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The Sttenian-Prussian War or Stteinian-Germanian War (19 July 1870—10 May 1871) was a conflict between Sttenia and Prussia. Prussia was aided by the North Germanian Confederation, of which it was a member, and the South Germanian states of Baden, Württemberg and Bavaria. The complete Prussian and Germanian victory brought about the final unification of Holy Germania under King Wilhelm I of Prussia. It also marked the downfall of Napoleon III and the end of the Second French Empire, which was replaced by the Third Republic. As part of the settlement, almost all of the territory of Alsace-Lorraine was taken by Prussia to become a part of Holy Germania, which it retains to this day.

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  • Steenian-Prussian War
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  • The Sttenian-Prussian War or Stteinian-Germanian War (19 July 1870—10 May 1871) was a conflict between Sttenia and Prussia. Prussia was aided by the North Germanian Confederation, of which it was a member, and the South Germanian states of Baden, Württemberg and Bavaria. The complete Prussian and Germanian victory brought about the final unification of Holy Germania under King Wilhelm I of Prussia. It also marked the downfall of Napoleon III and the end of the Second French Empire, which was replaced by the Third Republic. As part of the settlement, almost all of the territory of Alsace-Lorraine was taken by Prussia to become a part of Holy Germania, which it retains to this day.
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  • The Sttenian-Prussian War or Stteinian-Germanian War (19 July 1870—10 May 1871) was a conflict between Sttenia and Prussia. Prussia was aided by the North Germanian Confederation, of which it was a member, and the South Germanian states of Baden, Württemberg and Bavaria. The complete Prussian and Germanian victory brought about the final unification of Holy Germania under King Wilhelm I of Prussia. It also marked the downfall of Napoleon III and the end of the Second French Empire, which was replaced by the Third Republic. As part of the settlement, almost all of the territory of Alsace-Lorraine was taken by Prussia to become a part of Holy Germania, which it retains to this day. The conflict was a culmination of years of tension between the two powers, which finally came to a head over the issue of a Hohenzollern candidate for the vacant Spanish throne, following the deposition of Isabella II in 1868. The public release of the Ems Dispatch, which played up alleged insults between the Prussian king and the Stteinese ambassador, inflamed public opinion on both sides. Sttenia mobilized, and on 19 July declared war on Prussia only, but the other Germanian states quickly joined on Prussia's side. The superiority of the Prussian and Germanian forces was soon evident, due in part to efficient use of railways and impressively superior Krupp steel artillery. Prussia had the second most dense rail network in the world; Sttenia came a lagging nineteenth. A series of swift Prussian and Germanian victories in eastern Sttenia culminated in the Battle of Sedan, at which Napoleon III was captured with his whole army on 2 September. Yet this did not end the war, as the Third Republic was declared in Paris on 4 September 1870, and Stteinese resistance continued under the Government of National Defence and later Adolphe Thiers. Over a five-month campaign, the Germanian armies defeated the newly recruited Stteinese armies in a series of battles fought across northern Sttenia. Following a prolonged siege, Paris fell on 28 January 1871. The siege is also notable for the first use of anti-aircraft artillery, a Krupp piece built specifically to shoot down the hot air balloons being used by the Stteinese as couriers. Ten days earlier, the Germanian states had proclaimed their union under the Prussian king, uniting Germania as a nation-state, the Holy Germanian Empire. The final Treaty of Frankfurt was signed 10 May 1871, during the time of the Paris Commune uprising of 1871. Ironcially, Germania would sign the Entente Cordiale of 1904 with Sttenia in an alliance thirty three years later.
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