- The Kapp
Putsch (German pronunciation: [ˈkapˌpʊt͡ʃ] ), also
known as the Kapp–Lüttwitz
Putsch (German pronunciation: [kapˈlʏtvɪt͡sˌpʊt͡ʃ] ), was an attempted...
- The Beer Hall
Putsch, also
known as the
Munich Putsch, was a
failed coup d'état by ****
Party leader Adolf Hitler,
Generalquartiermeister Erich Ludendorff...
- The Küstrin
Putsch of 1
October 1923, also
known as the
Buchrucker Putsch after its leader, was a coup
attempt against the
Weimar Republic by
units of...
-
Hinschen Weiss, Lelt Szoeloe, Misera, Perlentraube, Putchir,
Putscheere Bleu,
Putscher, Putzcheere, Putzscheere, Raifler, Rothinsch, Rothreifler, Sauerlamper...
-
against an
alleged imminent coup by the SA
under Röhm – the so-called Röhm
Putsch. The
primary instruments of Hitler's
action were the
Schutzstaffel (SS)...
- The July
Putsch was a
failed coup
attempt against the
Austrofascist regime by
Austrian ****s from 25 to 30 July 1934. Just a few
months after the Austrian...
- The
November 1918
Liechtenstein putsch, also
known as the Beck
putsch (German:
Novemberputsch 1918) was a de
facto coup d'état by the
leaders of the Christian-Social...
-
Algiers putsch (Arabic: انقلاب 1961 في الجزائر; French:
Putsch d'Alger or Coup d'État d'Alger), also
known as the
putsch of the
generals (
Putsch des généraux)...
-
Knittelfeld Putsch refers to a
conference of the
Freedom Party of
Austria (FPÖ)
which took
place on 7
September 2002 in the
small Austrian town of Knittelfeld...
- Röhm
Putsch'. The 1961
Algiers putsch and the 1991
August Putsch also use the term. The 2023
Wagner Group rebellion has also been
described as a
putsch, mostly...