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Summary - Unit 37.2 - Germany, : united, divided and reunited

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in depth notes on the entire Germany course, using the textbook and wider reading

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GERMANY: UNITED, DIVIDED AND REUNITED
DEPTH STUDY 1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nqwif71ANsU

THE CONSTITUTION 1871:

PRUSSIA LED UNIFICATION- not much feeling of unity between states
Population of 41 million- 63% protestant, 39% catholic, 1% jewish
25 states- two houses- bundesrat and reichstag
Prussia biggest state (60% of land and population) followed by Bavaria
In 1871- 67% lived in villages- rural population
Objectives of constitution; create a feeling of unity, retain junker dominance
German flag created 1792, Wilhelm became a figure of unity for germans
●​ KAISER- KAISER OF PRUSSIA
●​ CHANCELLOR APPOINTED BY KAISER

Reichstag: representatives elected every three years
-​ 297 representatives elected by all males over 25 (secret ballot)
-​ Constituencies decided in 1871- never altered to reflect growing urban population
-​ Could reject any law and was in charge of domestic laws e.g. education
-​ Prussia- three tier franchise- richest 15% elected 85% of delegates
Bundesrat: 25 states
-​ Each had individual constitution
-​ Prussia was 17 of them
-​ Needed 14 to veto a constitution
-​ Prussian dominance
ARMY:
-​ 4 armies: Bavaria, Prussia, Wurttenburg and Saxony
-​ But Kaiser held supreme command

,THE NATIONAL LIBERALS
Led by Benningsen
1871: 30.1% of vote (biggest part in Reichstag) and ZP got 18.6%
1874: 29.7% but still biggest party
IDEOLOGIES: Represented interests of middle and industrial classes
-​ National unity and free trade ideologies
-​ Single economic system and no protectionism policies
-​ Constitutional change for greater democracy and civil liberties
BISMARK’S POSITION: Passed lots of free trade policies
-​ Free travel within Germany
-​ Removed laws restricting interest on loans
-​ Reichsmark- single German currency
-​ Measurements standardised
-​ Import duties on some metal products removed
-​ BASIS FOR ECONOMIC GROWTH 1890s →
WHY:Biggest party: demands could not be ignored
-​ Abide to economic demands and political demands would be ignored
-​ Economic concessions for political concessions
-​ Both feared the ZP and NLs supported Bismarck’s Kulturkampf (+)
HIS BREAK:
Mid 1870s: tension because of Bismarck’s refusal to extend parliamentary power
-​ Wanted to split NLs and work with the more right wing members
Economic downturn 1870s:
-​ Economic growth was too fast
-​ by 1873: 150 businesses had gone bankrupt
-​ Industry contracted and economic growth slowed
-​ Poor harvests 1873 and 79: price of rye fell by 50% 1871-79
-​ Competition from USA and Russia and relied on Russian imports
-​ New pressure group, Central Association of German Industrialists anti NL
-​ 1876- bill for tariffs defeated in Reichstag
BUT: Tariffs would protect Junker interests (Bismarck)- determined to pursue policy
Also provided opportunity to split the party 1878 election:
-​ Bismarck campaigned directly against NLs
➔​ FT policies anti patriotic as tariffs protecting Germany against foreign competition
-​ Many NL voters switched to Conservatives backed by Bismarck
-​ NLs lost 29 seats- mostly to pro-tariff conservatives
-​ Vote declined to 23%
1879: protectionism tariff law passed - ZP and right-wing NLs supported bill (conservatives)
Aug 1780: party was officially split- National Liberals and Liberal Union
CONSEQUENCES:
Split of NLs- weakened their position in Reichstag- couldn’t form coalition with conservatives
-​ Reichstag’s support of Bismarck’s policies weakened
ZP now biggest party in Reichstag; much more difficult for Bismark to manage government

,1881: Progressive party and Liberal Unions won 21.1% of vote combined
-​ Merged into German Free Minded Party
●​ 1884: second biggest party in Reichstag after ZP
Two biggest parties in Reichstag opposed to political goals of Bismarck; he was isolated
THE KULTURKAMPF 1871-78:

Culture struggle (translation)
-​ Control of education and religion
-​ Objection: destruction of centre party
➔​ Threatening to the consolidation of his new empire
➔​ Limited success
➔​ Kulturkampf isolated catholic population (36% of population in 1871)
➔​ 1874- ZP doubled vote (91 seats)- second biggest part after NLs (147 seats)
➔​ Bismarck super unsuccessful
Political system:
-​ 1871- prussian franco war- germany declared
-​ Wilhelm I- kaiser- Bismarck first chancellor (both prussian)
➔​ Won wars against austria, denmark and france
-​ Galvanised non-prussian German states into unification
-​ Bavaria and barden sceptical of prussia’s role- consolidation of Germany hard
-​ Lots of regional loyalty
-​ Religious divide dangerous fracture line- geographical
-​ protestants 62%- prussia and central germany
-​ Barden and bavaria- Catholic
-​ Poles and catholics- insecurity in protestant-dominated reich- fuelled ZP growth in
Reichstag
-​ Reichstag: parliament with limited powers
-​ No sway in defence and foreign policy
-​ Controlled budget and passing laws
-​ Bismarck scared that ZP would collaborate with Catholic C to undo Cerman state
-​ Catholic influence severely declined in c19th
➔​ Pope pius ix
-​ Italy and Germany- excommunicated both of their leaders and opposed the
unification
-​ Actively encouraged italians to boycott politics
-​ Sided against Prussia in Austro-Prussian war and Franco Prussian war
-​ 1864: ‘Syllabus of Errors- modern political ideology e.g. freedom of religion
condemned
-​ 1870: claimed pope could make no mistakes in matters of faith - provocative
-​ 10th Dec 1871: Pulpit Law- censorship- Kulturkampf started
-​ Forbade clerics from discussing politics- 2 years imprisonment
-​ Falk appointed as minister for religion, education and health
-​ School supervision act- education purely under state control
-​ Falk laws 1873

, -​ controls on the clergy
-​ royal court of justice for ecclesiastical affairs
-​ Banned excommunication
-​ Germans could server connection with church- financial debts gone
-​ 1875- last major law- prussia payment law
-​ No prussian payments to church unless they accept past laws




Response from Catholics:
-​ 1873 election: 50-90 seats in bundesrat and 63-91 seats in reichstag
-​ July 13th- Edward Kulman- assassination attempt
-​ 1875- church declared falk laws as invalid
-​ 1878- 3 of 8 prussian dioceses had bishops
-​ 1800 priests in jail/escile
-​ ½ nuns and monks left
-​ ZP doubled its popular vote in Reichstag
End of Kulturkampf:
-​ Hard for Bismarck to run government without ZP support
-​ SPD- became more threatening than ZP
-​ Economic threats from Russia and US
-​ Turned to ZP for support on anti-socialist laws
-​ First mitigation law- allowed payments to dioceses
-​ 1873- all religious of bishops allowed
-​ 28 expelled clerics pardoned 1783
Bismarck’s motivations:
-​ NLs and ZP were the biggest parties
-​ NLs: 37% of seats, ZP: 22% (1874)
-​ Needed support of one to pass laws
-​ Specificieties delegated to the NLs; Falk Laws
-​ Beyond Bismarck’s goals but needed their support
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