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In 1871, Germany went from being a region full of separate states to being an empire. That certainly came with its complications, as the needs of a full cast of characters (from princes, to politicians, to the ordinary masses) now had to be accommodated within a single state. With the support of the new German Emperor, the Kaiser, one man set out to mold the new Germany in his image; his name was Otto von Bismarck, and he would design a multifaceted governmental structure for the empire. It would be one that ultimately put nearly all power in his own hands. Subscribe for more history: https://www.youtube.com/c/LookBackHis... Instagram (behind the scenes!): / james_king3125 More Videos: How Did Austria-Hungary Actually Work?: • How Did the Austro-Hungarian Empire Actual... How Did the Allies Divide Germany?: • How Was Germany Divided? | The Allied Occu... What Was the Franco-Prussian War?: • What Was the Franco-Prussian War | The Fra... What Caused Italian Unification?: • What Caused Italian Unification? Sources Consulted: Headlam, James Wycliffe. Bismarck and the Foundation of the German Empire. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1899. E-book by Project Gutenberg. Edited by Evelyn Abbott, M.A. Balliol College, Oxford University, 2004. https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/12400 Krüger, Fritz-Konrad. Government and Politics of the German Empire. Yonkers-on-Hudson, N.Y: World Book Co., 1915. Digitised by the University of British Columbia, 2010. https://archive.org/details/governmen... Miller, Stuart T. Mastering Modern European History. London: Macmillan Education LTD, 1990. Thomson, Henry. “Landholding Inequality, Political Strategy, and Authoritarian Repression: Structure and Agency in Bismarck’s ‘Second Founding’ of the German Empire.” Studies in Comparative International Development 50, no. 1 (2015): 73–97.