ours, point.
People are too busy learning about the horrible deathcamps that were operated in what is current day Poland (some would even go as far as to say they were "Polish Deathcamps") to learn about anything else.
Nolan Murphy
>Polish Deathcamps
Yeah, they wouldn't have been there if the Germans hadn't invaded. There may have been some Poles, but they were German Deathcamps.
Lincoln Bell
>So do the "Wars of Liberation" still get viewed that way in Germany?
At least in my school yes, it was an important topic, but the military side itself was never really mentioned (just like ww2, or ww1), just the rise of nationalism and the deep reforms in prussia in almost every aspect.
I still do not understand how they could get away with mentioning nationalism as a good thing here and as purely evil on any other occassion, but they probably hoped for young kids not asking any uncomfortable questions.
But outside of school, no, noone ever talks about it, as german history is overwhelming centered on the nazi times.
At least in germany, I would say that the Völkerschlacht (battle of nations) is more well known then Waterloo, but its probably the only place.
Evan Kelly
>overwhelming centered on Nazi times
What do they just ignore all the castles and shit? Nothing about the HRE or anything like that?
Jace Jenkins
>I'm German and you're retarded I bet you don't get to say that often.
Ryan Moore
So does Austria give a fuck about this anymore, or do they act like history starts in 1945?
Anthony Perry
As a frenchman I was insanely triggered by their portrayal of Napoléon in the museum next to the Völkerschlachtdenkmal. He was the good guy for Pete's sake
Xavier Gomez
>Be Napoleon
>Agree with the Revolution and downfall of Bourbon monarchy
>Decides to make himself the Emperor
Jace Thomas
agree or "agree" to get to hold your position in military
Chase Jackson
You really think he cared about the Bourbons?
Daniel Roberts
bump
Bentley Johnson
Do the CDU folks view it that way, or are we calling everyone who isn't the the AFD or further right left in Germany?
Mason Butler
If Leipzig was that important Waterloo would never have happened.