Voices of History - CD 1

Mediathek

Dieses Medium ist Teil des Gesamtwerks Voices of History

Beiträge dieses Mediums

William Ewart Gladstone
To Edison from Colonel Gouraud, introducing Mr. Gladstone - the phonograph's salutation
Mitwirkende: Gladstone, William [Sprecher/in] , Gouraud, George [Sprecher/in]
Datum: 1888.12.18 [Aufnahmedatum]
Ort: London [Aufnahmeort]
Schlagworte: Politik ; Gesellschaft ; Technik ; Medien und Kommunikation ; Reden und Ansprachen ; Regierung ; Liberale ; Opposition ; Großbritannien ; Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika
Typ: audio
Inhalt: Charles Gouraud:

London, 18th December 1888. To Edison from Colonel Gouraud, introducing Mr Gladstone. The Phonograph Salutation.

The latest-born of science and American genius bends its knee of steel and bows its neck of iron in reverential homage before the veteran statesman of England. Mr Gladstone, the phonograph salutes you, and through the medium of the phonograph, Mr Edison greets you. Now, Edison, listen to a voice that has electrified its generation - the voice of William Ewart Gladstone;


William Ewart Gladstone:

Dear Mr Edison, I am profoundly indebted to you for, not the entertainment only, but the instruction and the marvels of one of the most remarkable evenings which it has been my privilege to enjoy. The request, that you have done me the honour to make - to receive the record of my voice - is one that I cheerfully comply with so far as it lies in my power; though I lament to say that the voice which I transmit to you is only the relic of an organ, the employment of which has been overstrained. Yet I offer to you as much as I possess and so much as old age has left me, with the utmost satisfaction, as being, at least, a testimony to the instruction and delight that I have received from your marvellous invention. As to future consequences it is impossible to anticipate them. All I see is that wonders upon wonders are opening before us. Your great country is leading the way in the important work of invention. Heartily do we wish it well. And to you, as one of its greatest celebrities, allow me to offer my hearty good wishes and earnest prayers that you may long live to witness its triumphs in all that appertains to the well-being of mankind. William Ewart Gladstone.
Herbert Henry Asquith
Speech on the budget
Mitwirkende: Asquith, Herbert Henry [Sprecher/in]
Datum: 1909.07.20 [Aufnahmedatum]
Schlagworte: Politik ; Wissenschaft und Forschung ; Wirtschaft ; Technik ; Reden und Ansprachen ; Regierung ; Liberale ; Wirtschaftspolitik ; Militär ; Parlament ; Großbritannien
Typ: audio
David Lloyd George - Speech on the budget
Speech on the budget
Mitwirkende: George, David Lloyd [Redner/in]
Datum: 1909.07.23 [Aufnahmedatum]
Ort: London
Schlagworte: Politik ; Wirtschaft ; Gesellschaft ; Regierung ; Wirtschaftspolitik ; Militär ; Parlament ; Reden und Ansprachen ; Liberale ; Großbritannien
Typ: audio
Thomas Woodrow Wilson
Labour
Mitwirkende: Wilson, Woodrow [Redner/in]
Datum: 1912.09.24 [Aufnahmedatum]
Schlagworte: Politik ; Wirtschaft ; Gesellschaft ; Regierung ; Opposition ; Liberale ; Wahlen ; Arbeitsbedingungen ; Soziales ; Wirtschaftspolitik ; Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika
Typ: audio
Inhalt: Woodrow Wilson:

To look at the politics of the day from the viewpoint of the laboring man is not to suggest that there is one view proper to him, another to the employer, another to the capitalist, another to the professional man, but merely that the life of the country as a whole may be looked at from various points of view, and yet be viewed as a whole. The whole business of politics is to bring classes together upon a platform of accommodation and common interest. In a political campaign the voters are called upon to choose between parties and leaders. Parties and platforms and candidates should be frankly put under examination to see what they will yield us by way of progress. And there are a great many questions which the working man may legitimately ask and quest until he gets a definite answer.

The predictions of the leader of the new party are as alarming as the predictions of the various stand-patters. He declares that he is not troubled by the fact that a very large amount of money is taken out of the pockets of the general taxpayer and put into the pockets of particular classes that protect his manufacturers, but that his concern is that so little of this money gets into the pockets of the laboring man and so large a proportion of it into the pockets of the employers. I have searched his program very thoroughly for an indication of what he expects to do in order to see to it that a larger proportion of this prize money gets into the pay envelope—and I have found only one suggestion. There is a plank in the program which speaks of establishing a minimum, or a living wage, for women workers. And I suppose that we may assume that the principle is not in the long run meant to be confined in its application to women only. Perhaps we are justified in assuming that the third party looks forward to the general establishment by law of a minimum wage.

It is very likely, I take it for granted, that if a minimum wage were established by law the great majority of employers would take occasion to bring their wage scale as nearly as might be down to the level of that minimum. And it would be very awkward for the working man to resist that process successfully because it would be dangerous to strike against the authority in the Federal government. Moreover, most of his employers—at any rate, practically all of the most powerful of them—would be wards and proteges of that very government which is the master of us all. For no part of this program can be discussed intelligently, without remembering that monopoly, as handled by it, is not to be prevented, but accepted and regulated.

When you have thought the whole thing out, therefore, you will find that the program of the new party legalizes monopolies and, of necessity, subordinates working men to them and to the plans made by the government, both with regard to employment, and with regard to wages. Take the thing as a whole, and it looks strangely like economic mastery over the very lives and fortunes of those who do the daily work of the nation. And all this under the overwhelming power and sovereignty of the national government. What most of us are fighting for is to break up this very partnership between big business and the government.
Vladimir Ilich Lenin
Lenins Speechs In memory of Comrade Yakov Mikhailovich Sverdlov, chairman of the All-Russia Central Executive Committee
Mitwirkende: Lenin, Vladimir Ilʹič [Redner/in]
Datum: 18.03.1919 [Aufnahmedatum]
Ort: Moskau
Schlagworte: Politik ; Gesellschaft ; Marxismus und Kommunismus ; Reden und Ansprachen ; Tod ; Feste ; Feiern ; Diktaturen und totalitäre Regime ; Regierung ; Revolution ; Krieg ; Sowjetunion ; Russland
Typ: audio
Eamon de Valera
Eamon de Valeras Saint Patrick's Day address
Mitwirkende: Valera, Eamon de [Redner/in]
Datum: 1920.03 [Aufnahmedatum] 1920.04 [Aufnahmedatum]
Ort: New York City [Aufnahmeort]
Schlagworte: Politik ; Gesellschaft ; Reden und Ansprachen ; Regierung ; Feiertag ; römisch - katholische Kirche ; Konservative ; Krieg ; Erster Weltkrieg ; Revolution ; IRA ; Irland ; Großbritannien ; Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika
Typ: audio
Inhalt: Éamon de Valera

Sons and daughters of the Gael, wherever you be today, in the name of the motherland, greetings. Whatever flag be the flag you guard and cherish, it is consistent with your highest duty to link yourselves together to use your united strength to break the chains that bind our sweet, sad mother. And never before have the scattered children of Éire had such an opportunity for noble service. Today you can serve not only Ireland but the world. A cruel war and a more cruel peace have shattered the generous of soul. Apathy mocks the high minded, and heartless cynicism points the way of selfishness. We the children of a race that has endured for ages the blight of war and the disappointment of peace, who have had the cup of the fruition of hope dashed from our lips in every decade and have not despaired, whose temper has never soured but who have always looked forward for the good in tomorrow. The world needs what we can give it today.

Once before, our people gave their souls to a barbarian continent and led brute materialism to an understanding of higher things. It is still our mission to show the world the might of moral duty, to teach mankind peace and happiness in keeping the law of love, doing to our neighbour what we would have our neighbour do to us. We are the spear point of the hosts in political slavery. We can be the shaft of dawn for the despairing and the wretched everywhere.

And those of our race, citizens of this mighty land of America whose thought will help to mould the policy of the leader among the nations, how much the world looks to you this St. Patrick's Day, hopes in you, trusts in you. You can so easily accomplish that which is needed. You have only to have the will - the way is so clear. What would not the people of the old land give for the power which is yours? May God and St. Patrick inspire you to use it and to use it well.
Address by the Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin at the Empire Rally of Youth
Mitwirkende: Baldwin, Stanley [Sprecher/in]
Datum: 1937.05.18 [Aufnahmedatum]
Schlagworte: Politik ; Gesellschaft ; Regierung ; Reden und Ansprachen ; Kinder und Jugend ; Konservative ; Großbritannien
Typ: audio
Inhalt: Stanley Baldwin

Let me end in this, the last speech I shall make before a great audience as Prime Minister of this country. Let me proclaim my faith, which is the faith of millions of all races from end to end of the British Empire. Here we have ceased to be an island, but we are still an Empire.

And what is her secret? Freedom, ordered freedom, within the law, with force in the background and not in the foreground: a society in which authority and freedom are blended in due proportion, in which state and citizen are both ends and means. It is an empire organised for peace and for the free development of the individual in and through an infinite variety of voluntary associations. It neither deifies the state nor its rulers.

The fruits of a free spirit of men do not grow in the garden of tyranny. It’s been well said that slavery is a weed that grows in every soil. As long as we have the wisdom to keep the sovereign authority of this country as the sanctuary of liberty, the sacred temple consecrated to our common faith, men will turn their faces towards us and draw their breath more freely. The association of the peoples of the Empire is rooted and their fellowship is rooted in this doctrine of the essential dignity of the individual human soul: that is the English secret, however feebly and faintly we have, at times and places, embraced and obeyed it.

And the torch I would hand to you and ask you to pass from hand to hand along the pathways of the Empire, is a great Christian proof rekindled anew in each ardent generation: that is a message I’ve tried to deliver as Prime Minister of England in a hundred speeches, and I can think of no better message to give you to take away tonight than that.
Leon Trotskys Speech to the Mexican people
Mitwirkende: Trotzki, Leo [Sprecher/in]
Datum: 1937 [Aufnahmedatum]
Schlagworte: Politik ; Gesellschaft
Typ: audio
Adolf Hitler
Speech in Königsberg
Mitwirkende: Hitler, Adolf [Sprecher/in]
Datum: 1938.03.25 [Aufnahmedatum]
Typ: audio
Arthur Neville Chamberlain
The Prime Minister's speech at Heston Airport on his return from Munich, Sept. 30th, 1938
Mitwirkende: Chamberlain, Neville [Sprecher/in]
Datum: 1938.09.30 [Aufnahmedatum]
Typ: audio
Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill
This was their finest hour [Ausschnitt]
Mitwirkende: Churchill, Winston [Sprecher/in]
Datum: 1940.06.18 [Aufnahmedatum]
Schlagworte: Politik ; Reden und Ansprachen ; Zweiter Weltkrieg
Typ: audio
Inhalt: Die Rede des britischen Premierministers Winston Chuchill vor dem Unterhaus trug als Titel das Zitat am Ende “Their finest hour” in der festgestellt wird, dass auch nach der Niederlage Frankreichs Großbritannien für die christliche Zivilisation weiterkämpfen wird. Wenn nötig über Jahre und wenn notwendig auch allein.
Joseph Stalin
Radio broadcast to the Soviet people
Mitwirkende: Stalin, Josef [Sprecher/in]
Datum: 1941.07.03 [Aufnahmedatum]
Schlagworte: Politik ; Reden und Ansprachen ; Zweiter Weltkrieg
Typ: audio
Inhalt: Beginn seiner Rede, in der sich Joseph Stalin am 3. Juli 1941 erstmals nach dem Kriegsausbruch am 22. Juni, als der Generalsekretär der Bolschewiki und Vorsitzender des Verteidigungskomitees der UdSSR an die Öffentlichkeit wendet. , Genossen! Bürger! Brüder und Schwestern!
Kämpfer unserer Armee und Flotte!
An Euch wende ich mich, meine Freunde!
Der von Hitlerdeutschland am 22. Juni wortbrüchig begonnene militärische Überfall auf unsere Heimat dauert an. Trotz des heldenhaften Widerstands der GlossarRoten Armee und ungeachtet dessen, daß die besten Divisionen des Feindes und die besten Einheiten seiner Luftwaffe schon zerschmettert sind und auf den Schlachtfeldern ihr Grab gefunden haben, setzt der Feind, der neue Kräfte an die Front wirft, sein Vordringen weiter fort. Es ist den Hitlertruppen gelungen, Litauen, einen beträchtlichen Teil Lettlands, den westlichen Teil Weißrußlands, einen Teil der Westukraine zu besetzen. Die faschistische Luftwaffe erweitert den Tätigkeitsbereich ihrer Bombenflugzeuge und bombardiert Murmansk, Orša, Mogilev, Smolensk, Kiev, Odessa, Sevastopol’. Über unsere Heimat ist eine ernste Gefahr heraufgezogen.

Wie konnte es geschehen, daß unsere ruhmvolle Rote Armee den faschistischen Truppen eine Reihe unserer Städte und Gebiete überlassen hat? Sind die faschistischen deutschen Truppen denn etwa in Wirklichkeit unbesiegbare Truppen, wie das die großmäuligen faschistischen Propagandisten unermüdlich in die Welt hinausposaunen?

Natürlich nicht!...
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Address to the Congress of the US
Mitwirkende: Roosevelt, Franklin D. [Sprecher/in]
Datum: 1941.12.08 [Aufnahmedatum]
Ort: Washington D.C., United States Capitol
Schlagworte: Politik ; Reden und Ansprachen ; Zweiter Weltkrieg ; Außenpolitik
Typ: audio
Inhalt: Die gesamte Ansprache mit Kriegserklärung vor dem US-Congress am 8. Dezember 1941. Die Rede von Präsident Roosevelt über den Angriff des Kaiserreiches Japan auf die US-Pazifikflotte auf Hawaii und damit auf die Vereinigten Staaten, enthält die berühmten Worte zum 7. Dezember 1941 - “A date which will live in infamy”. , Mr. Vice President, and Mr. Speaker, and Members of the Senate and House of Representatives: Yesterday, December 7, 1941 a date which will live in infamy the United States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces of the Empire of Japan.
The United States was at peace with that Nation and, at the solicitation of Japan, was still in conversation with its Government and its Emperor looking toward the maintenance of peace in the Pacific. Indeed, one hour after Japanese air squadrons had commenced bombing in the American Island of Oahu, the Japanese Ambassador to the United States and his colleague delivered to our Secretary of State a formal reply to a recent American message. And while this reply stated that it seemed useless to continue the existing diplomatic negotiations, it contained no threat or hint of war or of armed attack.
It will be recorded that the distance of Hawaii from Japan makes it obvious that the attack was deliberately planned many days or even weeks ago. During the intervening time the Japanese Government has deliberately sought to deceive the United States by false statements and expressions of hope for continued peace.
The attack yesterday on the Hawaiian Islands has caused severe damage to American naval and military forces. I regret to tell you that very many American lives have been lost. In addition American ships have been reported torpedoed on the high seas between San Francisco and Honolulu.
Yesterday the Japanese Government also launched an attack against Malaya. Last night Japanese forces attacked Hong Kong: Last night Japanese forces attacked Guam. Last night Japanese forces attacked the Philippine Islands. Last night the Japanese attacked Wake Island. And this morning the Japanese attacked Midway Island.
Japan has, therefore, undertaken a surprise offensive extending throughout the Pacific area. The facts of yesterday and today speak for themselves. The people of the United States have already formed their opinions and well understand the implications to the very life and safety of our Nation. As Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy I have directed that all measures be taken for our defense. But always will our whole Nation remember the character of the onslaught against us.
No matter how long it may take us to overcome this premeditated invasion, the American people in their righteous might will win through to absolute victory. (Applaus)
I believe that I interpret the will of the Congress and of the people when I assert that we will not only defend ourselves to the uttermost but will make it very certain that this form of treachery shall never again endanger us.
Hostilities exist. There is no blinking at the fact that our people, our territory, and our interests are in grave danger. With confidence in our armed forces with the unbounding determination of our people we will gain the inevitable triumph so help us God. I ask that the Congress declare that since the unprovoked and dastardly attack by Japan on Sunday, December 7, 1941, a state of war has existed between the United States and the Japanese Empire. (Applaus)
Clement Richard Attlee
Speech at the opening assembly of the United Nations
Mitwirkende: Attlee, Clement [Sprecher/in]
Datum: 1946.01.10 [Aufnahmedatum]
Typ: audio
Christabel Harriette Pankhurst
Suffrage for women
Mitwirkende: Pankhurst, Christabel [Sprecher/in]
Datum: 1908.12.18 [Aufnahmedatum]
Typ: audio
Margaret Wintringham
Politics and the home
Mitwirkende: Wintringham, Margaret [Sprecher/in]
Datum: 1929.03.25 [Aufnahmedatum]
Typ: audio
Margaret Grace Bondfield
The woman's opportunity
Mitwirkende: Bondfiled, Margaret Grace [Sprecher/in]
Datum: 1929.03.28 [Aufnahmedatum]
Typ: audio
Katharine Ramsay
The new outlook for women
Mitwirkende: Ramsay, Katharine [Sprecher/in]
Datum: 1929.04.18 [Aufnahmedatum]
Typ: audio
Nancy Witscher Astor
Nancy Astor lays foundation stone , Women against the war , Women damand equal compensation
Mitwirkende: Langhorne, Nancy <Lady Astor> [Sprecher/in] , Summerskill, Edith Clara [Sprecher/in]
Datum: 1931.05.14 [Aufnahmedatum] 1936.04.05 [Aufnahmedatum] 1941.09.22 [Aufnahmedatum]
Schlagworte: Reden und Ansprachen ; Interview ; Frauen
Typ: audio
Inhalt: Statement zur Gleichberechtigung der Frau auch als Kampf für Gerechtigkeit.

Katalogzettel

Titel Voices of History - CD 1
Spieldauer
Urheber/innen und Mitwirkende British Library [Label]
Typ audio
Format DFMP3 [Dateiformat: MP3]
DFWAV [Dateiformat: Broadcast WAV]
CD [Compact Disc]
Signatur 8-18117_K01, 8-18117
Medienart Mediendatei
Gesamtwerk/Reihe Voices of History

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