Essayer OR - Gratuit
KING AND COUNTRY
The Australian Women's Weekly
|August 2023
It could be a plot point from Monty Python's Holy Grail but it's only too real. In the castles, factories and beer halls of small-town Germany, a new movement of conspiracy theorists and far-right royalists is threatening to topple the republic.
-
At the end of a winding country road, about an hour south of Berlin, stands a sign proclaiming: ‘Welcome to the Kingdom of Germany.’ I scan the horizon for fairytale castles, oompah bands and tables groaning beneath beer and bratwurst, but there’s little to see here beyond a cluster of slightly drab buildings. Since 1918, when Wilhelm II, the last Kaiser, was driven into exile, most Germans have assumed that they lived in a republic, but today a new and unsettling kind of ‘monarchy’ is taking root.
The Kingdom, headquartered in a former chicken-canning factory near the small town of Wittenberg, issues its own currency, passports and driving licences, and contends that the ‘other’ Germany – the federal state established after World War II – is a gigantic confidence trick that has cheated the country’s near 85 million people out of their birthright.
In recent years, several other breakaway mini-states have sprung up around Germany, and the number of people joining them is soaring. Many members of the Reichsbürger [Citizens of the Reich] movement are united in wanting to dissolve modern Germany entirely and rebuild the old Imperial state, created in 1871, often intent on placing a new Kaiser at the helm, too. But their manifesto goes beyond a romantic harking back to pomp and ceremony, and into what many see as a menacing underworld of extremism and demagoguery.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition August 2023 de The Australian Women's Weekly.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Australian Women's Weekly
The Australian Women's Weekly
A room full of joy
The kitchen is at the centre of every home. With a little love (and easy refurbishment), yours can become a place of even greater pleasure.
2 mins
May 2026
The Australian Women's Weekly
Is your posture ageing you?
Experts say slouching can quietly add years to your appearance, but a few simple changes could help you stand taller, move better and look younger.
4 mins
May 2026
The Australian Women's Weekly
Cheers to mum
Celebrate Mother's Day in a delicious way with our gorgeous high tea. Think dreamy vintage layered cake, dainty sandwiches, lemony madeleines and show-stopping white chocolate cupcakes.
3 mins
May 2026
The Australian Women's Weekly
100 GLORIOUS YEARS
Intimate recollections, bold assessments and fond memories – The Weekly celebrates the centenary of Queen Elizabeth II's birth.
9 mins
May 2026
The Australian Women's Weekly
EAT WELL WASTE LESS
Saveful is a simple, intuitive platform to help turn food you already have into something delicious. These flavourful recipes from the cookbook were created to avoid food waste and save money.
6 mins
May 2026
The Australian Women's Weekly
TAKING the WORLD in STYLE
Thirty years ago, one man and 33 designers put our homegrown fashion on the world stage. As Australian Fashion Week enters a new phase, we look back at three decades of glitz and grit and the incredible innovators who found global fame in the aftermath.
8 mins
May 2026
The Australian Women's Weekly
Eating in
Elizabeth Hewson is a cookbook author, columnist and creator of the Saturday Night Pasta sauce and pasta range. Her food is delicious and achievable when dinner just needs to be dinner!
6 mins
May 2026
The Australian Women's Weekly
Into the blue
Peace and quiet, warm hospitality and piercingly blue lagoons ... welcome to the Cook Islands, your new favourite tropical escape.
4 mins
May 2026
The Australian Women's Weekly
Magic wand
From barely there to fluttery, doe-eyed lashes, there's more than one mascara out there for you.
3 mins
May 2026
The Australian Women's Weekly
The little town that could
Last year, the Tassie town of Fingal learned that its post office was facing closure. So the community pulled together to save the pretty building and its many services.
8 mins
May 2026
Translate
Change font size

