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Queen Louise League : ウィキペディア英語版
Queen Louise League

The "Queen Louise League" or Königin-Luise-Bund, often shortened to Luisenbund, was a German pro-monarchic women's organization. It was established in 1923 during the time of the Weimar Republic and lasted until the first years of the Third Reich. This organization was inspired on the figure of Louise of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, Queen of Prussia, held in reverence by many Germans of the time. The Bund Königin Luise had also a children branch known as Kinderkreis (Children Circle).〔(Liederbuch für den Kinderkreis: Das Kornblümchen Hg. von der Bundesleitung des Bundes Königin Luise, Halle a.d.S. 1933 )〕
The Queen Louise League as an organization had cultic overtones〔Philipp Demandt, ''Luisenkult'' 2007〕 built around the veneration of the former Prussian queen as a role model for all German women. She became idealized for her feminine virtues, her determination and her love for her country, as well as for her beauty and the fact that Napoleon, portrayed as an "enemy of everything German", hated her.〔Johannes Thiele, ''Geliebte Luise. Königin von Preußen. Ihr Leben in Bildern.'' Nicolaische Verlagsbuchhandlung Berlin 2003, ISBN 3-89479-094-6〕 The league's ideals were distilled into a booklet named ''ABC für unsere Arbeit'' (ABC for our Work) which every member had to know by heart.〔Philipp Demandt, ''Luisenkult'' 2007〕 Like many of the emergent nationalistic movements of the time, this organization was highly structured, with local branches all over Germany.〔(Der Königin-Luise-Bund - Ortsgruppe Garmisch-Partenkirchen )〕
==History==
The Queen Louise League was politically very close to far-right German parties of the time, like the German National People's Party (DNVP) and also the Stahlhelm paramilitary organization from its establishment. Many wives of Stahlhelm members belonged to the Queen Louise League and they were, like their husbands, strongly opposed to democracy〔(Conan Fisher, ''The Rise of National Socialism and the Working Classes in Weimar'', Berghahn Books, Providence/Oxford 1996 )〕 and in favor of German re-armament.
After the Machtergreifung, or takeover of the government by Adolf Hitler, the Queen Louise League was initially welcomed by the Nazi party as an ally. There were strong bonds between both movements owing to their common extremely conservative ideology and solid German nationalism.〔(Geraldine Horan, ''Mothers, Warriors, Guardians of the Soul'' - 2003 )〕
Campaigning along with the brownshirts for a "Greater Germany" with expanded borders and "freedom from weight of the reparations", the League's members had taken active part in parades and events organized by the Nazis even before their accession to power. The Queen Louise League shared as well with the Reichskolonialbund the demand for the return of the former German colonies.〔(1933 - Der Beginn der nationalsozialistischen Diktatur/ Vaterländische Ziele des Bundes Königin Luise )〕
Despite its ideological affinity with most of the Third Reich's nationalistic ideals, the Queen Louise League was disbanded all the same by the Nazi government in 1934.〔(Conan Fisher, ''The Rise of National Socialism and the Working Classes in Weimar'', Berghahn Books, Providence/Oxford 1996 )〕 The reason was the difference in local practices, be it at the Gau or national level, which didn't match those wished by the Nazi leadership of the country.〔Jill Stephenson, The Nazi Organisation of Women, London 1981〕 Following its dissolution the members and departments of the Königin-Luise-Bund were integrated into the corresponding branches for women and children of the Nazi Party, like the NS-Frauenschaft (Nazi Women's League), Bund Deutscher Mädel (League of German Girls) and its children section into the National Socialist Schoolchildren's League (NSS) or the ''Kinderschar'' of the Nazi Women's League.

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