National Assembly Deutsche Nationalversammlung | |
---|---|
Constituent assembly of Germany | |
Type | |
Type | |
History | |
Established | 1919 |
Disbanded | 1920 |
Preceded by | Imperial Reichstag |
Succeeded by | Weimar Reichstag |
Seats | 423 |
Elections | |
Direct competitive elections | |
Last election | 19 January 1919 |
Meeting place | |
Deutsches Nationaltheater, Weimar |
The Weimar National Assembly (German: Weimarer Nationalversammlung), officially the German National Constitutional Assembly (Verfassunggebende Deutsche Nationalversammlung), was the popularly elected constitutional convention and de facto parliament of Germany from 6 February 1919 to 21 May 1920. As part of its duties as the interim government, it debated and reluctantly approved the Treaty of Versailles that codified the peace terms between Germany and the victorious Allies of World War I. The Assembly drew up and approved the Weimar Constitution that was in force from 1919 to 1933 (and technically until the end of Nazi rule in 1945). With its work completed, the National Assembly was dissolved on 21 May 1920. Following the election of 6 June 1920, the new Reichstag met for the first time on 24 June 1920, taking the place of the Assembly.
Because the National Assembly convened in Weimar rather than in politically restive Berlin, the period in German history became known as the Weimar Republic.
Background
At the end of World War I, following the outbreak of the German Revolution of 1918–1919, state power lay with the Council of the People's Deputies. It was formed on 10 November by revolutionary workers' and soldiers' councils in Berlin and headed by Friedrich Ebert of the Social Democratic Party (SPD). He had been appointed German chancellor on 9 November by Maximilian von Baden, the last chancellor under the German Empire. Both von Baden and the Social Democrats called for the speedy election of a National Assembly to establish a new government for Germany. The Council decided on 30 November to hold the election on 19 January 1919. On 19 December the Reich Congress of Workers' and Soldiers' Councils also approved the decree by a clear majority.
Because of the Spartacist uprising, a general strike and the accompanying armed struggles that roiled the Reich capital from 5 to 12 January 1919, it was agreed that the National Assembly should not initially meet in Berlin. Four possible locations – Bayreuth, Nuremberg, Jena and Weimar – were considered. Friedrich Ebert favored Weimar because he wanted the victorious Allies to be reminded of Weimar Classicism, which included the writers Goethe and Schiller, while they were deliberating the terms of the peace treaty.[1] On 14 January 1919 the choice fell to Weimar.[2]
Elections
The elections for the National Assembly were the first held in Germany after the introduction of women's suffrage[3] and the lowering of the legal voting age from 25 to 20 years. Together the changes raised the number of eligible voters by around 20 million.[4] The turnout was 83%,[3] a slightly lower percentage than in the last Reichstag elections in 1912, but a much greater absolute turnout due to the expanded suffrage.[4] Among women the turnout was 90%.[5] The Communist Party of Germany (KPD), founded in December 1918, boycotted the elections.
The election for the National Assembly resulted in the SPD receiving the most votes at 38%, followed by the Catholic Centre Party (which in this election ran as the Christian People's Party) with 20%, the liberal German Democratic Party (DDP) 19%, the national-conservative German National People's Party (DNVP) 10% and the more leftist and antiwar breakaway from the SPD, the Independent Social Democratic Party (USPD), 8%. Numerous small parties made up the remainder.[6] Out of a total of 416 delegates 36 were women, although this increased to 41 during the term of the Assembly.[7] If the latter number is taken, at 10% women, the Weimar National Assembly was one of the most female parliaments of its time.[8][9]
On 10 February the Assembly passed the "Law on Provisional Reich Power" (Gesetz über die vorläufige Reichsgewalt)[10] to go into effect the following day. It regulated the government's powers during the transitional phase from the German Empire to the Weimar Republic. The National Assembly was to adopt a constitution and "urgently needed" Reich laws, thus allowing it to act as an interim parliament. A States' Committee served in the place of the later Reichsrat to represent the interests of the German states. The "business of the Reich" was to be conducted by a Reich president. His function was somewhat like that of the former emperor but with the restrictions that had been made to the constitution in October 1918, notably that war and peace were to be decided by Reich law, not by the head of state. The ministers appointed by the Reich president required the confidence of the National Assembly.
Assembly as provisional parliament
The National Assembly convened at the German National Theater in Weimar on 6 February 1919. It elected the SPD politician Eduard David as its president, but because of an inter-party agreement he stepped down after just four days.[11] On 14 February 1919 the National Assembly elected Constantin Fehrenbach, a Centre Party deputy and former vice president, as his successor.
On 11 February the National Assembly elected the previous head of government, Friedrich Ebert (SPD), as provisional Reich president. He asked Philipp Scheidemann of the SPD to form a government. The three party coalition of the SPD, the Centre Party and the DDP that he brought together in the Scheidemann cabinet came to be known as the Weimar Coalition.
Discussion of the Treaty of Versailles
On 12 May 1919 the National Assembly met in Berlin for the first time. There it heard and then debated a statement by Minister President Philipp Scheidemann on the peace terms of the Versailles Treaty. In his speech Scheidemann, to great applause from all parties, called the Entente Powers' terms a "dictated" or "enforced" peace (Gewaltfrieden) intended to strangle the German people. The territorial, economic and political demands would deprive Germany of the air to breathe. The conditions were unacceptable, he said, and were in stark contrast to the assurances given by U.S. President Woodrow Wilson. The Reich government could not agree to the conditions and would make counterproposals based on Wilson's 14-point program. Prussian Minister President Paul Hirsch assured the Reich government of full support on behalf of the constituent states of the German Reich and also sharply criticized the Entente's conditions. Speakers from all parties, from the USPD to the DNVP, also declared the Entente's demands unacceptable. The chairman of the liberal German People's Party (DVP) and later Reich Foreign Minister Gustav Stresemann described the peace terms of the victorious powers as "an outpouring of political sadism". Only Hugo Haase, chairman of the USPD, combined his rejection of the Entente's demands with sharp attacks on the Reich government, accusing it of having caused the current situation in the first place through its policy of enforcing a truce between political parties (Burgfriedenspolitik) during the war.
Following the Entente's rejection of its counterproposals, the Scheidemann cabinet resigned on 20 June 1919 because it was unwilling to give its assent to the Treaty of Versailles.[12] The new Minister President, Gustav Bauer (SPD), who headed a government of the SPD and the Centre, promoted the signing of the treaty but continued to criticize individual provisions, especially those concerning the extradition of Germans to the Entente and the imposition of war guilt on Germany alone. He combined his call for approval with the comment that it would be impossible for the German Reich to fulfill all the economic conditions of the treaty and regretted that it had not been possible to extract further concessions from the Entente.
Initial vote in favor
Speakers from the SPD and the Centre, Paul Löbe and Adolf Gröber, also condemned the treaty. They objected in particular to the statement in the Entente draft treaty that Germany was solely to blame for the war. On behalf of their parliamentary groups, however, they spoke in favor of acceptance, since the only alternative was the resumption of hostilities, which would lead to even worse consequences. Eugen Schiffer, the former Reich Finance Minister, spoke on behalf of the majority of German Democratic Party deputies against accepting the treaty. He reminded the two governing parties of Philipp Scheidemann's 12 May warning that the hand that signed the treaty would wither.[13] He did not see that the situation had changed since then. The DNVP and DVP were also strongly opposed to the treaty. The USPD was the only opposition party to endorse its acceptance. Hugo Haase called the issue at stake a terrible dilemma for the National Assembly. Although he too sharply criticized the treaty, he pointed out, as had the representatives of the governing parties, the consequences if the treaty were rejected.
In a 22 June roll call, 237 deputies voted in favor of signing the peace treaty, 138 against, and five abstained. Of the major parties, the SPD, Centre and USPD approved, while the DDP, DNVP and DVP rejected the treaty, on both sides by large majorities of the delegates.
The Reich government informed the Entente the same day that it would sign the treaty but with reservations as to the provisions on war guilt and the extradition of Germans to the victorious countries. French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau replied that evening on behalf of the Allied Powers that the treaty could only be accepted or rejected in its entirety.
Second vote following allied ultimatum
At the meeting of the National Assembly on 23 June, Minister President Bauer informed the plenum of the Entente's position and stated that the government no longer had a choice; it had to sign the treaty:
Let us sign, that is the proposal I have to make to you on behalf of the entire cabinet. The reasons that compel us to make the proposal are the same as yesterday, only now we are separated by a period of barely four hours before the resumption of hostilities. We could not justify a new war even if we had weapons. We are defenseless, but without defense does not mean without honor (wehrlos ist aber nicht ehrlos). Certainly, our enemies want to take away our honor, there is no doubt about that, but that this attempt at cutting away our honor will one day fall back on the originators, that it is not our honor that will perish in this world tragedy, that is my belief until my last breath.[14]
Eugen Schiffer (DDP) and Rudolf Heinze (DVP), whose parties had rejected the treaty the day before, explicitly stated in their speeches that the supporters of the treaty would act exclusively out of "patriotic sentiment and conviction" (Schiffer), even if they had different opinions about the right path forward. The DNVP speaker Georg Schultz, however, did not make his opinion on the issue clear.
Ratification of the treaty through the "Law on the Conclusion of Peace between Germany and the Allied and Associated Powers" (Gesetz über den Friedensschluß zwischen Deutschland und den alliierten und den assoziierten Mächten)[15] finally took place on 9 July 1919 with results similar to the 22 June vote. The only exception was that the majority of the deputies of the Bavarian Peasants' League, who had abstained from the first vote, now approved the ratification law.
In part as a response to the treaty, and particularly Article 231 that assigned sole responsibility for the war to Germany, the Assembly established an inquiry into guilt for the war on 20 August 1919. Its four subcommittees were tasked with examining the causes of the war, what brought about its loss, what missed opportunities for peace had presented themselves, and if international laws had been broken.[16][17] The inquiry continued for thirteen years, until the Nazi Party victory in the election of July 1932. The inquiry's findings were hampered by lack of cooperation from both the government and the military and were in general watered down and deflected blame away from Germany.
Constitutional deliberations
On 15 November 1918 Friedrich Ebert had appointed Hugo Preuß to the Reich Office of the Interior and charged him with drafting a Reich constitution. Preuß, a teacher of constitutional law and one of the founders of the German Democratic Party, based his draft of the Weimar Constitution in large part on the Frankfurt Constitution of 1849 which was written after the German revolutions of 1848–1849 and intended for a unified Germany that did not come to pass at the time. He was influenced as well by Robert Redslob's theory of parliamentarianism, which called for a balance between the executive and legislative branches under either a monarch or the people as sovereign.[18] After the National Assembly was seated, Preuß became a member of the constitutional committee, which was chaired by the Assembly's vice president, Conrad Haußmann of the DDP. Preuß later became known as the father of the Weimar Constitution.
During July of 1919, the Assembly moved quickly through the draft constitution with most debates concluded within a single session. On 31 July the Assembly passed the revised committee proposal for the constitution by a vote of 262 to 75, with USPD, DNVP and DVP against.
Key topics of debate were as follows:
Date | Topic | Decision |
---|---|---|
2 July | National name | 'Deutsches Reich' |
National structure | Retain federal states | |
Flag and colors | Black-red-gold | |
4 July | Reich president | Adopted a semi-presidential system with power divided between president, cabinet and parliament. The president was to rule in conjunction with the Reichstag. Emergency powers to be used only in exceptional circumstances. |
7 July | Reich administration | Germany unified as an economic territory; legislative responsibility for tax law to be with the Reich. Unified postal and railroad systems |
10 July | Justice | Established a system of administrative courts and a high or constitutional court. Restricted military jurisdiction to wartime. Independence of courts incorporated into the constitution. |
11 July | Fundamental rights | Constitution to include expanded list of fundamental rights as in draft version. |
15 July | Equality of the sexes | Adopted what became Article 109: "(1) All Germans are equal before the law. Men and women shall fundamentally have the same civic rights and duties. (2) Public and legal privileges or disadvantages of birth or status shall be abolished." |
16 July | Death penalty | Rejected draft constitution's proposal to abolish the death penalty. |
Censorship | Guaranteed freedom of expression in speech, print, or “pictorially”. Censorship forbidden except in “cinematographs”, “indecent and obscene literature”, and for “protection of youth”. | |
Illegitimacy | Illegitimate children to have the same rights as legitimate. | |
17 July | Right to assemble | Guaranteed right to assemble peaceably without any special permission needed. |
Church and state | Guaranteed freedom of religion and separation of church and state. | |
18 July | Education | Universal public education ensured to age 18. |
21 July | Economic Life | Right to property, patent protection, and unionization guaranteed. |
Miscellaneous
On 13 January 1920, while the National Assembly was negotiating the Works Councils Act, which created an obligation for companies with twenty or more employees to have works councils, a demonstration against the law took place in front of the Reichstag building. The left-wing opposition parties USPD and Communist Party, among others, had called for the demonstration because they felt the councils would lack sufficient worker representation. About 100,000 people gathered for the demonstration. Prussian security police fired into the crowd leaving 42 people dead and over 100 wounded. The Reichstag Bloodbath was the deadliest demonstration in German history.[19]
Beginning on 30 September 1919, the National Assembly met in the renovated Reichstag building in Berlin. During the Kapp Putsch it briefly moved to Stuttgart and met there on 18 March 1920.
The National Assembly dissolved on 21 May 1920. After the Reichstag election on 6 June 1920, the Republic's first Reichstag took the place of the National Assembly.
Summary of important events and decisions
- 6 February 1919 – Friedrich Ebert, as chairman of the Council of the People's Deputies, opened the first session of the National Assembly.
- 10 February 1919 – Against the votes of the USPD, the Assembly passed the "Law on Provisional Reich Power" (Gesetz über die vorläufige Reichsgewalt). It designated the Assembly itself as the legislative power and set up the position of Reich president, who was to be in charge of "the Reich's government affairs". A States' Committee was to be created to represent Germany's constituent states.
- 11 February 1919 – Friedrich Ebert was elected provisional Reich president. He asked Philipp Scheidemann to form a government.
- 13 February 1919 –Scheidemann formed a government based on the Weimar Coalition.
- 14 February 1919 – Konstantin Fehrenbach (Centre Party) was elected president of the National Assembly.
- 27 February 1919 – The Assembly passed a law setting up a provisional military in accordance with the terms of the Armistice. By 1921 the armed forces were to be transformed into a professional army without conscripts. The number of land troops was to be cut from 800,000 to 100,000.
- 4 March 1919 – The Assembly passed a law clarifying the position of imperial laws and those passed by the Council of the People's Deputies.
- 12 May 1919 – The National Assembly met for a protest rally against the Treaty of Versailles. Philipp Scheidemann called it "unacceptable".
- 20/21 June 1919 – The Scheidemann government resigned. The next day Gustav Bauer (SPD) formed a new government.
- 22 June 1919 – With the approval of the Assembly, the new government declared itself ready to accept the Treaty of Versailles if the admission of Germany's sole responsibility for the war were dropped.
- 3 July 1919 – The Assembly accepted the new national colors.
- 7 July 1919 – Finance minister Matthias Erzberger (Centre Party) presented his fiscal reforms including the introduction of the first German income tax and fiscal burden sharing.
- 9 July 1919 – The Assembly ratified the Treaty of Versailles and the regulatory statutes about the military occupation of the Rhineland.
- 31 July 1919 – The Assembly passed the Weimar Constitution with 262 delegates voting for and 75 (USPD, DNVP and DVP) against.
- 11 August 1919 – Reich President Ebert signed the constitution. It came into force on 14 August 1919. Final meeting of the Assembly in Weimar.
- 30 September 1919 – First meeting of the Assembly at Berlin, after law and order were deemed to have been restored in the capital.
- 17 December 1919 – The Assembly passed a law that called for a one-off wealth tax to pay for the national debt.
- 18 January 1920 – The Assembly passed the law on workers' councils.
- 13 March 1920 – The Assembly left Berlin as a result of the Kapp Putsch. It returned from Stuttgart seven days later.
- 25/26 March 1920 – The government of Chancellor Gustav Bauer resigned. The next day President Ebert asked Hermann Müller (SPD) to form a new government.
- 8 May 1920 – A law came into force establishing a security zone around parliamentary buildings in which demonstrations were not allowed.
- 12 May 1920 – A law that was the basis for movie censorship came into force.
- 20 May 1920 – Supported by the SPD, the majority of the Assembly called on the government to end the state of emergency in all of Germany. The government refused.[3][20][21][22]
- 21 May 1920 – The National Assembly dissolved. After the Reichstag election on 6 June 1920, the Republic's first Reichstag took the place of the National Assembly.
Presidents of the Weimar National Assembly
Name | Party | Entered Office | Left Office | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Eduard David | SPD | 7 February 1919 | 13 February 1919 | |
Conrad Haußmann (acting) | 13 February 1919 | 14 February 1919 | ||
Konstantin Fehrenbach | Centre | 14 February 1919 | 21 June 1920 |
Members
Member | Party | Constituency | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bruno Ablaß | DDP | 11 (Liegnitz) | |||
Karl Aderhold | USPD | Entered on 1 March 1919 as a replacement for August Merges | |||
Lore Agnes | USPD | 25 (Düsseldorf-Ost) | |||
Joseph Allekotte | Centre | 21 (Coblenz-Trier) | |||
Ludwig Alpers | DHP | 37 (Bremen-Hamburg-Stade) | |||
Josef Andre | Centre | 31/32 (Württemberg) | |||
Albert Arnstadt | DNVP | 36 (Thuringia) | |||
Julius Aßmann | DVP | 8 (Posen) | |||
Jacob Astor | Centre | 21 (Coblenz-Trier) | |||
Erhard Auer | SPD | 24 (Oberbayern-Schwaben) | |||
Benedikt Bachmeier | BB | Entered on 24 February 1919 as a replacement for Wilhelm Männer | |||
Paul Bader | SPD | 12 (Magdeburg) | |||
Max Baerecke | DNVP | 2 (Westpreußen) | |||
Moritz Baerwald | DDP | 8 (Posen) | Died on 26 December 1919 | ||
Gertrud Bäumer | DDP | 36 (Thuringia) | |||
Max Bahr | DDP | 6 (Frankfurt (Oder)) | |||
Franz Bartschat | DDP | 1 (Ostpreußen) | |||
August Baudert | SPD | 36 (Thuringia) | |||
Gustav Bauer | SPD | 9 (Breslau) | |||
Marie Baum | DDP | 14 (Schleswig-Holstein) | |||
Eduard Baumer | BVP | Entered on 26 February 1920 as a replacement for Eugen Taucher | |||
Johannes Becker | Centre | 20 (Westfalen-Süd) | |||
Johann Becker | German People’s Party | 34 (Hessen-Darmstadt) | |||
Josef Becker | Centre | 19 (Hessen-Nassau) | |||
Roman Becker | SPD | 10 (Oppeln) | |||
Margarete Behm | DNVP | 7 (Pommern) | |||
Marie Behncke | SPD | Entered on 7 August 1919 as a replacement for August Jordan | |||
Franz Behrens | DNVP | 1 (Ostpreußen) | |||
Hermann Beims | SPD | 12 (Magdeburg) | |||
Johannes Bell | Centre | 23 (Düsseldorf-West) | |||
Ferdinand Bender | SPD | 12 (Magdeburg) | |||
Theodor Bergmann | Centre | 23 (Düsseldorf-West) | |||
Karl Bethke | SPD | Entered on 12 May 1919 as a replacement for Wilhelm Buck | |||
August Beuermann | German People’s Party | 8 (Posen) | |||
Konrad Beyerle | Centre | 29 (Franken) | Joined Bavarian People’s Party on 6 January 1920 | ||
Anton Bias | SPD | 10 (Oppeln) | |||
Franz Biener | DNVP | 30 (Chemnitz-Zwickau) | |||
Albert Billian | SPD | Entered on 13 January 1920 as a replacement for Heinrich Kürbis | |||
Jakob Binder | SPD | ||||
Joseph Bitta | Centre | 10 (Oppeln) | |||
Lorenz Blank | Centre | ||||
Anna Blos | SPD | ||||
Johannes Blum | Centre | 26 (Düsseldorf-West) | |||
Andreas Blunck | DDP | 14 (Schleswig-Holstein) | |||
Wilhelm Bock | USPD | 13 (Thuringia) | |||
Karl Böhme | DDP | 11 (Magdeburg) | |||
Wilhelm Böhmert | DDP | ||||
Friedrich Börschmann | SPD | ||||
Minna Bollmann | SPD | ||||
Eugen Bolz | Centre | 34 (Württemberg) | |||
Otto Brass | USPD | 25 (Düsseldorf-Ost) | |||
Otto Braun | SPD | 26 (Düsseldorf-West) | |||
Adolf Braun | SPD | 29 (Franken) | |||
Heinrich Brauns | Centre | Reichswahlvorschlag | |||
Otto von Brentano di Tremezzo | Centre | 22 (Hessen-Darmstadt) | |||
August Brey | SPD | 18 (Süd-Hannover-Braunschweig) | |||
Alfred Brodauf | DDP | 33 (Chemnitz-Zwickau) | |||
Elisabeth Brönner | DDP | 1 (Ostpreußen) | |||
Arno Bruchardt | USPD | Reichswahlvorschlag | |||
Hermann Bruckhoff | DDP | ||||
Paul Brühl | USPD | 4 (Potsdam I) | |||
Friedrich Brühne | SPD | ||||
Wilhelm Bruhn | DNVP | 5 (Frankfurt (Oder)) | |||
Wilhelm Buck | SPD | 31 (Dresden-Bautzen) | Resigned on 11 April 1919 | ||
Ewald Budde | SPD | ||||
Michael Burgau | SPD | ||||
Eduard Burlage | Centre | 16 (Weser-Ems) | |||
Oskar Cohn | USPD | ||||
Hermann Colshorn | DHP | 18 (Süd-Hannover-Braunschweig) | Elected on a joint list with the Centre Party | ||
Eduard David | SPD | 22 (Hessen-Darmstadt) | |||
Georg Davidsohn | SPD | ||||
Kurt Deglerk | DNVP | 8 (Breslau) | |||
Karl Deichmann | SPD | ||||
Clemens von Delbrück | DNVP | Reichswahlvorschlag | Died on 18 December 1921 | ||
Carl Delius | DDP | 12 (Merseburg) | |||
Bernhard Dernburg | DDP | 3 (Potsdam II) | |||
Hermann Dietrich | DDP | 35 (Baden) | Resigned on 12 April 1919 | ||
Hermann Dietrich | DNVP | Reichswahlvorschlag | |||
Karl Dietrich | SPD | ||||
Carl Diez | Centre | 35 (Baden) | |||
Theodor Dirr | BB | ||||
Wilhelm Dittmann | USPD | 11 (Magdeburg) | |||
Alexander Graf zu Dohna-Schlodien | German People’s Party | 1 (Ostpreußen) | |||
Hedwig Dransfeld | Centre | Reichswahlvorschlag | |||
Ernst Dröner | SPD | ||||
Adelbert Düringer | DNVP | 35 (Baden) | |||
Wilhelm Dusche | German People’s Party | 18 (Süd-Hannover-Braunschweig) | |||
Bernhard Düwell | USPD | 12 (Merseburg) | |||
Friedrich Ebert | SPD | Resigned on 11 February 1919 | |||
Hermann Eger | Centre | Entered on 19 November 1919 as a replacement for Adolf Gröber | |||
Franz Ehrhardt | Centre | 10 (Oppeln) | |||
Emil Eichhorn | USPD | 2 (Berlin) | |||
Wilhelmine Eichler | SPD | 13 (Thuringia) | |||
Georg Eisenberger | BB | 27 (Oberbayern-Schwaben) | |||
Elise Ekke | DDP | ||||
Paul Ende | DDP | Entered on 22 June 1919 as a replacement for Oscar Günther | |||
Fritz Endres | SPD | ||||
Emil Engelhard | DDP | Resigned on 3 October 1919 | |||
Anton Erkelenz | DDP | 25 (Düsseldorf-Ost) | |||
Eugen Ernst | SPD | ||||
Joseph Ersing | Centre | 35 (Baden) | |||
Matthias Erzberger | Centre | 34 (Württemberg) | |||
Bernhard Falk | DDP | ||||
Wilhelm Farwick | Centre | ||||
Constantin Fehrenbach | Centre | 35 (Baden) | |||
Jan Fegter | DDP | Entered on 20 November 1919 as a replacement for Theodor Tantzen | |||
Franz Feldmann | SPD | 8 (Breslau) | |||
Otto Fischbeck | DDP | ||||
Gustav Fischer | SPD | 18 (Süd-Hannover-Braunschweig) | |||
Richard Fischer | SPD | 2 (Berlin) | |||
Paul Fleischer | Centre | 1 (Ostpreußen) | |||
Wilhelm Frank | Centre | Entered on 9 March 1920 as a replacement for Richard Müller | |||
Richard Franke | DDP | ||||
Wilhelm Frerker | Centre | ||||
Karl Frohme | SPD | 14 (Schleswig-Holstein) | |||
Karl Gandorfer | BB | ||||
Karl Gebhart | German People’s Party | 30 (Pfalz) | |||
Oskar Geck | SPD | 35 (Baden) | |||
Julius Gehl | SPD | ||||
Liborius Gerstenberger | BVP | 29 (Franken) | |||
Curt Geyer | USPD | Reichswahlvorschlag | |||
Friedrich Geyer | USPD | 32 (Leipzig) | |||
Karl Giebel | SPD | 5 (Frankfurt (Oder)) | |||
Anna von Gierke | German National People’s Party | ||||
Johannes Giesberts | Centre | 25 (Düsseldorf-Ost) | |||
Anton Gilsing | Centre | ||||
Emil Girbig | SPD | 9 (Liegnitz) | |||
Wilhelm Gleichauf | DDP | ||||
Heinrich Gölzer | SPD | ||||
Georg Gothein | DDP | 8 (Breslau) | |||
Georg Gradnauer | SPD | Reichswahlvorschlag | Resigned on 10 April 1919 | ||
Albrecht von Graefe | German National People’s Party | 7 (Mecklenburg) | |||
Adolf Gröber | Centre | Died on 19 November 1919 | |||
Martin Gruber | SPD | 27 (Oberbayern-Schwaben) | |||
Helene Grünberg | USPD | Entered on 21 November 1919 as a replacement for Josef Simon | |||
Wilhelm Grünewald | DDP | ||||
August Grunau | Centre | ||||
Oscar Günther | DDP | Resigned on 1 June 1919 | |||
Magnus Haack | SPD | Resigned on 19 August 1919 | |||
Ludwig Haas | DDP | 35 (Baden) | |||
Hugo Haase | USPD | Died on 7 November 1919 | |||
August Josef Hagemann | Centre | 16 (Weser-Ems) | |||
August Hampe | Brunswick State Electoral Association | ||||
Heinrich Hansmann | SPD | 20 (Westfalen-Süd) | |||
Gustav Hartmann | DDP | ||||
Rudolf Hartmann | German National People’s Party | 10 (Oppeln) | |||
Ludwig Hasenzahl | SPD | ||||
Frieda Hauke | SPD | 10 (Oppeln) | |||
Conrad Haußmann | DDP | 34 (Württemberg) | |||
Benedikt Hebel | BVP | Resigned on 24 February 1920 | |||
Werner Heidsieck | DDP | Entered on 17 January 1920 as a replacement for Moritz Baerwald | |||
Wilhelm Heile | DDP | 18 (Süd-Hannover-Braunschweig) | |||
Georg Heim | Centre | 28 (Niederbayern-Oberpfalz) | Bavarian People’s Party on 9 January 1920 | ||
Hugo Heimann | SPD | 2 (Berlin) | |||
Wolfgang Heine | SPD | ||||
Rudolf Heinze | German People’s Party | 31 (Dresden-Bautzen) | |||
August Hellmann | SPD | 15 (Hamburg) | |||
Alfred Henke | USPD | 16 (Weser-Ems) | |||
Konrad Henrich | DDP | ||||
Karl Hense | SPD | ||||
Richard Herbst | USPD | Entered on 20 November 1919 as a replacement for Hugo Haase | |||
Karl Hermannn | DDP | 34 (Württemberg) | |||
Carl Herold | Centre | 19 (Westfalen-Nord) | |||
Alfred Herrmann | DDP | ||||
Hans Herschel | Centre | 10 (Oppeln) | |||
Fritz Hesse | DDP | ||||
Michael Hierl | SPD | ||||
Karl Hildenbrand | SPD | 34 (Württemberg) | |||
Franz Hitze | Centre | Reichswahlvorschlag | |||
Gustav Hoch | SPD | 21 (Hessen-Nassau) | |||
Else Höfs | SPD | ||||
Otto Hörsing | SPD | ||||
Johannes Hoffmann | SPD | 30 (Pfalz) | |||
Arthur Hofmann | SPD | 13 (Thuringia) | |||
Hermann Hofmann | Centre | 30 (Pfalz) | |||
Peter Holl | SPD | ||||
Franz Holzapfel | SPD | Entered on 30 September 1919 as a replacement for Magnus Haack | |||
Otto Hue | SPD | 20 (Westfalen-Süd) | |||
Anna Hübler | USPD | ||||
Paul Hug | SPD | Resigned on 22 May 1919 | |||
Alfred Hugenberg | German National People’s Party | 19 (Westfalen-Nord) | |||
Otto Hugo | German People’s Party | 19 (Westfalen-Nord) | |||
Heinrich Imbusch | Centre | 20 (Westfalen-Süd) | |||
Martin Irl | Centre | Bavarian People’s Party on 9 January 1920 | |||
Heinrich Jäcker | SPD | 25 (Düsseldorf-Ost) | |||
Willy Jandrey | German National People’s Party | 6 (Pommern) | |||
Alfred Janschek | SPD | 19 (Westfalen-Nord) | |||
Viktor Jantzen | SPD | ||||
Heinrich Jasper | SPD | ||||
Josef Jaud | BVP | 27 (Oberbayern-Schwaben) | |||
Philipp Johannsen | SHBLD | Entered on 1 August 1919 as a replacement for Detlef Thomsen | |||
Joseph Joos | Centre | 23 (Köln-Aachen) | |||
August Jordan | SPD | Entered on 22 May 1919 as a replacement for Paul Hug, resigned on 5 July 1919 | |||
Marie Juchacz | SPD | 4 (Potsdam I) | |||
Max Jungnickel | SPD | ||||
Ludwig Kaas | Centre | 24 (Coblenz-Trier) | |||
Wilhelm Kahl | German People’s Party | 2 (Berlin) | |||
Wilhelmine Kähler | SPD | 1 (Ostpreußen) | |||
Hermann Käppler | SPD | 13 (Thuringia) | |||
Hermann Kahmann | SPD | 31 (Dresden-Bautzen) | |||
Franz Kaufmann | Centre | ||||
Simon Katzenstein | SPD | ||||
Wilhelm Keil | SPD | 34 (Württemberg) | |||
Adolf Kempkes | German People’s Party | 25 (Düsseldorf-Ost) | |||
Gottlieb Kenngott | SPD | ||||
Andreas Kerschbaum | DDP | 29 (Franken) | |||
Katharina Kloss | DDP | ||||
Friedrich Knollmann | German National People’s Party | Died on 16 April 1920 | |||
Christian Koch | DDP | ||||
Johann Koch | Centre | Reichswahlvorschlag | |||
Wilhelm Koch | German National People’s Party | 25 (Düsseldorf-Ost) | |||
William Karl Koch | DDP | ||||
Erich Koch-Weser | DDP | 16 (Weser-Ems) | |||
Franz Heinrich Költzsch | German National People’s Party | ||||
Wilhelm Koenen | USPD | 12 (Merseburg) | |||
Max König | SPD | 20 (Westfalen-Süd) | |||
Alwin Körsten | SPD | 6 (Pommern) | |||
Bartholomäus Koßmann | Centre | ||||
Theodor Kotzur | SPD | 1 (Ostpreußen) | |||
Hermann Krätzig | SPD | 31 (Dresden-Bautzen) | |||
Heinrich von Kraut | German National People’s Party | ||||
Karl Kreft | German National People’s Party | ||||
Franz Kreutz | Centre | ||||
Wilhelm Kröger | SPD | 7 (Mecklenburg) | Entered on 25 July 1919 as a replacement for Franz Starosson | ||
Peter Kronen | SPD | ||||
Franz Krüger | SPD | ||||
Hans Krüger | SPD | ||||
Josef Kubetzko | Centre | 10 (Oppeln) | Resigned on 12 July 1919 | ||
Wilhelm Külz | DDP | Entered on 20 January 1920 as a replacement for Emil Nitzschke | |||
Heinrich Kürbis | SPD | Resigned on 2 December 1919 | |||
Bernhard Kuhnt | USPD | 33 (Chemnitz-Zwickau) | |||
Fritz Kunert | USPD | 12 (Merseburg) | |||
Alexander Kuntze | SPD | 6 (Pommern) | |||
Bruno Kurowski | Centre | ||||
Hedwig Kurt | SPD | Entered on 10 April 1919 as a replacement for Georg Gradnauer | |||
Otto Landsberg | SPD | ||||
Christian Ritter von Langheinrich | DDP | Resigned on 21 April 1919 | |||
Heinrich Langwost | DHP | 18 (Süd-Hannover-Braunschweig) | Elected on a joint list with the Centre Party | ||
Wilhelm Lattmann | German National People’s Party | Entered on 24 October 1919 as a replacement for Karl Veidt | |||
Gustav Laukant | USPD | ||||
Wilhelm Laverrenz | German National People’s Party | 2 (Berlin) | |||
Peter Legendre | Centre | ||||
Carl Legien | SPD | 14 (Schleswig-Holstein) | Died on 26 December 1920 | ||
Johann Leicht | Centre | 29 (Franken) | Bavarian People’s Party in January 1922 | ||
Gottfried Leiser | DDP | Entered on 24 October 1919 as a replacement for Emil Engelhard | |||
Felix Lensing | Centre | ||||
Friedrich Lesche | SPD | 17 (Ost-Hannover) | |||
Hans Liebig | SPD | ||||
Julius Lippmann | DDP | ||||
Paul Lockenvitz | DDP | ||||
Paul Löbe | SPD | 8 (Breslau) | |||
Gertrud Lodahl | SPD | Entered on 12 February 1919 as a replacement for Paul Stössel | |||
Heinrich Löffler | SPD | 10 (Oppeln) | |||
Josef Lübbring | SPD | 1 (Ostpreußen) | |||
Marie-Elisabeth Lüders | DDP | Reichswahlvorschlag | Entered on 24 August 1919 as a replacement for Friedrich Naumann | ||
Frida Lührs | SPD | ||||
August Lüttich | SPD | ||||
Friedrich Max Ludewig | DDP | ||||
Hermann Luppe | DDP | ||||
Ernestine Lutze | SPD | ||||
Wilhelm Männer | BB | Resigned in February 1919 | |||
Gustav Malkewitz | German National People’s Party | 6 (Pommern) | |||
Oskar Maretzky | German People’s Party | 4 (Potsdam I) | |||
Wilhelm Marx | Centre | 25 (Düsseldorf-Ost) | |||
Georg Mauerer | SPD | Entered on 2 February 1919 as a replacement for Alwin Saenger | |||
Joseph Mausbach | Centre | ||||
Wilhelm Maxen | Centre | 18 (Süd-Hannover-Braunschweig) | |||
Wilhelm Mayer | Centre | 27 (Oberbayern-Schwaben) | Bavarian People’s Party on 9 January 1920, resigned on 17 February 1920 | ||
Johannes Meerfeld | SPD | 23 (Köln-Aachen) | |||
Richard Meier | SPD | 33 (Chemnitz-Zwickau) | |||
Christian Meisner | DDP | Entered in Mai 1919 as a replacement for Christian Ritter von Langheinrich | |||
Clara Mende | German People’s Party | Reichswahlvorschlag | |||
Wilhelm Merck | Bavarian People’s Party | Reichswahlvorschlag | Entered in February 1920 as a replacement for Benedikt Hebel | ||
August Merges | USPD | Resigned on 28 February 1919 | |||
Peter Michelsen | SPD | 14 (Schleswig-Holstein) | |||
Fritz Mittelmann | German People’s Party | 6 (Pommern) | |||
Hermann Molkenbuhr | SPD | 33 (Chemnitz-Zwickau) | |||
Albrecht Morath | German People’s Party | Reichswahlvorschlag | |||
Julius Moses | USPD | 2 (Berlin) | |||
Otto Most | German People’s Party | 26 (Düsseldorf-West) | |||
Hermann Müller | SPD | 29 (Franken) | |||
Hermann Müller | SPD | ||||
Richard Müller | Centre | Resigned on 31 January 1920 | |||
Reinhard Mumm | German National People’s Party | 20 (Westfalen-Süd) | |||
Josef Nacken | Centre | 23 (Köln-Aachen) | |||
Anna Nemitz | USPD | 9 (Liegnitz) | SPD in September 1922 | ||
Friedrich Naumann | DDP | Died on 24 August 1919 | |||
Agnes Neuhaus | Centre | 20 (Westfalen-Süd) | |||
Adolf Neumann-Hofer | DDP | ||||
Matthias Neyses | Centre | 24 (Coblenz-Trier) | |||
Emil Nitzschke | DDP | Resigned on 20 January 1920 | |||
Ferdinand Noske | German National People’s Party | ||||
Gustav Noske | SPD | ||||
Otto Nuschke | DDP | ||||
Ernst Oberfohren | German National People’s Party | 14 (Schleswig-Holstein) | |||
Karl Obermeyer | SPD | 25 (Düsseldorf-Ost) | |||
Richard Oertel | German People’s Party | 24 (Coblenz-Trier) | |||
Wilhelm Ohler | German National People’s Party | ||||
Karl Okonsky | SPD | 10 (Oppeln) | Entered in July 1919 as a replacement for Josef Kubetzko | ||
Karl Ollmert | Centre | ||||
Nikolaus Osterroth | SPD | ||||
Waldemar Otte | Centre | ||||
Hermann Pachnicke | DDP | 4 (Potsdam I) | |||
Johann Panzer | SPD | ||||
Richard Partzsch | SPD | Entered on 3 January 1920 as a replacement for August Winnig | |||
Friedrich von Payer | DDP | ||||
Carl Wilhelm Petersen | DDP | 15 (Hamburg) | |||
Wilhelm Pfannkuch | SPD | ||||
Maximilian Pfeiffer | Centre | 2 (Berlin) | |||
Antonie Pfülf | SPD | 27 (Oberbayern-Schwaben) | |||
Albrecht Philipp | German National People’s Party | 32 (Leipzig) | |||
Otto Pick | DDP | ||||
Karl Pinkau | SPD | 32 (Leipzig) | |||
Alexander Pohlmann | DDP | 10 (Oppeln) | |||
Franz Pokorny | SPD | ||||
Arthur von Posadowsky-Wehner | German National People’s Party | ||||
Alois Puschmann | Centre | 8 (Breslau) | |||
Max Quarck | SPD | ||||
Ludwig Quessel | SPD | 22 (Hessen-Darmstadt) | |||
Ludwig Quidde | DDP | ||||
Fritz Raschig | DDP | ||||
Friedrich Rauch | SPD | ||||
Gustav Raute | USPD | 12 (Merseburg) | |||
Walter Reek | SPD | ||||
Heinrich Reineke | German People’s Party | ||||
Hermann Paul Reißhaus | SPD | 13 (Thuringia) | |||
Johanne Reitze | SPD | 15 (Hamburg) | |||
Ernst Remmers | DDP | ||||
Anton Rheinländer | Centre | 20 (Westfalen-Süd) | |||
Adolf Richter | German National People’s Party | 1 (Ostpreußen) | |||
Johann Sophian Christian Richter | Centre | ||||
Hartmann von Richthofen | DDP | ||||
Lorenz Riedmiller | SPD | 35 (Baden) | |||
Jakob Riesser | German People’s Party | 21 (Hessen-Nassau) | |||
Paul Rodemann | SPD | ||||
Elisabeth Röhl | SPD | ||||
Paul Röhle | SPD | ||||
Gustav Roesicke | German National People’s Party | Reichswahlvorschlag | |||
Kurt Rosenfeld | USPD | 13 (Thuringia) | Entered on 3 May 1920 as a replacement for Emanuel Wurm | ||
Leopold Rückert | SPD | ||||
Heinrich Runkel | German People’s Party | 14 (Schleswig-Holstein) | |||
Elfriede Ryneck | SPD | 3 (Potsdam II) | |||
Hermann Sachse | SPD | ||||
Alwin Saenger | SPD | Resigned on 2 February 1919 | |||
Robert Sagawe | Centre | ||||
Albert Salm | SPD | ||||
Ernst Schädlich | SPD | ||||
Valentin Schäfer | SPD | ||||
Josef Schefbeck | Centre | ||||
Philipp Scheidemann | SPD | 21 (Hessen-Nassau) | |||
Martin Schiele | German National People’s Party | 11 (Magdeburg) | |||
Eugen Schiffer | DDP | 11 (Magdeburg) | |||
Karl Matthias Schiffer | Centre | Resigned on 24 September 1919 | |||
Joseph Schilgen | Centre | Entered on 24 September 1919 as a replacement for Karl Matthias Schiffer | |||
Minna Schilling | SPD | 33 (Chemnitz-Zwickau) | |||
Carl Schirmer | Centre | 29 (Franken) | Bavarian People’s Party on 9 January 1920 | ||
Käthe Schirmacher | German National People’s Party | ||||
Peter Schlack | Centre | 25 (Düsseldorf-Ost) | |||
Alexander Schlicke | SPD | Reichswahlvorschlag | |||
Wilhelm Schlüter | SPD | ||||
Richard Schmidt | SPD | 31 (Dresden-Bautzen) | |||
Richard Schmidt | SPD | ||||
Robert Schmidt | SPD | Reichswahlvorschlag | |||
Wilhelm Schmidthals | DDP | ||||
Adam Josef Schmitt | Centre | ||||
Maria Schmitz | Centre | ||||
Alexander Schneider | Centre | ||||
Gustav Schneider | DDP | ||||
Georg Schöpflin | SPD | 35 (Baden) | |||
Carl Schreck | SPD | 19 (Westfalen-Nord) | |||
Louise Schroeder | SPD | 14 (Schleswig-Holstein) | |||
Clara Schuch | SPD | 2 (Berlin) | |||
Walther Schücking | DDP | 21 (Hessen-Nassau) | |||
Wilhelm Schümmer | Centre | ||||
Georg Schultz | German National People’s Party | Reichswahlvorschlag | |||
Heinrich Schulz | SPD | Reichswahlvorschlag | |||
Hermann Schulz | SPD | Westpreußen | |||
Wilhelm Schulz | SPD | ||||
Gerhart von Schulze-Gävernitz | DDP | Entered on 12 April 1919 as a replacement for Hermann Dietrich | |||
Oswald Schumann | SPD | 5 (Frankfurt (Oder)) | |||
Jean Albert Schwarz | Centre | 21 (Hessen-Nassau) | |||
Rudolf Schwarzer | Bavarian People’s Party | 27 (Oberbayern-Schwaben) | |||
Friedrich Seger | USPD | 32 (Leipzig) | |||
Friedrich Wilhelm Semmler | German National People’s Party | 8 (Breslau) | |||
Carl Severing | SPD | 19 (Westfalen-Nord) | |||
Richard Seyfert | DDP | ||||
Otto Sidow | SPD | 4 (Potsdam I) | |||
Ernst Siehr | DDP | ||||
Karl Sielermann | German National People’s Party | Entered on 29 September 1919 as a replacement for Wilhelm Wallbaum | |||
Anna Simon | SPD | ||||
Hermann Silberschmidt | SPD | 11 (Magdeburg) | |||
Georg Simon | SPD | 27 (Oberbayern-Schwaben) | |||
Josef Simon | USPD | 29 (Franken) | Resigned on 21 November 1919 | ||
Hugo Sinzheimer | SPD | ||||
Hans Sivkovich | DDP | 7 (Mecklenburg) | |||
Wilhelm Sollmann | SPD | 23 (Köln-Aachen) | |||
Peter Spahn | Centre | Reichswahlvorschlag | |||
Emil Stahl | SPD | ||||
Michael Stapfer | Centre | ||||
Franz Starosson | SPD | ||||
Otto Steinmayer | SPD | ||||
Wilhelm Steinsdorff | DDP | ||||
Adam Stegerwald | Centre | 19 (Westfalen-Nord) | |||
Willy Steinkopf | SPD | Reichswahlvorschlag | |||
Johannes Stelling | SPD | 7 (Mecklenburg) | |||
Christian Stock | SPD | ||||
Otto Stolten | SPD | 15 (Hamburg) | |||
Paul Stössel | SPD | Resigned on 2 February 1919 | |||
Gustav Stresemann | German People’s Party | 3 (Potsdam II) | |||
Franz Strzoda | Centre | ||||
Daniel Stücklen | SPD | 33 (Chemnitz-Zwickau) | |||
Thomas Szczeponik | Centre | 10 (Oppeln) | |||
Theodor Tantzen der Jüngere | DDP | Resigned on 31 October 1919 | |||
Paul Taubadel | SPD | 9 (Liegnitz) | |||
Eugen Taucher | Centre | Bavarian People’s Party on 9 January 1920, resigned on 1 February 1920 | |||
Johanna Tesch | SPD | 21 (Hessen-Nassau) | |||
Christine Teusch | Centre | 23 (Köln-Aachen) | |||
Johannes Thabor | SPD | 26 (Düsseldorf-West) | |||
Adolf Thiele | SPD | ||||
Georg Thöne | SPD | 21 (Hessen-Nassau) | |||
Detlef Thomsen | SHBLD | Resigned on 7 July 1919 | |||
Franz Thurow | SPD | Entered on 11 February 1919 as a replacement for Friedrich Ebert | |||
Gottfried Traub | German National People’s Party | ||||
Peter Tremmel | Centre | 24 (Coblenz-Trier) | |||
Karl Trimborn | Centre | 23 (Köln-Aachen) | |||
Oskar Trinks | SPD | ||||
Carl Ulitzka | Centre | 10 (Oppeln) | |||
Carl Ulrich | SPD | 22 (Hessen-Darmstadt) | |||
Karl Veidt | German National People’s Party | Resigned on 29 August 1919 | |||
Wilhelm Vershofen | DDP | ||||
Otto Vesper | SPD | ||||
Albert Vögler | German People’s Party | 20 (Westfalen-Süd) | |||
Hans Vogel | SPD | 29 (Franken) | |||
Wilhelm Vogt | German National People’s Party | 34 (Württemberg) | |||
Fritz Voigt | SPD | ||||
Friedrich Wachhorst de Wente | DDP | ||||
Felix Waldstein | DDP | 14 (Schleswig-Holstein) | |||
Wilhelm Wallbaum | German National People’s Party | Resigned on 29 September 1919 | |||
Fritz Warmuth | German National People’s Party | 5 (Frankfurt (Oder)) | |||
Helene Weber | Centre | ||||
Victor Weidtman | German People’s Party | ||||
Luitpold Weilnböck | German National People’s Party | 29 (Franken) | |||
Friedrich Weinhausen | DDP | Westpreußen | |||
Konrad Weiß | DDP | 29 (Franken) | |||
Franz Xaver Weixler | Bavarian People’s Party | 27 (Oberbayern-Schwaben) | Entered in March 1920 as a replacement for Wilhelm Mayer | ||
Otto Wels | SPD | 5 (Frankfurt (Oder)) | |||
Hugo Wendorff | DDP | ||||
Kuno von Westarp | German National People’s Party | 3 (Potsdam II) | |||
Johannes Wetzlich | German National People’s Party | ||||
Franz Wieber | Centre | 26 (Düsseldorf-West) | |||
Philipp Wieland | DDP | 34 (Württemberg) | |||
Carl Winkelmann | SPD | ||||
August Winnefeld | German People’s Party | 20 (Westfalen-Süd) | |||
August Winnig | SPD | Resigned on 3 January 1920 | |||
Joseph Wirth | Centre | 35 (Baden) | |||
Rudolf Wissell | SPD | ||||
Franz Heinrich Witthoefft | German People’s Party | ||||
Theodor Wolff | SPD | ||||
Emanuel Wurm | USPD | Died on 3 May 1920 | |||
Constantin Zawadzki | Centre | 10 (Oppeln) | |||
Johann Anton Zehnter | Centre | ||||
Marie Zettler | Centre | ||||
Paul Ziegler | DDP | 20 (Westfalen-Süd) | |||
Luise Zietz | USPD | 2 (Berlin) | |||
Georg Zöphel | DDP | ||||
Fritz Zubeil | USPD | 3 (Potsdam II) |
See also
- Herrenchiemsee convention of 1948
- Parlamentarischer Rat of 1949
References
- ↑ Sturm, Reinhard (23 December 2011). "Weimarer Republik: Vom Kaiserreich zur Republik 1918/19" [Weimar Republic: From Empire to Republic 1918/19]. Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung (in German). Retrieved 17 June 2013.
- ↑ Holste, Heiko (January 2009). "Die Nationalversammlung gehört hierher!" [The National Assembly belongs here!]. Frankfurther Allgemeine Zeitung, Bilder und Zeiten Nr. 8, 10 (in German).
- 1 2 3 "Chronologie 1919 (in German)". Deutsches Historisches Museum. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
- 1 2 "Die Wahlen zur Nationalversammlung" [The Election of the National Assembly]. Deutsches Historisches Museum (in German). Retrieved 10 December 2007.
- ↑ Sturm, Reinhard (23 December 2011). "Weimarer Republik: Vom Kaiserreich zur Republik 1918/19" [Weimar Republic: From Empire to Republic 1918/19]. Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung (in German). Retrieved 17 June 2013.
- ↑ Winkler, Heinrich August (1993). Weimar 1918–1933. Die Geschichte der ersten deutschen Demokratie [Weimar 1918–1933. The History of the First German Democracy] (in German). Munich: C.H. Beck. p. 69. ISBN 3-406-37646-0.
- ↑ Kohn, Walter S.G. (1980). Women in National Legislatures: A Comparative Study of Six Countries. Westport, CT: Praeger. p. 141. ISBN 9780030475917.
- ↑ Schüler, Anja (8 September 2008). "Bubikopf und kurze Röcke" [Bobbed hair and short skirts]. Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung (in German).
- ↑ Jindra, Steffen (2 March 2021). "Weimar und die 37 Frauen" [Weimar and the 37 Women]. ARD (in German).
- ↑ "Gesetz über die vorläufige Reichsgewalt1". documentArchiv.de (in German).
- ↑ Miller, Susanne; Matthias, Erich, eds. (1966). Das Kriegstagebuch des Reichstagsabgeordneten Eduard David 1914 bis 1918 [The War Diary of Eduard David, Member of the Reichstag 1914 to 1918] (in German). Düsseldorf: Droste. pp. XXXIII. ISBN 9783770050376.
- ↑ "Philipp Scheidemann". Encyclopedia Britannica. 22 July 2023. Retrieved 31 August 2023.
- ↑ Müller, Wolfgang (8 November 2022). "Versailler Vertrag: Fragen und Antworten" [Versailles Treaty: Questions and Answers]. NDR (in German).
- ↑ "Vor 100 Jahren: Nationalversammlung ratifiziert Versailler Vertrag" [100 Years Ago: The National Assembly Ratifies the Versailles Treaty]. Deutscher Bundestag. 4 July 2019.
- ↑ "Gesetz über den Friedensschluß zwischen Deutschland und den alliierten und den assoziierten Mächten". documentArchiv.de (in German).
- ↑ "Verhandlungen des Deutschen Reichstages: 84. Sitzung der Nationalversammlung vom 20. August 1919" [Proceedings of the German Reichstag: 84th Session of the National Assembly]. Reichstagsprotokolle (in German). 20 August 1919. p. 2798. Retrieved 19 February 2023.
- ↑ Heilfron, Eduard, ed. (1921). Die Deutsche Nationalversammlung im Jahre 1919 in ihrer Arbeit für den Aufbau des neuen deutschen Volksstaates [The German National Assembly in 1919 in its Work for the Establishment of the New German People's State] (in German). Berlin: Norddeutsche Buchdruckerei und Verlagsanstalt. pp. 150–153.
- ↑ Mommsen, Wolfgang J. (1974). Max Weber und die deutsche Politik 1890–1920 [Max Weber and German Politics 1890–1920] (in German) (2nd ed.). Tübingen: Mohr. pp. 372–375. ISBN 9783165358612.
- ↑ Weipert, Axel (2012). "Vor den Toren der Macht. Die Demonstration am 13. Januar 1920 vor dem Reichstag" [At the gates of power. The Demonstration in Front of the Reichstag on 13 January 1920] (PDF). Jahrbuch für Forschungen zur Geschichte der Arbeiterbewegung. (in German). 11 (2): 16–32.
- ↑ "Chronik 1920" [Chronicle 1920]. Deutsches Historisches Museum (in German). 23 July 2013.
- ↑ Braun, Bernd; Epkenhans, Michael; Mühlhausen, Walter (September 1998). "Friedrich Ebert (1871–1925). Vom Arbeiterführer zum Reichspräsidenten" [Friedrich Ebert (1871–1925). From labor leader to Reich President]. Friedrich Ebert Stiftung (in German). Retrieved 23 July 2013.
- ↑ "Kabinett Scheidemann, Einleitung II" [Scheidemann Cabinet, Introduction II]. Bundesarchiv (in German). Retrieved 23 July 2013.