1 / 26

HIST 2509 A History of Germany

HIST 2509 A History of Germany. Lecture W3-1 Defeat, Revolution, and the Early Republic. TA Office Hours. Meaghan Harris (L-Z 2% applied to final grade) Email: emharris@connect.carleton.ca 437 Paterson Hall Tuesday January 17 11:30-1:00 Friday January 20 1:00-2:30

zenia
Télécharger la présentation

HIST 2509 A History of Germany

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. HIST 2509 A History of Germany Lecture W3-1 Defeat, Revolution, and the Early Republic

  2. TA Office Hours Meaghan Harris (L-Z 2% applied to final grade) Email: emharris@connect.carleton.ca 437 Paterson Hall Tuesday January 17 11:30-1:00 Friday January 20 1:00-2:30 Tuesday January 24 11:30-1:00

  3. TA Office Hours Margaret Watts (A-G 2% not applied -- I will do this on spreadsheet, no worries!) Email: mwatts@connect.carleton.ca 1302 Dunton Tower Wednesday January 18, 25 12-1pm Friday January 20, 27 10-11am

  4. Today’s Main Themes • promises made, promises kept? • total war at home and away • truly a stab in the back? • postwar chaos =understanding the weaknesses of Weimar

  5. I. Peace in the Castle? • total war on the home/front -from mythic victories early on (Tannenburg, Masurian Lakes 1914) -to Langemarck 1914 and the slaughter of 1916 (Verdun, Somme, Jutland, and the Brusilov Offensive)

  6. I. Peace in the Castle? • total war on the home/front -to Langemarck 1914 and the slaughter of 1916 (Verdun, Somme, Jutland, and the Brusilov Offensive) FROM REINHARD DITHMAR, DER LANGEMARCK-MYTHOS IN DICHTUNG UND UNTERRICHT (Neuwied Luchterhand, 1992). This image of a singing student volunteer appeared in a Nazi-era book.

  7. I. Peace in the Castle? • total war on the home/front -Hindenburg Programme 1916 -industrial refashioning -scarcity and urban unrest "Wir lassen uns nicht aushungern!” Verein für Kindervolksküchen und Kinderhorte, 1915

  8. I. Peace in the Castle? -"Turnip Winter 1916/17 -Ersatzbrot; newspaper nappies -750,000 die due to starvation alone

  9. I. Peace in the Castle? b. new fault lines to contend with -despite initial support for the war, the 1915 Manifesto -hatred by 1916, from the left but meandering to the centre -Kaiser's 1917 Easter Speech and promised reforms -last-ditch offensive, mutiny, and finally defeat

  10. Armistice Graphic depiction after 1918 of Matthias Erzberger in Compiegne France with Ferdinand Foch

  11. II. The Face of Defeat a. 1918/19 Revolution and temporary government -from Brest-Litovsk -to the streets of Berlin -worker's, soldier's, sailor's councils -abdication of the Kaiser -general strike -revolution At the dutch border

  12. II. The Face of Defeat Philipp Scheidemann proclaims a republic in Berlin November 9, 1918 DHM Photo So does Karl Liebknecht -- A socialist republic at the Berlin Palace Reichstag

  13. Warp Ahead: the Stadtschloss 1945 The Liebknecht Portal

  14. Palast der Republik

  15. Battleground Berlin Freikorps Communist soldiers

  16. The Landwehrkanal murders

  17. Post-murder celebrations January 15, 1919, Eden Hotel Berlin

  18. Postwar Commemoration Liebknecht, Luxemburg and Thaelmann: GDR’s martyrs www.arbeiterfotografie.com/reportage Freikorps paraphernalia

  19. II. The Face of Defeat b. the Weimar Constitution – the Basic Law -finally, a solution to the German Question? -women’s suffrage -universal manhood suffrage c.  the Versailles Diktat -Wilson’s 14 points -the dictated peace -reparations -John Maynard Keynes

  20. September 1, 1923

  21. A woman feeds a stovepipe with RM From the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung Archive

  22. III. The Unsung Republic a. putsches and coups b. assassinations c. inflation d. reparations and Ruhr occupation e. gradual international acceptance at least for a time

  23. a. putsches and coups -Kapp-Putsch 1920, Luettzow Putsch -Beer Hall 1923 -Thuringia and Saxony Kapp-Putschists spreading leaflets in front of Reichs Chancellery in Berlin DHM Berlin, 13. März 1920

  24. b. assassinations Enzenberger Rathenau Eisner

  25. c. inflation 1923d. reparations and Ruhr and Rhineland Occupation -passive resistance -Rhineland Bastards Hands off the Ruhr! Anti-French placard by Theo Matejko from 1923 DHM

  26. e. stabilization and acceptance 1923-29f. integration: healing of past wounds? -the infirm -600,000 war widows -2.7 million veterans -6 million children lost one or both parents -rift between l and r gone? From the series, Victims of the First World War, 1933

More Related