Narratives of German history, 1806-1914,
1914-1920: Two developments since 1871
"late" but rapid industrialization
with strong workers' movement ("from below")
progressive social welfare system instituted
paternalistically "from above"
tensions between 1) and 2) can be seen (in different ways)
as basis of Hitler's success
question of continuities (graph of changing party strengths;
reader p. 11 and textbook p. 81)
Critical junctures
1888: William I (1797-1888), Frederick
III (1831-1888), William II (1859-1941)
World War I (1914-1918); Russian
Revolution (1917) Versailles Peace Treaty (June 1919)
German Revolution, Nov. 1918: Karl
Liebknecht (KPD) vs. Friedrich Ebert (SPD)
Versailles terms; reparations, inflation
and 1923 hyperinflation; occupation of Ruhr
Hitler's putsch (Nov. 1923), trial (1923-4), imprisonment at Landsberg
and "Mein Kampf"
Phases of "Weimar Republic"
1919-1923: inflation (ended by Stresemann:
chancellor and foreign minister)
1923: French and Belgians enforce Versailles
payments
November: coup d'etat attempt by Hitler and Ludendorff
in Munich
1924-28: progressive period (again: under dark clouds)
1924-1929: stable (Ebert dies 1925,
replaced by Hindenburg; Stresemann dies 1929)
1930: Great Depression reaches Germany: deflationary
policy of appointed chancellor Brüning