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Karl Twesten

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Name
  
Karl Twesten

Role
  
Politician

Died
  
1870


Parents
  
August Detlev Christian Twesten

Karl Twesten (born in Kiel, April 22, 1820; died in Berlin, October 14, 1870) was a German politician and author.

Contents

Biography

He was the son of German theologian August Detlev Christian Twesten. He became connected with the judicial service, and was one of the founders of the progressive party, which in 1861 involved him in a duel with Gen. Edwin von Manteuffel, in which he lost his right arm. In the same year, he was elected to the Prussian chamber of deputies (German: Preußisches Abgeordnetenhaus), and he was one of the founders of the National Liberal Party and an early member of the North German Reichstag (German: Reichstag des Norddeutscher Bundes). Persecuted for advocating the fullest parliamentary freedom, he retired in 1868 after being fined.

Works

  • Schiller in seinem Verhältniss zur Wissenschaft ("Friedrich Schiller in his relationship to knowledge"; Berlin, 1863).
  • Machiavelli (1868)
  • Die religiösen, politischen und socialen Ideen der asiatischen Culturvölker und der Aegypter in ihrer historischen Entwickelung, posthumous ("The religious, political and social ideas of the Asiatic cultures and the Egyptions in their historical development"; edited by Moritz Lazarus, 1873).
  • References

    Karl Twesten Wikipedia