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Weimar Germany overview - EduqasGermany in transition, 1919-1939

Germany embraced democracy after World War One and, after a troubled start; by 1929 Weimar was stable and increasingly prosperous. However, economic crisis led to brutal dictatorship under the Nazis.

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Germany in transition, 1919-1939

This period neatly divides into two phases:

  1. The Weimar Republic and democracy, 1919-1933
  2. Germany under the Nazis, 1933-1939

The Weimar Republic and democracy, 1919-1933

After the First World War Germany began a bold experiment with . All adult Germans were able to vote and the system of meant a wide range of views were given a voice in Parliament. There was also an elected President.

However, the legacy of defeat in the war, in the shape of crippling payments and the military restrictions of the , led to serious problems:

  • in 1923 there was a crisis that left Germany鈥檚 currency worthless
  • in the first four years of the Weimar Republic there were three serious attempts to overthrow the government, the Spartacist Revolt in 1919, the Kapp Putsch in 1920 and the Munich Putsch in 1923

Rescued by Gustav Stresemann and American loans, which enabled reparations payments to be made, Germany eventually recovered from these crises. By the late 1920s the Weimar Republic was a key member of the , a hotbed of modern culture and feeling increasingly prosperous, though its unstable governments left it vulnerable to any new crisis that might emerge.

Portrait of Adolf Hitler

A crisis did emerge in 1929 as the brought a worldwide depression. Germany suffered more than any other nation as a result of the recall of US loans, which caused its economy to collapse. Unemployment rocketed to over 6 million, poverty soared and Germans became desperate. This led to a chain of events that ended in the destruction of German democracy:

  • With the government unable to win a majority in the , laws could only be passed by presidential decree (an order given by the President with the force of the law). As a result, not enough action was taken to tackle the economic and social consequences of the Depression and Germans increasingly began to look to the political extremes for answers.
  • The Nazis benefitted from this the most, as a combination of policies with widespread appeal, a charismatic leader in Hitler and the violence of the helped make them the largest party in the Reichstag by the middle of 1932.

In January 1933, Hitler was appointed Chancellor by President Hindenburg.

  • Hitler quickly set about dismantling German democracy. He forced the passing of an Enabling Act through the Reichstag in March 1933, which gave him unlimited powers for four years. He then eliminated any potential sources of opposition: other political parties, trades unions and even Ernst Rohm, the leader of the SA.

By the time President Hindenburg died in August 1934, Hitler was able to declare himself and had absolute power in Germany.