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・ Karl Glogauer
・ Karl Goddard
・ Karl Frank Klein
・ Karl Frankenstein
・ Karl Franz Lodron
・ Karl Franz Otto Dziatzko
・ Karl Franzevich Albrecht
・ Karl Frederick
・ Karl Frederick, Prince of Anhalt-Bernburg
・ Karl Fredrik Dahlgren
・ Karl Fredrik Wilkama
・ Karl Frei
・ Karl Freiherr von Lersner
・ Karl Freiherr von Müffling
・ Karl Freiherr von Thüngen
Karl Freiherr von Vogelsang
・ Karl Freller
・ Karl Frenzel
・ Karl Freudenberg
・ Karl Freudenthal
・ Karl Freund
・ Karl Friederichs
・ Karl Friedrich
・ Karl Friedrich Abt
・ Karl Friedrich August Kahnis
・ Karl Friedrich August Rammelsberg
・ Karl Friedrich Bahrdt
・ Karl Friedrich Becker
・ Karl Friedrich Bernhard Hellmuth von Hobe
・ Karl Friedrich Bonhoeffer


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Karl Freiherr von Vogelsang : ウィキペディア英語版
Karl Freiherr von Vogelsang

Karl Freiherr von Vogelsang (3 September 1818 – 8 November 1890), a journalist, politician and Catholic social reformer, was one of the mentors of the Christian Social movement in Austria-Hungary.
==Life==
He was born in Liegnitz in the Silesia Province of Prussia (present-day Legnica, Poland), studied jurisprudence at Bonn, Rostock and Berlin, and settled at his family's estate Alt-Guthendorf near Marlow in Mecklenburg-Schwerin. After the Revolutions of 1848 Vogelsang moved to Berlin, where he made the acquaintance of Wilhelm Emmanuel Freiherr von Ketteler and Friedrich Maassen. Like Maassen he converted to Catholicism in 1850, whereafter he had to resign as deputy to the Protestant Mecklenburg ''Landtag''. Vogelsang then worked as a journalist in Catholic Southern Germany and spent several years in Munich, where he wrote for periodical publications established by the circles around Guido Görres. From 1859 he accompanied Prince Johann II of Liechtenstein on his voyages throughout Europe.
Vogelsang finally settled in Austria in 1864. In 1875, he became editor of the Catholic newspaper ''Das Vaterland'' ("The Native Country") edited by Leo von Thun-Hohenstein. This conservative publication was highly influential on Catholic social teaching, helping to establish the 40-hour work week and national health insurance for workers under the government of Minister-President Eduard Taaffe. Vogelsang died at Vienna in 1890, aged 72. Many of his thoughts found entrance into the 1891 ''Rerum novarum'' encyclical issued by Pope Leo XIII. As a social reformer, he was later seen as a precursor by the Austrofascist authoritarian state of the 1930s; he was quoted in the regime's propaganda by its leader, Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss.

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