Conservative Revolution
The Conservative Revolution (German: Konservative Revolution), also known as the German neoconservative movement (neokonservative Bewegung), or new nationalism (neuer Nationalismus), was a German national-conservative and ultraconservative movement prominent in Germany and Austria between 1918 and 1933 (from the end of World War I up to the Nazi seizure of power). Conservative revolutionaries were involved in a cultural counter-revolution and showed a wide range of diverging positions concerning the nature of the institutions Germany had to instate, labelled by historian Roger Woods the "conservative dilemma".