The Weimar Republic survived the crises of 1919–23 using the right-wing army & Freikorps to crush Communists, & left-wing unions to crush the Kapp Putsch. Stresemann's leadership & US money (Dawes Plan) → prosperity & cultural flowering in Germany.
How did the Weimar Republic survive & recover, 1919–29?
Despite appearing doomed, the Weimar Republic survived by any means necessary:
1. Freikorps
• SPD Defence Minister Gustav used right-wing Freikorps to crush Communist revolts (1919–20).
2. Army
• Led by von , the right-wing army suppressed Communist revolts (1923).
3. Strikes
• During the right-wing Kapp Putsch, the Freikorps & army refused to help. Ebert appealed to Berlin's left-wing workers → strikes → Berlin shutdown → Putsch collapsed.
4. Stresemann's Achievements [DIFFERS]
a. Dawes Plan (1924)
• Called off 1923 Ruhr strike, resumed reparations w. extended payment terms via Plan. Young Plan (1929) reduced payments.
b. Inflation controlled (1923)
• Burned worthless marks, replaced w. (worth 3bn old marks).
c. French leave Ruhr (1924)
• Persuaded French to withdraw.
d. Foreign Affairs
• Signed Treaty (1925) accepting Alsace-Lorraine loss.
• Germany joined (1926), regaining global status.
e. Economic Growth
• Borrowed 25k million gold marks (mostly from US) → roads, railways, factories. Prosperity → cultural boom (Roaring Twenties).
f. Reforms & Social Change
• Introduced & unemployment insurance (1927), benefits for veterans, single mothers, disabled.
• Welfare programmes inc. infant, youth, maternal care, schools, parks, sports facilities.
• Govt spent on housing; offered loans, tax breaks, land grants to developers.
g. Strength at the Centre
• Stresemann formed '' of moderate pro-democracy parties (SDP, Centre, DVP). United, they passed laws, overcoming proportional representation issues.
Cultural Flowering – The 'Roaring Twenties'
Progress
1. Cultural creativity
• architecture, art, books, films, & cabaret. Arts became accessible to wider audiences.
2. Famous figures:
• November Group (radical artists).
• school (Walter Gropius).
• Paul Klee, Otto Dix (WW1 trench art).
• Marlene Dietrich (singer/actress).
• Erich Maria Remarque (anti-war novel ).
Backlash
3. Opposition to Culture
• Avant-garde art was sexually liberated, politicised → backlash from conservatives & right-wing (who saw it as 'decadent').
• Catholic Centre Party opposed moral decline → 1926 Law to from Pulp Fiction & Pornography, defying no-censorship rule in Constitution.
• Many artists were Jewish → anti-art criticism merged w. antisemitism.
The Wall Street Crash (1929) revealed the fragility of the Weimar Republic, plunging it into crisis.
The Weimar Republic survived the crises of 1919–23 using the right-wing army & Freikorps to crush Communists, & left-wing unions to crush the Kapp Putsch. Stresemann's leadership & US money (Dawes Plan) → prosperity & cultural flowering in Germany.
How did the Weimar Republic survive & recover, 1919–29?
Despite appearing doomed, the Weimar Republic survived by any means necessary:
1. Freikorps
• SPD Defence Minister Gustav Noske used right-wing Freikorps to crush Communist revolts (1919–20).
2. Army
• Led by von Seeckt, the right-wing army suppressed Communist revolts (1923).
3. Strikes
• During the right-wing Kapp Putsch, the Freikorps & army refused to help. Ebert appealed to Berlin's left-wing workers → strikes → Berlin shutdown → Putsch collapsed.
4. Stresemann's Achievements [DIFFERS]
a. Dawes Plan (1924)
• Called off 1923 Ruhr strike, resumed reparations w. extended payment terms via Dawes Plan. Young Plan (1929) reduced payments.
b. Inflation controlled (1923)
• Burned worthless marks, replaced w. Rentenmark (worth 3bn old marks).
c. French leave Ruhr (1924)
• Persuaded French to withdraw.
d. Foreign Affairs
• Signed Locarno Treaty (1925) accepting Alsace-Lorraine loss.
• Germany joined League of Nations (1926), regaining global status.
e. Economic Growth
• Borrowed 25k million gold marks (mostly from US) → roads, railways, factories. Prosperity → cultural boom (Roaring Twenties).
f. Reforms & Social Change
• Introduced Labour Exchanges & unemployment insurance (1927), benefits for veterans, single mothers, disabled.
• Welfare programmes inc. infant, youth, maternal care, schools, parks, sports facilities.
• Govt spent on housing; offered loans, tax breaks, land grants to developers.
g. Strength at the Centre
• Stresemann formed 'Great Coalition' of moderate pro-democracy parties (SDP, Centre, DVP). United, they passed laws, overcoming proportional representation issues.
Cultural Flowering – The 'Roaring Twenties'
Progress
1. Cultural creativity
• architecture, art, books, films, & cabaret. Arts became accessible to wider audiences.
2. Famous figures:
• November Group (radical artists).
• Bauhaus school (Walter Gropius).
• Paul Klee, Otto Dix (WW1 trench art).
• Marlene Dietrich (singer/actress).
• Erich Maria Remarque (anti-war novel All Quiet on the Western Front).
Backlash
3. Opposition to Culture
• Avant-garde art was sexually liberated, politicised → backlash from conservatives & right-wing (who saw it as 'decadent').
• Catholic Centre Party opposed moral decline → 1926 Law to Protect Youth from Pulp Fiction & Pornography, defying no-censorship rule in Constitution.
• Many artists were Jewish → anti-art criticism merged w. antisemitism.