Mary Fulbrook

A History of Germany 1918 - 2020


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– rather than the individual – might be held responsible for the difficulties they found in feeding their families. This awareness of the responsibilities of the state continued after the war, heightened by more widespread dependence on state benefits and pensions.

      Meanwhile, rising domestic unrest in Germany played a role in the army leaders’ decision, in winter 1917–18, to ignore the chance of achieving peace with Western powers on relatively moderate terms, since they had begun to believe that only a spectacular military victory could now avert the threat of domestic revolution. In January 1918 there were more strikes, and a widespread war weariness and desire for peace, even as the Army High Command, supported by the recently founded right-wing Vaterlandspartei, propagated ever more extravagant military aims. Yet on the Left, the political forces opposing both the military and the right-wing nationalist parties were themselves divided. The Social Democratic Party, since its formation in 1875 out of two preexisting parties with different traditions, had long experienced tension between its reformist and revolutionary wings. Under the strain of responding to the war effort, the SPD finally split in 1917. The more radical wing formed the so-called Independent Social Democratic Party (USPD), while the majority remained with the more moderate SPD, sometimes known as the Majority Social Democratic Party (MSPD). A loose, more radical grouping further to the Left of the Social Democrats was the Spartacus League, whose leading lights were Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht. It was in this complex domestic configuration that the new Republic was born.

      The ‘Last Revolution from Above’

      Despite the success of the spring offensive against Russia, by summer 1918 it was clear even to the leaders of the army that the war was lost. The Army High Command now felt that it would be advisable to hand over power to a civilian administration: army leaders – who were already propagating the myth of a ‘stab in the back’, the alleged betrayal of an undefeated Germany by Jews and Bolsheviks at home, an enemy within – preferred that a civilian government should have to shoulder the opprobrium of accepting national defeat.

      The Incomplete Revolution of November 1918

      However, matters developed otherwise. All the cautious moves for reform from above were swept away by a revolutionary tide on the streets that, by early November, it was no longer possible for Max von Baden’s government to control. Uprisings all over Germany were sparked off by a sailors’ mutiny in Wilhelmshaven and Kiel at the end of October. Ordered out on a last, suicidal mission against the British fleet, the sailors decided they would rather save their own skins than attempt to salvage ‘German honour’. News of the mutiny led to the formation, in a large number of places across Germany, of ‘sailors’, soldiers’ and workers’ councils’, which wrested control of administration from local governments. On 8 November a republic was proclaimed in the ‘Free State’ of Bavaria, under a workers’, soldiers’ and peasants’ council led by Kurt Eisner. The German war effort had clearly collapsed, the authority of the regime was rapidly crumbling, the threat of strikes and civil war on the streets loomed ever larger.

      Rapid negotiations took place between the moderate Social Democrats and the USPD leaders, and a compromise caretaker government was agreed. This consisted of a six-member ‘Council of People’s Representatives’ (Rat der Volksbeauftragten), of whom three – Ebert, Scheidemann and Landsberg – were members of the SPD, and three – Haase, Dittmann and Barth – were members of the USPD. Even before this body had been constituted, Ebert had declared his priorities to the people of Germany. The new government was committed to organizing elections for a national constituent assembly, which would be elected by all men and women over twenty years of age. Until this elected body could take power, the temporary government would agree an armistice, lead peace negotiations, seek to ensure an adequate food supply for the people and oversee an orderly demobilization of troops and the return of former soldiers to civilian life and work. In the meantime, law and order were to be upheld and the people were to desist from plunder and violence and help to build a better future.

      In the context of widespread strikes and demonstrations, the obstacles to a peaceful transition to a new order were formidable. The USPD did agree to cooperate with the SPD, despite their rather different general aims, and the new government – which was to last only a few weeks – was duly given popular legitimization, first by a meeting of council delegates in Berlin in November and then in December by a wider body of delegates from workers’ and soldiers’ councils from all over Germany. An armistice was achieved on 11 November, although it was not until the following summer that the terms of the peace treaty would be revealed.

      In the first few days after the proclamation of the Republic, two very significant agreements were reached, which embodied compromises which would have a profound effect on the subsequent course of events. The first