Ancient history

Defeat of Germany and the Weimar Republic

The First World War opposed the Triple Alliance, made up of the German Empire, the Austro-Hungarian Empire and Italy, to the Triple Entente (France, Great Britain, Russia joined by Italy and the United States ). This war is bogged down in the trenches, leaving the nations bloodless, especially Germany. Indeed, affected by a major economic crisis, the empire of William II was also decimated by shortages. However, not having fought on its territory, the German population thinks of emerging victorious from this conflict.

1918-1933

Characters

William II

Maximilian of Baden

Philipp Scheidemann

Paul von Hindenburg

Erich Ludendorff

Friedrich Ebert

Gustav Bauer

Mattias Erzberger

Walther von Lüttwitz

Gustav Noske

Wolfgang Kapp

Rosa Luxemburg

Karl Liebknecht

Adolf Hitler

Procedure

In July 1918, the Germans launched a final offensive, the second battle of the Marne. But the Villers-Cotterêts counter-attack and then the battle of August 8, 1918 left no doubt as to the outcome of the fight. On November 9, forced by the crowd and the new Chancellor, Prince Max of Baden, Kaiser Guillaume abdicated. Fearing a revolution, Philipp Scheidemann, Social Democratic leader SPD proclaims the birth of the Republic from the balcony of the Reichstag, followed by Karl Liebknecht of the Independent Social Democratic Party (USPD). It was therefore the young Republic of Weimar, with the civilian Matthias Erzberger, which signed the armistice in the heart of the forest of Compiègne, not far from Rethondes, on November 11, 1918.

The defeat is not understood by the people who are rising up. The “stab in the back” theory was spread by high German dignitaries, such as Paul von Hindenburg and Erich Ludendorff, to excuse the German army from its failure. It was in this climate of unpopularity that the Weimar Republic was born, officially voted on at a constituent assembly on January 19, 1919, shortly after the bloody week of January. Friedrich Ebert is the president, Scheidemann directs the first government. For the German people, it is this new regime that is responsible for the “treaty of shame”, signed in Versailles on June 28, 1919 by Gustav Bauer, the new chancellor. A revolutionary wind, coming from Russia, is blowing. From its creation, the KPD, the first communist party in Germany, multiplied demonstrations and other workers' councils, while the Freikorps (militias) and the army (in particular Walther von Lüttwitz and Gustav Noske), used violence to repress riots. The Weimar Republic remains marked by political instability (Bloody Christmas, revolt of the Spartacists, Kapp putsch, uprising in the Ruhr, beer hall putsch in Munich, etc.), economic misery (hyperinflation), and above all by a unpopularity from which she will never stand out.

Consequences

Born of defeat, the Weimar Republic finds itself, from its birth, torn between extreme left workers' revolts and the rise of nationalism, its inconsistency favoring right/left bipolarization. Condemned even before having lived, it could only make the bed of extremes and favor the coming of a strong, dictatorial power. It will be overthrown by Adolf Hitler on March 15, 1933, with the creation of the III th Reich.