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This article gives an overview of the History of Germany.
The Holy Roman Empire, dating from the 8th century AD until
1806, was the first German Reich, or empire, a term sometimes
used to describe the German historical epochs. At its largest
extent, the territory of the empire included what is now Germany,
Austria, the Czech Republic, Switzerland, eastern France,
the Low Countries, and parts of northern and central Italy.
After the mid 15th century, it was known as the "Holy
Roman Empire of the German Nation". The German Empire
of 18711918 was often known as the second Reich to indicate
its descent from the medieval empire. By the same reasoning,
Adolf Hitler referred to Nazi Germany (19331945) as
the Third Reich.
The Germans and the Romans
Between 800 and 70 BC the Germanic tribes in the north migrated
into Celtic territory, advancing to the Oder and the Rhine
and into southern Germany.
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| Gaius Cornelius Tacitus, author of
Germania, a descriptive work about the Germanic tribes
at the Roman frontier on the Rhine |
Around 58 BC, in a succession of military campaigns the Romans
made the Rhine the north-eastern frontier of the Roman Empire,
leading to the Romanisation of the left bank of the Rhine
and the incorporation of the central European Celtic societies
into their Empire. Roman forts were built at Cologne, Trier,
Koblenz, Mainz and elsewhere to secure the Rhine frontier,
where Romans and Germanic people now faced each other directly.
In AD 9 a Roman army led by Publius Quinctilius Varus was
defeated by the Cheruscan leader Arminius (Hermann) in the
Battle of the Teutoburg Forest. Germany as far as the Rhine
and the Danube remained outside the Roman Empire.
From 90 AD onwards, the Romans built the Limes, a 550-km
(340-mile) defensive line from the Rhine to the Danube designed
to check Germanic advances over the frontier, as well as numerous
forts (e.g. at Wiesbaden, Augsburg, Regensburg, Passau). The
3rd century saw the emergence of a number of large West Germanic
tribes Alamanni, Franks, Chatti, Saxons, Frisians,
Thuringians. Around 260, the Germans finally broke through
the Limes and the Danube frontier.
In the 4th century, the advance of the Huns into Europe gave
the start to the period of the Great Migrations, which changed
the whole map of Europe. By unifying the Franks and conquering
Gaul, the Merovingian king Chlodwig became the founder of
the Frankish kingdom. In 496 the Franks defeated the Alemanni,
accepted the Catholic faith and so gained the support of the
Church.
The Roman provinces north of the Alps had been Christianised
since the 4th century and Christian centres such as at Augsburg
were maintained after the end of the Roman empire. However,
from around 600 there was a renewed Christian mission of the
barbarian tribes. Irish-Scottish monks founded monasteries
at Würzburg, Regensburg, Reichenau, and other places.
The missionary activity in the Merovingian kingdom was continued
by the Anglo-Saxon monk Boniface, who established the first
monastery east of the Rhine at Fritzlar. Bishoprics under
Papal authority were established to spread the Christian faith
in the German lands.
In 751 Pippin III, mayor (controller) of the palace under
the Merovingian king, himself assumed the title of king and
was anointed by the Church. The Frankish kings now set up
as protectors of the Pope, and the Carolingian successors
of Pippin launched a decades-long military camapign against
their Heathen rivals, the Saxons. The Saxons were eventually
overwhelmed and forcibly converted, and their lands were annexed
by the Frankish empire.
Holy Roman Empire
Middle Ages
From 772 to 814 king Charlemagne extended the Carolingian
empire into northern Italy and the territories of all west
Germanic peoples, including the Saxons and the Bajuwari (Bavarians).
In 800 Charlemagne's authority in Western Europe was confirmed
by his coronation as emperor in Rome. The Holy Roman Empire
was established. The Frankish empire was divided into counties,
and its frontiers were protected by border Marches. Imperial
strongholds (Kaiserpfalzen) became economic and cultural centres
(Aachen being the most famous).
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| The prince-electors of the Holy Roman
Empire. From Bildatlas der Deutschen Geschichte by Dr
Paul Knötel (1895) |
Between 843 and 880, after fighting between Charlemagne's
grandchildren, the Carolingian empire was partitioned into
several parts in the Treaty of Verdun. The German empire developed
out of the East Frankish kingdom. From 919 to 936 the Germanic
peoples (Franks, Saxons, Swabians and Bavarians) were united
under Duke Henry of Saxony, who took the title of king. For
the first time, the term Kingdom (Empire) of the Germans ("Regnum
Teutonicorum") was applied to the Frankish kingdom.
In 936 Otto I the Great was crowned at Aachen. He strengthened
the royal authority by appointing bishops and abbots as princes
of the Empire (Reichsfürsten), thereby establishing a
national church (Reichskirche). In 951 Otto the Great married
the widowed queen Adelheid, thereby winning the Langobardic
(Lombard) crown. Outside threats to the kingdom were contained
when in 955 the Hungarians were decisively defeated near Augsburg
at the Battle of Lechfeld and the Slavs between the Elbe and
the Oder were submitted. In 962 Otto I was crowned emperor
in Rome, taking the succession of Charlemagne and establishing
a strong German influence over the Papacy.
In 1033 the kingdom of Burgundy was incorporated into the
German empire during the reign of Conrad II.
During the reign of Henry III Germany supported the Cluniac
reform of the Church - the Peace of God, the prohibition of
simony (the purchase of clerical offices) and the celibacy
of priests. Imperial authority over the Pope reached its peak.
An imperial stronghold (Pfalz) was built at Goslar, as the
Empire continued its expansion to the East.
In the Investiture Dispute which began between Henry IV and
Pope Gregory VII over appointments to ecclesiastical offices,
the emperor was compelled to submit to the Pope at Canossa
in 1077, after having been excommunicated. In 1122 a temporary
reconciliation was reached between Henry V and the Pope with
the Concordat of Worms. The consequences of the investiture
dispute were a weakening of the Ottonian Reichskirche and
a strengthening of the German secular princes.
The time between 1096 and 1291 was the age of the crusades.
Knightly religious orders were established, including the
Templars, the Knights of St John and the Teutonic Order.
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Castle of the Teutonic Order in Malbork
(German: Marienburg)
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From 1100, new towns were founded around imperial strongholds,
castles, bishops' palaces and monasteries. The towns began
to establish municipal rights and liberties, while the rural
population remained in a state of serfdom. In particular,
several cities became Imperial Free Cities, which did not
depend on princes or bishops, but were immediately subject
to the Emperor. The towns were ruled by patricians (merchants
carrying on long-distance trade). The craftsmen formed guilds,
governed by strict rules, which sought to obtain control of
the towns. Trade with the East and North intensified, as the
major trading towns came together in the Hanseatic League,
under the leadership of Lübeck.
The Germanic expansion into the east began: German settlers,
including peasants, towns-people and the Teutonic Order, moved
into Slav populated territories east of the Oder (Bohemia,
Silesia, Pomerania, Poland, Courland), settling into towns
and villages. (See Ostsiedlung).
Between 1152 and 1190, during the reign of Frederick I (Barbarossa),
of the Hohenstaufen dynasty, an accommodation was reached
with the rival Guelph party by the grant of the duchy of Bavaria
to Henry the Lion, duke of Saxony. Austria became a separate
duchy by virtue of the Privilegium Minus in 1156. Barbarossa
tried to reassertain his control over Italy. In 1177 a final
reconciliation was reached between the emperor and the Pope
in Venice.
In 1180 Henry the Lion was outlawed and Bavaria was given
to Otto von Wittelsbach (founder of the Wittelsbach dynasty
which was to rule Bavaria until 1918), while Saxony was divided.
From 1184 to 1186 the Hohenstaufen empire under Barbarossa
reached its peak in the Reichsfest (imperial celebrations)
held at Mainz and the marriage of his son Henry in Milan to
the Norman princess Constance of Sicily. The power of the
feudal lords was undermined by the appointment of "ministerials"
(unfree servants of the Emperor) as officials. Chivalry and
the court life flowered, leading to a development of German
culture and literature (see Wolfram von Eschenbach).
Between 1212 and 1250 Frederick II established a modern,
professionally administered state in Sicily. He resumed the
conquest of Italy, leading to further conflict with the Papacy.
In the Empire, extensive sovereign powers were granted to
ecclesiastical and secular princes, leading to the rise of
independent territorial states. The struggle with the Pope
sapped the Empire's strength, as Frederick II was excommunicated
three times. After his death, the Hohenstaufen dynasty fell,
followed by an interregnum during which there was no Emperor.
In 1226 parts of Prussia were conquered,christianized and
its population slaughtered by the Teutonic Order invited by
Polish rulers. But from 1300, the Empire started to lose territory
on all its frontiers.
Between 1346 and 1378 Emperor Charles IV of Luxembourg, king
of Bohemia, sought to restore the imperial authority.
Around 1350 Germany and Europe were ravaged by the Black
Death. Jews were persecuted, on religious and economic grounds.
The Golden Bull of 1356 stipulated that in future the emperor
was to be chosen by seven electors - the Archbishops of Mainz,
Trier and Cologne, the King of Bohemia, the Count Palatine
of the Rhine, the Duke of Saxony and the Margrave of Brandenburg.
After the disasters of the fourteenth century, early-modern
European society gradually came into being as a result of
economic, religious and political changes. A money economy
arose which provoked social discontent among knights and peasants.
Gradually, a proto-capitalistic system evolved out of feudalism.
The Fugger family gained prominence through commercial and
financial activities and became financiers to both ecclesiastical
and secular rulers.
The knightly classes found their monopoly on arms and military
skill undermined by the introduction of mercenary armies and
foot soldiers. Predatory activity by "robber knights"
became common. From 1438 the Habsburgs, who controlled most
of the southeast of the Empire (more or less modern-day Austria
and Slovenia, and, from 1526 onwards, Bohemia and Moravia),
maintained a constant grip on the position of the Holy Roman
Emperor until 1806 (with the exception of the years between
1742 and 1745). This situation, however, gave rise to increased
disunity among Germany's territorial rulers and prevented
all sections of the nation from coming together in the manner
of France and England.
During his reign from 1493 to 1519, Maximilian I tried to
reform the Empire: an Imperial Supreme Court (Reichskammergericht)
was established, imperial taxes were levied, the power of
the Imperial Diet (Reichstag) was increased. The reforms were,
however, frustrated by the continued territorial fragmentation
of the Empire.
Reformation and Thirty Years War
Around the beginning of the 16th century there was much discontentment
in Germany with abuses in the Catholic Church and a desire
for reform.
In 1517 the Reformation began: Luther nailed his 95 "theses"
against the abuse of indulgences to the church door in Wittenberg.
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| Martin Luther, German reformer and
reformer of Germany, 1529 |
In 1521 Luther was outlawed at the Diet of Worms. But the
Reformation spread rapidly, helped by the Emperor Charles
V's wars with France and the Turks. Hiding in the Wartburg
Castle, Luther translated the Bible, establishing the basis
of modern German.
In 1524 the Peasants' War broke out in Swabia, Franconia
and Thuringia against ruling princes and lords, following
the preachings of Reformist priests. But the revolts, which
were assisted by war-experienced noblemen like Götz von
Berlichingen and Florian Geyer (in Franconia), and by the
theologian Thomas Münzer (in Thuringia), were soon repressed
by the territorial princes.
From 1545 the Counter-Reformation began in Germany. The main
force was provided by the Jesuit order, founded by the Spaniard
Ignatius of Loyola. Central and north-eastern Germany were
by this time almost wholly Protestant, whereas western and
southern Germany remained predominantly Catholic. In the War
of the Schmalkaldic League in 1546/1547, the Emperor Charles
V defeated the Protestant rulers.
The Peace of Augsburg in 1555 brought recognition of the
Lutheran faith. But the treaty also stipulated that the religion
of a state was to be that of its ruler (Cuius regio, eius
religio).
In 1556 Charles V abdicated. The Habsburg Empire was divided,
as Spain was separated from the German possessions.
In 1608/1609 the Protestant Union and the Catholic League
were formed.
From 1618 to 1648 the Thirty Years' War ravaged Germany.
The causes were the conflicts between Catholics and Protestants,
the efforts by the various states within the Empire to increase
their power and the Emperor's attempt to achieve the religious
and political unity of the Empire. The immediate occasion
for the war was the uprising of the Protestant nobility of
Bohemia against the emperor (Defenestration of Prague), but
the conflict was widened into a European War by the intervention
of King Christian IV of Denmark (1625-29), Gustavus Adolphus
of Sweden (1630-48) and France under Cardinal Richelieu, the
regent of the young Louis XIV (1635-48). Germany became the
main theatre of war and the scene of the final conflict between
France and the Habsburgs for predominance in Europe. The war
resulted in large areas of Germany being laid waste, in a
loss of something like a third of its population, and in a
general impoverishment.
The war ended in 1648 with the Peace of Westphalia, signed
in Münster and Osnabrück: German territory was lost
to France and Sweden and the Netherlands left the Holy Roman
Empire. The imperial power declined further as the states'
rights were increased.
End of the Holy Roman Empire
From 1640, Brandenburg-Prussia had started to rise under the
Great Elector, Frederick William. The Peace of Westphalia
strengthened it even further, through the acquisition of East
Pomerania. A system of rule based on absolutism was established.
In 1701 Elector Frederick of Brandenburg was crowned "king
of Prussia". From 1713 to 1740, King Frederick William
I, also known as the "Soldier King", established
a highly centralised state.
Meanwhile Louis XIV of France had conquered parts of Alsace
and Lorraine (1678-1681), and had invaded and devastated the
Palatinate (1688-1697). Louis XIV benefitted from the Empire's
problems with the Turks, which were menacing Austria. He ultimately
had to relinquish the Palatinate, though.
In 1683 the Turks were defeated outside Vienna by a Polish
relief army led by King Jan Sobieski of Poland while the city
itself was defended by German and Austrian troops under the
command of Charles IV, Duke of Lorraine. Hungary was reconquered,
and later became a new destination for German settlers. Austria,
under the Habsburgs, developed into a great power.
In the War of Austrian Succession (1740-1748) Maria Theresa
fought successfully for recognition of her succession to the
throne. But in the Silesian Wars and in the Seven Years' War
she had to cede Silesia to Frederick II, the Great, of Prussia.
After the Peace of Hubertsburg in 1763 between Austria, Prussia
and Saxony, Prussia became a European great power. This gave
the start to the rivalry between Prussia and Austria for the
leadership of Germany.
From 1763, against resistance from the nobility and citizenry,
an "enlightened absolutism" was established in Prussia
and Austria, according to which the ruler was to be "the
first servant of the state". The economy developed and
legal reforms were undertaken, including the abolition of
torture and the improvement in the status of Jews; the emancipation
of the peasants began. Education was promoted.
In 1772-1779 Prussia took part in partitions of Poland, occuping
western territories of Poland, which led to centuries of Polish
resistence against German rule and persecution.
The French Revolution sparked a new war between the France
several of its Eastern neighbours, including Prussia and Austria.
Following the Peace of Basle in 1795 with Prussia, the left
bank of the Rhine was ceded to France.
Napoleon I of France relaunched the war against the Empire.
In 1803, under the "Reichsdeputationshauptschluss"
(a resolution of a committee of the Imperial Diet meeting
in Regensburg), he abolished almost all the ecclesiastical
and the smaller secular states and most of the imperial free
cities. New medium-sized states were established in south-western
Germany. In turn, Prussia gained territory in north-western
Germany.
The Holy Roman Empire was formally dissolved on 6 August
1806 when the last Holy Roman Emperor Francis II (from 1804,
Emperor Francis I of Austria) resigned. Francis II's family
continued to be called Austrian emperors until 1918. In 1806
the Confederation of the Rhine was established under Napoleon's
protection.
After the Prussian army was defeated by the French revolutionary
forces at Jena and Auerstedt, the Peace of Tilsit was signed
in 1807: Prussia ceded all its possessions west of the Elbe
to France and the kingdom of Westphalia was established under
Napoleon's brother Jérome. Some of the territories
Prussia conquered from Poland were regained by Grand Duch
of Warsaw.
From 1808 to 1812 Prussia was reconstructed, and a series
of reforms were enacted by Freiherr vom Stein and Freiherr
von Hardenberg, including the regulation of municipal government,
the liberation of the peasants and the emancipation of the
Jews. A reform of the army was undertaken by the Prussian
generals Gerhard von Scharnhorst and August von Gneisenau.
In 1813 the Wars of Liberation began, following the destruction
of Napoleon's army in Russia (1812). After the Battle of the
Nations at Leipzig, Germany was liberated from French rule.
The Confederation of the Rhine was dissolved.
In 1815 Napoleon was finally defeated at Waterloo by the
United Kingdom's Duke of Wellington and by Prussia's Gebhard
Leberecht von Blücher.
German Confederation
Restoration and Revolution
After the fall of Napoleon, European monarchs and statesmen
convened in the Vienna in 1814 for the reorganization of European
affairs, under the leadership of the Austrian Prince Metternich.
The political principles agreed upon at this Congress of Vienna
included the restoration, legitimacy and solidarity of rulers
for the repression of revolutionary and nationalist ideas.
On the territory of the former "Holy Roman Empire of
the German Nation", the German Confederation (Deutscher
Bund) was founded, a loose union of 39 states (35 ruling princes
and 4 free cities) under Austrian leadership, with a Federal
Diet (Bundestag) meeting in Frankfurt am Main.
In 1817, inspired by liberal and patriotic ideas of a united
Germany, student organisations gathered for the "Wartburg
festival" at Wartburg Castle, at Eisenach in Thuringia,
on the occasion of which reactionary books were burnt.
In 1819 the student Karl Ludwig Sand murdered the writer
August von Kotzebue, who had scoffed at liberal student organisations.
Prince Metternich used the killing as an occasion to call
a conference in Karlsbad, which Prussia, Austria and eight
other states attended, and which issued the Karlsbad Decrees:
censorship was introduced, and universities were put under
supervision. The decrees also gave the start to the so-called
"persecution of the demagogues", which was directed
against individuals who were accused of spreading revolutionary
and nationalist ideas. Among the persecuted were the poet
Ernst Moritz Arndt, the publisher Johann Joseph Görres
and the "Father of Gymnastics" Ludwig Jahn.
In 1834 the Zollverein was established, a customs union between
Prussia and most other German states, but excluding Austria.
Growing discontent with the political and social order imposed
by the Congress of Vienna led to the outbreak, in 1848, of
the March Revolution in the German states. In May the German
National Assembly (the Frankfurt Parliament) met in St. Paul's
Church in Frankfurt am Main to draw up a national German constitution.
But the 1848 revolution proved abortive: King Frederick William
IV of Prussia refused the imperial crown, the Frankfurt parliament
was dissolved, the ruling princes repressed the risings by
military force and the German Confederation was re-established
by 1850.
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| Liberal and nationalist pressure led
to the Revolution of 1848 in the German states |
In 1862 Prince Bismarck was nominated chief minister of Prussia
- against the opposition of liberals and socialists, who saw
in him a reactionary.
In 1864, disputes between Prussia and Denmark grew over Schleswig,
which - unlike Holstein - was not part of the German Confederation,
and which Danish nationalists wanted to incorporate into the
Danish kingdom. The dispute led to the Second War of Schleswig,
in the course of which the Prussians, joined by Austria, defeated
the Danes. Denmark was forced to cede both the duchy of Schleswig
and the duchy of Holstein to Austria and Prussia. In the aftermath,
the management of both duchys provoked growing tensions between
Austria and Prussia, which ultimately led to the Austro-Prussian
War (1866). The war was decided in favour of the Prussians,
who carried the decisive victory at the Battle of Königgratz,
under the command of Helmuth von Moltke.
North German Confederation
In 1867 the German Confederation was dissolved. In its place
the North German Confederation (German Norddeutscher Bund)
was established, under the leadership of Prussia. Austria
was excluded, and would remain outside German affairs for
most of the remaining 19th and the 20th centuries.
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| At the Battle of Königgrätz,
the Austro-Prussian rivalry for
the leadership of Germany was ultimately decided in favour
of Prussia |
The North German Confederation was a transitory group that
existed from 1867 to 1871, between the dissolution of the
German Confederation and the founding of the German Empire.
With it, Prussia established control over the 22 states of
northern Germany and, via the Zollverein, southern Germany.
German Empire
Age of Bismarck
Differences between France and Prussia over the accession
to the Spanish throne of a German candidate - whom France
opposed - led to the Franco-Prussian War (1870-71). Following
a French declaration of war, joint southern-German and Prussian
troops, under the command of Moltke, invaded France in 1870.
The French army was finally forced to capitulate by the fortress
of Sedan. French Emperor Napoleon III was taken prisoner and
the Second French Empire collapsed. Following the capitulation
of Paris, the Peace of Frankfurt am Main was signed: France
was obliged to cede Alsace and the German-speaking part of
Lorraine to Germany. The territorial cessions deeply hurt
the French national feeling, creating an obstacle to Franco-German
understanding.
On January 18, 1871, in the Hall of Mirrors of the Palace
of Versailles, the Prussian King Wilhelm I was proclaimed
"Emperor of Germany". The German Empire was founded,
with 25 states, three of which were Hanseatic cities. It was
a "Little German" solution, since Austria had been
excluded.
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The German Empire of 1871. By excluding
Austria, Bismarck chose a "little German"
solution.
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Bismarck's domestic policies as Chancellor of Germany were
characterized by his fight against perceived enemies of the
Protestant Prussian state. In the so-called Kulturkampf (1872-1878),
he tried to limit the influence of the Catholic Church and
of its political arm, the Catholic Centre Party, through various
measures - like the introduction of civil marriage - but without
much success. Non-German sections of the population in the
German Empire, like the Danish, Polish and French minorities,
were discriminated and policy of Germanisation was implemented.
The other perceived threat was the rise of the Socialist
Workers' Party (later known as the Social Democratic Party
of Germany), the declared aim of which was the establishment
of a new socialist order through the transformation of the
existing political and social conditions. From 1878, Bismarck
tried to repress the social democratic movement by outlawing
the party's organisation, its assemblies and most of its newspapers.
Through the introduction of a social insurance system, on
the other hand, he hoped to win the support of the working
classes for the Empire.
Bismarck's priority was to protect Germany's expanding power
through a system of alliances and an attempt to contain crises
until Germany was fully prepared to initiate them. Of particular
importance, in this context, was the containment and isolation
of France, because Bismarck feared that France would form
an alliance with Russia and take revenge for its loss of Alsace
and Lorraine to Germany.
In 1879, Bismarck formed a Dual Alliance of Germany and Austria-Hungary,
with the aim of mutual military assistance in the case of
an attack from Russia, which was not satisfied with the agreement
reached at the Congress of Berlin.
The establishment of the Dual Alliance led Russia to take
a more conciliatory stance, and in 1887, the so-called Reinsurance
Treaty was signed between Germany and Russia: in it, the two
powers agreed on mutual military support in the case that
France attacked Germany, or in case of an Austrian attack
on Russia.
In 1882, Italy joined the Dual Alliance to form a Triple
Alliance. Italy wanted to defend its interests in North Africa
against France's colonial policy. In return for German and
Austrian support, Italy committed itself to assisting Germany
in the case of a French military attack.
For a long time, Bismarck had refused to give in to Emperor
Wilhelm I's aspirations of making Germany a world power through
the acquisition of German colonies ("a place in the sun").
Bismarck wanted at all cost to avoid tensions between the
European great powers that would threaten the security of
Germany. But when, between 1880 and 1885, the foreign situation
proved auspicious, Bismarck gave way, and a number of colonies
were established overseas: in Africa, these were Togo, the
Cameroons, German South-West Africa and German East Africa;
in Oceania, they were German New Guinea, the Bismarck Archipelago
and the Marshall Islands.
In 1888 Kaiser Wilhelm I died, his son Friedrich III ruled
for only 99 days before his death. The young and ambitious
Wilhelm II, Friedrich's son, acceded to the throne. Political
and personal differences between Bismarck and the new monarch,
who wanted to be "his own chancellor", eventually
caused Bismarck to resign in 1890.
Wilhelminian Era
When Bismarck resigned, Wilhelm II had declared that he would
continue the foreign policy of the old chancellor. But soon,
a new course was taken, with the aim of increasing Germany's
influence in the world (Weltpolitik). The Reinsurance Treaty
with Russia was not renewed. Instead, France formed an alliance
with Russia, against the Triple Alliance of Germany, Austria-Hungary
and Italy. The Triple Alliance itself was undermined by differences
between Austria and Italy.
From 1898, German colonial expansion in East Asia (Jiaozhou
Bay, the Marianas, the Caroline Islands, Samoa) led to frictions
with the United Kingdom, Russia, Japan and the United States.
The construction of the Baghdad Railway, financed by German
banks and heavy industry, and aimed at connecting the North
Sea with the Persian Gulf via the Bosporus, also collided
with British and Russian geopolitical and economic interests.
To protect Germany's overseas trade and colonies, Admiral
von Tirpitz started a programme of warship construction in
1898. This posed a direct threat to British hegemony on the
seas, with the result that negotiations for an alliance between
Germany and Britain broke down. Germany was increasingly isolated.
Imperialist power politics and the determined pursuit of
national interests ultimately led to the outbreak in 1914
of the First World War, sparked by the assassination, on June
28, 1914, of the Austrian heir-apparent Franz Ferdinand and
his wife at Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia-Herzegovina by
a Serbian nationalist. The theorized underlying causes have
included the opposing policies of the European states, the
armaments race, German-British rivalry, the difficulties of
the Austro-Hungarian multinational state, Russia's Balkan
policy and overhasty mobilisations and ultimatums (the underlying
belief being that the war would be short). Germany fought
on the side of Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire against
Russia, France, Great Britain, Italy, and several other smaller
states. Fighting also spread to the Near East and the German
colonies.
In the west, Germany fought a war of position with bloody
battles. After a quick march through Belgium, German troops
were halted on the Marne, north of Paris. The frontlines in
France changed little until the end of the war. In the east,
no decisive victories against the Russian army. The British
naval blockade in the North Sea had crippling effects on Germany's
supplies of raw materials and foodstuffs. The entry of the
United States into the war in 1917 following Germanys declaration
of unrestricted submarine warfare marked a decisive turning-point
against Germany.
At the end of October, units of the German Navy in Kiel,
in northern Germany, refused to set sail for a last, large-scale
operation in a war which they saw as good as lost. On November
3, the uprising spread to other cities. So-called workers'
and soldiers' councils were established.
Kaiser Wilhelm II and all German ruling princes abdicated.
On November 9, the Social Democrat Philipp Scheidemann proclaimed
a Republic. On November 11, an armistice ending the war was
signed at Compiègne.
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| A postage stamp
from the Carolines, dating back to the time when the islands
were ruled by the German Empire. The new Weltpolitik of
Kaiser Wilhelm II led to frictions with other imperialist
powers. |
Weimar Republic
The German Revolution laid the foundation for the Weimar RepublicOn
28 June 1919 the Treaty of Versailles was signed. Germany
was to cede Alsace-Lorraine, Eupen-Malmédy, North Schleswig,
and the Memel area. Poland was restored and Posen, West Prussia,
and Upper Silesia were returned after plebiscites and independence
uprisings. All German colonies were to be handed over to the
Allies. The left and right banks of the Rhine were to be permanently
demilitarised. The industrially important Saarland was to
be governed by the League of Nations for 15 years and its
coalfields administered by France. At the end of that time
a plebiscite was to determine the Saar's future status. To
ensure execution of the treaty's terms, Allied troops would
occupy the left (German) bank of the Rhine for a period of
515 years. The German army was to be limited to 100,000
officers and men; the general staff was to be dissolved; vast
quantities of war material were to be handed over and the
manufacture of munitions rigidly curtailed. The navy was to
be similarly reduced, and no military aircraft were allowed.
Germany and its allies were to accept the sole responsibility
of the war, and were to pay financial reparations for all
loss and damage suffered by the Allies.
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| The German Revolution laid the foundation
for the Weimar Republic |
The humiliating peace terms provoked bitter indignation throughout
Germany, and seriously weakened the new democratic regime.
On 11 August 1919 the Weimar constitution came into effect,
with Friedrich Ebert as first President.
The two biggest enemies of the new democratic order, however,
had already been constituted. In December 1918, the German
Communist Party (KPD) was founded, followed in January 1919
by the establishment of the German Workers' Party, later known
as the National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP). Both
parties would make reckless use of the freedoms guaranteed
by the new constitution in their fight against the Weimar
Republic.
In the first months of 1920, the Reichswehr was to be reduced
to 100,000 men, in accordance with the Treaty of Versailles.
This included the dissolution of many Freikorps - units made
up of volunteers. Some of them made difficulties. The discontent
was exploited by the extreme right-wing politician Wolfgang
Kapp. He let the rebelling Freikorps march on Berlin and proclaimed
himself Reich Chancellor (Kapp Putsch). After only four days
the coup d'état collapsed, due to lack of support by
the civil servants and the officers. Other cities were shaken
by strikes and rebellions, which were bloodily suppressed.
Faced with animosity from Britain and France and the retreat
of American power from Europe, in 1922 Germany was the first
state to establish diplomatic relations with the new Soviet
Union. Under the Treaty of Rapallo, Germany accorded the Soviet
Union de jure recognition, and the two signatories mutually
cancelled all pre-war debts and renounced war claims.
When Germany defaulted on its reparation payments, French
and Belgian troops occupied the heavily industrialised Ruhr
district (January 1923). The German government encouraged
the population of the Ruhr to passive resistance: shops would
not sell goods to the foreign soldiers, coal-mines would not
dig for the foreign troops, trams in which members of the
occupation army had taken seat would be left abandoned in
the middle of the street. The passive resistance proved effective,
in so far as the occupation became a loss-making deal for
the French government. But the Ruhr fight also led to hyperinflation,
and many who lost all their fortune would become bitter enemies
of the Weimar Republic, and voters of the anti-democratic
right.
In September 1923, the deteriorating economic conditions
led Chancellor Gustav Stresemann to call an end to the passive
resistance in the Ruhr. In November, his government introduced
a new currency, the Rentenmark (later: Reichsmark), together
with other measures to stop the hyperinflation. In the following
six years the economic situation improved. In 1928, Germany's
industrial production even regained the pre-war levels of
1913.
On the evening of November 8th, six hundred armed SA men
surrounded a beer hall in Munich, where the heads of the Bavarian
state and the local Reichswehr had gathered for a rally. The
storm troopers were led by Adolf Hitler. Born in 1889 in Austria,
a former volunteer in the German army during WWI, now a member
of a new party called NSDAP, he was largely unknown until
then. Hitler tried to force those present to join him and
to march on to Berlin to seize power (Beer Hall Putsch). Hitler
was later arrested and condemned to five years in prison,
but was released at the end of 1924 after only one year of
detention.
The national elections of 1924 led to a swing to the right
(Ruck nach rechts). Field Marshal Hindenburg, a supporter
of the monarchy, was elected President.
In October 1925 the Treaty of Locarno was signed between
Germany, France, Belgium, the United Kingdom and Italy, which
recognized Germany's borders with France and Belgium. Moreover,
Britain, Italy and Belgium undertook to assist France in the
case that German troops marched into the demilitarised Rheinland.
The Treaty of Locarno paved the way for Germany's admission
to the League of Nations in 1926.
The stock market crash of 1929 on Wall Street marked the
beginning of the Great Depression. The effects of the ensuing
world economic crisis were also felt in Germany, where the
economic situation rapidly deteriorated. In July 1931, the
Darmstätter und Nationalbank - one of the biggest German
banks - failed, and, in early 1932, the number of unemployed
rose to more than 6,000,000.
In addition to the flagging economy came political problems,
due to the inability by the political parties represented
in the Reichstag to build a governing majority. In March 1930,
President Hindenburg appointed Heinrich Brüning Chancellor.
To push through his package of austerity measures against
a majority of Social Democrats, Communists and the NSDAP,
Brüning made use of emergency decrees, and even dissolved
Parliament.
The NSDAP was the big winner in the national elections of
July 1932. It gained 38% of the vote, making it the biggest
party in the Reichstag. The Communist KPD came third, with
15%. Together, the anti-democratic parties of right and left
were now able to hold the majority of seats in Parliament.
The NSDAP was particularly successful among young voters,
who were unable to find a place in vocational training, with
little hope for a future job; among the petite bourgeoisie
(lower middle class) which had lost its assets in the hyperinflation
of 1923; among the rural population; and among the army of
unemployed. In new elections in November 1932, the NSDAP's
share of the vote declined slightly, but it remained the biggest
party in the Parliament.
On January 30th 1933, pressured by former Chancellor Franz
von Papen and other conservatives, President Hindenburg finally
appointed Hitler Chancellor.
Third Reich
Nazi revolution or 'Seizure of Power'
In order to secure a majority for his NSDAP in the Reichstag,
Hitler called for new elections. On the evening of 27 February
1933, a fire was laid in the Reichstag building. Hitler was
swift to paint an alleged Communist uprising on the wall,
and convinced President Hindenburg to sign the so-called Emergency
Decree for the Protection of the People and the State. This
decree, which would remain in force until 1945, repealed important
basic rights of the Weimar constitution.
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| NSDAP rally (Reichsparteitag)
in Nuremberg, 1936. These
rallies were held every year in the same place. They were
meant to demonstrate the unity of the National Socialist
state |
Thousands of Communists and Socialists were arrested and
brought into concentration camps, where they were at the mercy
of the Gestapo, the newly established secret police force.
Despite the terror and propaganda, the national elections
of March 5th failed to bring the majority for the NSDAP that
Hitler had hoped for. Together with the German National People's
Party (DNVP), however, he was able to form a majority government.
With false promises, Hitler succeeded in convincing a required
two-thirds of Parliament to pass an enabling law that gave
his government full legislative power. Only the Social Democrats
voted against the law. The enabling law formed the basis for
the dissolution of the Länder; the trade unions and all
political parties other than the National Socialist (Nazi)
Party were suppressed. A centralised totalitarian state was
established, no longer based on the rule of law. Germany left
the League of Nations.
But many leaders of the Nazi SA were disappointed. The chief
of staff of the SA, Ernst Röhm, was pressing for the
SA to be incorporated into the Wehrmacht under his supreme
command. Hitler felt threatened by these plans. On the weekend
of June 30, 1934, he gave order to the SS to seize Röhm
and his lieutenants, and to execute them without trial.
The SS became an independent organisation under the command
of the Reichsführer SS Heinrich Himmler. He would become
the supervisor of the Gestapo and of the concentration camps,
soon also of the ordinary police. Hitler also established
the Waffen-SS as a separate troop.
The regime showed particular hostility towards the Jews.
In September 1935, the Reichstag passed the so-called Nuremberg
race laws directed against Jewish citizens. Jews lost their
German citizenship, and were banned from marrying Germans.
About 500,000 individuals were affected by the new rules.
Hitler re-established the German air force and re-introduced
universal military service. The open rearmament was in flagrant
breach of the Treaty of Versailles. However, neither the United
Kingdom, nor France and Italy, went beyond issuing notes of
protest.
In 1936 German troops marched into the demilitarised Rhineland.
In this case, the Treaty of Locarno would have obliged the
United Kingdom to intervene in favour of France. But despite
protests by the French government, Britain chose to do nothing
about it. The coup strengthened Hitler's standing in Germany.
His reputation was going to increase further with the Olympic
Games, which were held in the same year in Berlin and in Garmisch-Partenkirchen,
and which proved a great propagandistic success for the regime.
Expansion and defeat
After establishing the "Rome-Berlin axis" with Mussolini,
and signing the Anti-Comintern Pact with Japan - which was
joined by Italy a year later, in 1937 - Hitler felt able to
take the offensive in foreign policy. On 12 March1938, German
troops marched into Austria, where an attempted Nazi coup
had been unsuccessful in 1934. When Hitler entered Vienna,
he was greeted by loud cheers. Four weeks later, 99% of Austrians
voted in favour of the annexation (Anschluss) of their country
to Germany. Hitler thereby fulfilled the old idea of a German
Reich with the inclusion of Austria - the "greater German"
solution that Bismarck had shunned when, in 1871, he united
the German lands under Prussian leadership. Although the annexation
denounced the Treaty of Saint-Germain, which expressedly forbade
the unification of Austria with Germany, the western powers
once again merely protested.
After Austria, Hitler turned to Czechoslovakia, where the
3.5 million-strong Sudeten German minority was demanding equal
rights and self-government. At the Munich Conference of September
1938, Hitler, the Italian leader Benito Mussolini, British
Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and French Prime Minister
Édouard Daladier agreed upon the cession of Sudeten
territory to Germany by the Czechoslovaks. Hitler thereupon
declared that all of Germany's territorial claims had been
fulfilled. But hardly six months after the Munich Agreement,
in March 1939, Hitler used the smoldering quarrel between
Slowaks and Czechs as a pretext for taking over the rest of
Czechoslovakia as the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia.
In the same month, he secured the return of Memel from Lithuania
to Germany. British Prime Minister Chamberlain was forced
to acknowledge that his policy of appeasement towards Hitler
had failed.
In six years, the Nazi regime prepared the country for World
War II. The Nazi leadership attempted to remove or subjugate
the Jewish population in Nazi Germany and later in the occupied
countries through forced deportation and, ultimately, genocide
now known as the Holocaust. A similar policy applied to the
various ethnic and national groups considered subhuman such
as Roma,Poles or Russians. After annexing the Sudeten border
country of Czechoslovakia (October 1938), and taking over
the rest of the Czech lands as a protectorate (March 1939),
Germany and the Soviet Union in September 1939 invaded Poland.
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| Marking the Soviet Union's victory,
a soldier raises the Soviet flag over the Reichstag in
Berlin |
By 1945, Germany and its Axis partners (Italy and Japan)
were defeated chiefly by the united forces of USA,
Britain and the Soviet Union. Much of Europe lay in ruins,
tens of millions of people had been killed, most of them civilians,
as the six million Jews murdered in the Holocaust and many
millions of people in the conquered territories. World War
II resulted in the destruction of Germany's political and
economic infrastructures, led to its division, considerable
loss of territory in the East and left a humiliating legacy.
Germany since 1945
Germans frequently refer to 1945 as the Stunde Null (zero
hour) to describe the near-total collapse of their country.
At the Potsdam Conference, Germany was divided into four military
occupation zones by the Allies, see Partitions of Germany;
the three western zones would form the Federal Republic of
Germany (commonly known as West Germany), while part of the
Soviet zone became the German Democratic Republic (commonly
known as East Germany), both founded in 1949. West Germany
was a democratic country while East Germany became a Communist
State under influence of the Soviet Union. Also in Potsdam,
the allies agreed that the provinces east of the Oder and
Neisse rivers (the Oder-Neisse line) were transferred to Poland
and Russia (Kaliningrad). The agreement also set forth the
abolition of Prussia and the repatriation of Germans living
in those territories, and formalized the German exodus from
Eastern Europe.
Willy Brandt became chancellor of West Germany in 1969. He
made an important contribution towards reconciliation between
West and East Germany. The Red Army Faction carried out a
succession of terrorist attacks in West Germany during the
1970s.
After the collapse of the Soviet bloc Europe, Germany was
reunited on 3 October 1990; together with France and other
EU states, the new Germany is playing the leading role in
the European Union. Germany is at the forefront of European
states seeking to exploit the momentum of monetary union to
advance the creation of a more unified and capable European
political, defence and security apparatus. The German chancellor
expressed an interest in a permanent seat for Germany in the
UN Security Council, identifying France, Russia and Japan
as countries that explicitly backed Germany's bid.
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