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12995041
The Weimar republic
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GSCE History Mind Map on The Weimar republic, created by h g on 25/03/2018.
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Resource summary
The Weimar republic
The origins of the republic
The setting up of the Weimar Republic
The Weimar Constitution
finalised in August 1919
first time Germany experienced democracy
meeting for the constituent assembly in Berlin was too dangerous, so they met in Weimar(hence the name of the republic)
no single party had a majority of votes
coalition government
chose Ebert(Social democratic party(SPD)) as new president
he asked Philipp Echeidemann of same party to be chancellor
formed coalition with the catholic centre party(ZP)
two key tasks before them:
1. drawing up of a new constitution
2. formulation of a peace treaty with the allies
The legacy of the first world war
The revolution of 1918 - 19
Max approached pres. Woodrow Wilson about ending the war(USA)
he would not go to peace with Germany as long as there was a Kaiser in charge
end of 1918 German navy mutinied
Nov 9 1918; Kaiser Wilhelm abdicated
Chancellor Friedrich Ebert of the German republic accepted the armistice of Wilson's Fourteen points
elections for a constituent assembly Jan 19 1919
WW1 started in 1914
Britain, France and Russia + USA from 1917(allies) vs Germany, Austria-Hungary and Turkey(central powers)
1918 - new gov. in Germany lead by prince Max of Baden
Germany's first parliamentary cabinet
meaning they were accountable to Reichstag rather than the Kaiser
The early challenges to the republic
The early unpopularity of the republic
The treaty of Versailles
Germans signed armistice 11 November 1918
treaty ending WW1 signed 28 June 1919
Expected peace settlement to be based on Wilson's Fourteen Points
his idea of self-determination as a safeguard of Germany's sovereignty
severe terms on Germany
lost 13% of land
lost 48% of iron production
6million+ citizens were absorbed into other countries
Article 231 - the War Guilt Clause
had to accept blame for starting the war
denial of entry to the League of Nations
The stab in the back theory
scapegoat
The November Criminals
19 June 1919
Scheidemann resigned as chancellor (in disgust)
the Allies had informed the German leaders that refusal to accept the terms would lead to a renewal of hostilites and immediate invasion of G
the politicians had stabbed the army in the back
main reason = the Treaty of Versailles
Challenges to the republic from the left and right
Threat from the left
The Spartacist uprising
based on communist ideals
lead by Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg
killed
formed the German Communist Party (KPD)
6 Jan 1919
egan their attempt to overthrow Ebert and the gov to create a communist state
o match for the freikorps and army
many Germans hoped German could become socialist
Soldiers, workers and sailors set up 'soviets' (Oct and Nov 1918)
Ebert made a deal with Groener because of the fear of revolution
Examples
Communist rising (Oct 1923)
communist rising in the Ruhr (March-April 1920)
The Kapp Putsch
right-wing
trade unionists and civil servants supported the Gov
Putsch collapsed because it had little support
1920
Berlin
leaders were Erhart and Kapp
Further uprisings
left-wing and right-wing groups involved
iolence continued for the nect two years
1919 -22: 376 murders (354 by the right)
Matthias Erzberger and Walther Rathenau were both assassinated (1921 and 1922)
political turmoil across the country
uprisings and threats
some Germans felt democracy had been imposed on them
radical changes in Germany (late October and early November 1918) came about because those in power in G saw there was no alternative
British naval blockage - shortages of food
inflation
Bolshevik Revolution (Russia) - October 1917
Provisional Gov was removed by Lenin and Trotsky
The challenges of 1923
The French occupation of the Ruhr, 1923
German resistance
passive
industrial sabbotage
factories were set on fire
mines were sabotaged and flooded
strike and protests
The result of the occupation
the strikers became heroes
German gov. backed the strikers and printed more money to pay them a wage
inflation
Hyperinflation
benefited certain ppl
businessmen who were in too great debts
farmers
foreigners
French and Belgium troops, January
Germany failed to pay reparations for both countries
French occupation of the Ruhr
Hyperinflation
The recovery of the republic
Reasons for economic recovery
Dawes plan
Persuasion of the French, British and American to change the payment terms
Agreed in August 1924
named after US vice president Charles Dawes
Main points
reparation payments would begin at 1million marks and over 4 years increase to 2.5million marks per year
the Ruhr area was to be evacuated by Allied occupation troops
1925
Reichsbank would be recognised under Allied supervision
USA would give loans to help economic recovery
US loans
beginning: 800million marks
next six years: $3,000 million
The rentenmark
hyperinflation of 1923 - destroyed the value of the German mark
November 1923 - Stresemann introduced the temporary Rentenmark
1924 - Rentenmark converted to Reichsmark, backed by gold reserves
based on property values
The young plan
1929 - Owen Young came up with a new plan for payments
reduced from 6,600 million pounds to 1,850 million.
Payment length extended to 59 years
2.05 billion marks per year
severely critisised by right-wing politicians
Alfred Hugenberg
Adolf Hitler
further payment of reparations extended to 1988
Political stability
1924 - 1929
until 1930 - no single party won majority of seats in the Reichstag
Social Democrats always got most votes
Greater votes for the parties supporting the Weimar republic rather than extremist groups such as the Nazis
Extent of recovery
German economy flourished
large businesses were able to pay off many of their debts
Industrial growth
wages increased
work day remained at 8 hours
state arbitration
unemployment reached a peak in 1926
worldwide depression in agriculture
lower middle class - did not fully recover from the hyperinflation
Stresemann's policies abroad
The locarno pact
signed in 1925 between Germany with Britain, France, Belgium and Italy
reed to keep existing borders between G, France and Belgium.
'Locarno honeymoon'
The League of Nations
est. 1920
1926 - G was given a permanent seat on the council
regarded as the guardian of the hated TofV
used his position to bring about the young plan
The Kellogg-Briand pact
1928 - G signed (along with 64 other nations)
kept armies for self-defence and solve all int. disputes 'by peaceful means'
G was once again one of the leading nations
The impact of domestic policies
improved relations meant the allies were open to renegotiating he representations payment schedule
reduced payment - G better off economically
opposition - Alfred Hugenberg and Fritz Thyssen
1927 - Allied troops withdrew from the west bank of the Rhine
(5 years before scheduled in 1933)
showed relaxation of the TofV terms
boosted the popularity of Stresemann
Changes in society
The standard of living
Wages
by 1928 - over 10% increase in real wages
some of the best-paid workers in Europe
April 1928 - 184'000 sought employment, half of them didn't qualify
Housing
gov employed architects and planners to device ways of reducing shortage of houses
1924 - 1931: 2'000'000+ houses built, and 200'000 renovated/expanded
1929 - gov spent 33 times more on housing than in 1913
1928 - homelessness reduced by 60 %
Unemployment insurance
1880's - Otto von Bismarck introduced a series of reforms
1927 - insurance law
ages, housing and unemployment insurance
The position of women
Politics
1919 - women over 20 years were able to vote
equality in education, civil service appointments and equal pay
1926 - 32 women deputies in the Reichstag
higher than Britain and USA
Employment
growth: civil service, teaching , social work, shops and assembly line
1933 - 100'000 teachers and 3'000 doctors
Leisure
unescorted, drank, smoked (all in public)
Cultural changes
Art
Neue Sachlichkeit (new objectivity)
George Grosz and Otto Dix
Architecture
Bauhaus (School of building)
'Art and technology - a new unity'
Walter Gropius (founder)
Cinema
dir. Fritz Lang - Metropolis
actress Marlene Dietrich
Literature
right: critical of German democracy + glorified experiences of WW1 (Arthur Moeller and Oswald Spengler)
left: anti-war (Erich Remarque and Ludwig Renn
Theatre
new operas and plays
Zeittheater and Zeitoper
greater realism
The Good Soldier Schweik
The Salesman of Berlin
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