fbpx
Wikipedia

Eduard von Capelle

Eduard von Capelle (10 October 1855 – 23 February 1931) was a German Imperial Navy officer from Celle. He joined the Imperial German Navy in 1872, serving in various roles, including as an executive officer of the battleship SMS Weissenburg and chief of the administrative department in the Reichsmarineamt (Imperial Naval Office). Working closely with Admiral Alfred von Tirpitz, he was primarily responsible for drafting the Flottengesetze (German Naval Laws), and was promoted to admiral in 1913. He was supportive of Germany's entry into war during July Crisis of 1914.

Eduard von Capelle
Born10 October 1855
Celle, Lower Saxony, Kingdom of Hanover
Died23 February 1931(1931-02-23) (aged 75)
Wiesbaden, Hesse, Germany
Allegiance German Empire
Service/branch Imperial German Navy
Years of service1872–1918
RankAdmiral

Capelle was recalled from his post in March 1916 to replace Tirpitz as the State Secretary of the Imperial Navy Office, and oversaw the German naval war during the latter three years of World War I. Initially against unrestricted submarine warfare, he was persuaded to support it; the continuation of this policy caused the United States to declare war on Germany. Nevertheless, he maintained his belief in the supremacy of battleships and argued against halting their construction. Facing opposition from those who saw him as too much of a conservative in naval affairs, he was asked by Kaiser Wilhelm II to resign, which he did in October 1918. He resided in Wiesbaden until his death on 23 February 1931.

Early career edit

Eduard Capelle was born on 10 October 1855, in Celle, in what was then the Kingdom of Hanover.[1] His father, Eduard (1832–1897), was a factory owner, and his mother was Emilie Kraus (1831–1903); the younger Eduard had a brother, Hans (1864–1948), a physicist who served as President of the German Naval Observatory.[2] Capelle joined the Imperial German Navy in 1872, as a naval cadet. He served in various capacities in the fleet,[1] including in the Torpedowesen (Torpedo Department) with Alfred von Tirpitz.[3] In December 1894, he was serving as the executive officer of the battleship SMS Weissenburg.[4] He was later assigned to the Reichsmarineamt (RMA), the Imperial Navy Office, as the chief of the administrative department.[5] In this capacity, he began to work closely with now-Admiral von Tirpitz, who had been promoted to become the State Secretary for the Navy.[1] Capelle was responsible for drafting the legislation that became the Flottengesetz, the Fleet Laws, and the supplementary laws in 1906, 1908, and 1912.[6] During this period, he and other senior members of the naval command worked repeatedly to break monopolies in the shipbuilding industry, as a means to keep costs low and stable.[7] The only firm that proved resistant to their efforts was Krupp, which held a near monopoly on armor plating and large-caliber guns, and proved to be too powerful for the RMA to effectively pressure.[8]

Capelle was promoted to konteradmiral (rear admiral) in 1906, and to vizeadmiral (vice admiral) three years later.[9] In 1912, Capelle was elevated to the nobility, which allowed him to add "von" to his name.[10] He rose to the rank of admiral in 1913,[9] and by 1914, he was Tirpitz's deputy. During the July Crisis that instigated World War I, Capelle was temporarily the acting state secretary, as Tirpitz was away at his summer home.[11] In this capacity, he endorsed the "blank check" Kaiser Wilhelm II had extended to Austria-Hungary in the aftermath of the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand by Serbian terrorists the previous month.[12] With regard to the deepening crisis, Capelle stated that while "many swords will be rattled and much poisonous ink spilled, Europe will not tear itself to pieces over Serbia.[13]

World War I edit

By late August 1915, Capelle had fallen ill, and so requested retirement from the navy, though he agreed to remain in the post until 1 November.[14] In March 1916 Capelle was recalled to service and replaced Tirpitz, whose views on the naval war had become unpopular, as the State Secretary for the Navy.[9] Tirpitz had by this point pushed for unrestricted submarine warfare in order to break the deadlock on the Western Front; Chancellor Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg, fearing war with the United States, manoeuvred to have Tirpitz relieved of command. He meanwhile secured the support of Capelle and brought him out of retirement.[15] Capelle's position as state secretary was decidedly weaker than under Tirpitz's tenure; this was in large part due to the course of the war and the discrediting of the surface fleet policy advocated at first by Tirpitz and then by Capelle. Admiral Paul Behncke, who would later serve as Capelle's deputy, stated that, "In the Navy, the position of the RMA has become purely administrative, it no longer plays a leading role."[16] Though Capelle was initially opposed to unrestricted submarine warfare, a group of senior officers led by the commander of the High Seas Fleet, Admiral Reinhard Scheer, convinced Capelle to change his mind, who in turn worked to convince Wilhelm II to permit a return to unrestricted submarine warfare. By January 1917, Wilhelm II had consented, and Germany resumed the U-boat campaign against Britain on 1 February.[9] The US Congress voted to declare war with Germany on 6 April 1917.

Even though he agreed to resume the U-boat campaign, Capelle did not believe that submarines had replaced the battleship as the decisive naval weapon, arguing in February 1917 that new battleship construction—that of the L 20e α design—should not be stopped.[17] In order to keep costs down, Capelle announced that the Navy would not build any ships over 41,000 t (40,000 long tons; 45,000 short tons) displacement or with a draft in excess of 9.8 m (32 ft); these were the maximum dimensions of the existing harbours and dry docks. Larger designs would require prohibitively expensive dredging on harbours and channels and new docks.[18] Nevertheless, by February 1918, design work on the new class of battleships had ground to a halt, and Capelle could do nothing about it; by this far into the war, the U-boat arm had absorbed all of the limited production capabilities of the Navy.[19] Capelle also advocated for shipbuilding contracts with the Ottoman Empire, Germany's wartime ally; he secured contracts for twelve torpedo boats and twelve U-boats for the Ottoman Navy.[20] Capelle also used the naval construction program to keep skilled workers out of the Army, in order to preserve their expertise for the Navy's needs.[21]

In August 1917, Capelle banned socialist literature from the fleet, in the aftermath of several disturbances. On 9 October 1917, in a speech to the Reichstag, he accused the radical, independent branch of the Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands (SPD–Social Democratic Party) of knowingly supporting these revolutionary actions, which drove moderate SPD members closer to the radical independent faction. This led to the toppling of Chancellor Georg Michaelis, who was replaced by Georg von Hertling.[9] On 9 January 1918, Capelle was awarded the Pour le Mérite, Germany's highest military award.[22] By August 1918, Scheer and a group of prominent commanders in the High Seas Fleet had convinced Wilhelm II that the senior officers in the naval high command needed to be replaced by more dynamic individuals. To this end, Wilhelm II requested the resignation of Capelle, Henning von Holtzendorff, the Admiralty Chief, and Georg Alexander von Müller, the head of the Naval Cabinet.[23] Capelle resigned from the Navy in October 1918, shortly before the end of the war. His deputy, Paul Behnke, briefly replaced him but was also forced out due to his opposition to Scheer, who had by this time been promoted to the Seekriegsleitung (Chief of Naval Staff).[24]

In 1919, Capelle testified before the Reichstag War Failures Committee about his tenure as State Secretary during the war, particularly relating to the U-boat campaign against Britain.[25] Capelle died in Wiesbaden on 23 February 1931.[9]

Decorations and awards edit

  Kingdom of Prussia/  German Empire
Other German states

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c Tucker & Roberts, p. 426
  2. ^ Hubatsch, p. 131.
  3. ^ Gottschall, p. 225
  4. ^ Hildebrand Röhr & Steinmetz, p. 175
  5. ^ Weir, p. 23
  6. ^ Tucker & Roberts, pp. 426–427
  7. ^ Weir, p. 55
  8. ^ Weir, p. 70
  9. ^ a b c d e f Tucker & Roberts, p. 427
  10. ^ Tucker, p. 46
  11. ^ Hamilton & Herwig, pp. 157–158
  12. ^ Fischer, p. 54
  13. ^ Herwig (1972), p. 211
  14. ^ Kelly, p. 404
  15. ^ Scheck, pp. 30–31
  16. ^ Weir, p. 144
  17. ^ Forstmeier & Breyer, p. 44
  18. ^ Herwig (1980), p. 203
  19. ^ Weir, p. 179
  20. ^ Weir, p. 151
  21. ^ Weir, pp. 180–181
  22. ^ Rangliste der Kaiserlich Deutschen Marine für das Jahr 1918, p. 6
  23. ^ Weir, p. 171
  24. ^ Weir, p. 176
  25. ^ Rose, p. 261

References edit

  • Fischer, Fritz (1967). Germany's Aims in the First World War. New York: W.W. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-09798-6.
  • Forstmeier, Friedrich; Breyer, Siegfried (2002). Deutsche Großkampfschiffe 1915 bis 1918 – Die Entwicklung der Typenfrage im Ersten Weltkrieg (in German). Bonn: Bernard & Graefe. ISBN 3-7637-6230-2.
  • Gottschall, Terrell D. (2003). By Order of the Kaiser. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-309-5.
  • Hamilton, Richard F.; Herwig, Holger (2003). The Origins of World War I. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-81735-8.
  • Herwig, Holger (1972). "Admirals versus Generals: The War Aims of the Imperial German Navy, 1914–1918". Central European History. Cambridge University Press. 5 (3): 208–233. doi:10.1017/S000893890001548X. S2CID 145244594.
  • Herwig, Holger (1980). "Luxury" Fleet: The Imperial German Navy 1888–1918. Amherst, New York: Humanity Books. ISBN 978-1-57392-286-9.
  • Hildebrand, Hans H.; Röhr, Albert; Steinmetz, Hans-Otto (1993). Die Deutschen Kriegsschiffe. Vol. 5. Ratingen: Mundus Verlag. ISBN 978-3-8364-9743-5.
  • Hubatsch, Walther (1957). "Capelle, Eduard Carl Ernst von (seit 1912)". Deutsche Neue Biographie. Vol. 3.
  • Kelly, Patrick J. (2011). Tirpitz and the Imperial German Navy. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-35593-5.
  • Rangliste der kaiserlich deutschen Marine für das Jahr 1918: auf Befehl Seiner Majestät des Kaisers und Königs (in German). Berlin: Ernst Siegfried Mittler. 1918. OCLC 742334601.
  • Rose, Lisle Abbott (2007). Power at Sea. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press. ISBN 978-0-8262-1701-1.
  • Scheck, Raffael (1998). Alfred Von Tirpitz and German Right-Wing Politics, 1914–1930. Atlantic Highlands: Humanities Press. ISBN 0-391-04043-X.
  • Tucker, Spencer (2002). Who's Who in Twentieth Century Warfare. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-203-40253-7.
  • Tucker, Spencer; Roberts, Priscilla (2005). World War I: A Student Encyclopedia. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 1-85109-879-8.
  • Weir, Gary (1992). Building the Kaiser's Navy. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-929-8.

eduard, capelle, october, 1855, february, 1931, german, imperial, navy, officer, from, celle, joined, imperial, german, navy, 1872, serving, various, roles, including, executive, officer, battleship, weissenburg, chief, administrative, department, reichsmarine. Eduard von Capelle 10 October 1855 23 February 1931 was a German Imperial Navy officer from Celle He joined the Imperial German Navy in 1872 serving in various roles including as an executive officer of the battleship SMS Weissenburg and chief of the administrative department in the Reichsmarineamt Imperial Naval Office Working closely with Admiral Alfred von Tirpitz he was primarily responsible for drafting the Flottengesetze German Naval Laws and was promoted to admiral in 1913 He was supportive of Germany s entry into war during July Crisis of 1914 Eduard von CapelleBorn10 October 1855Celle Lower Saxony Kingdom of HanoverDied23 February 1931 1931 02 23 aged 75 Wiesbaden Hesse GermanyAllegiance German EmpireService wbr branch Imperial German NavyYears of service1872 1918RankAdmiralCapelle was recalled from his post in March 1916 to replace Tirpitz as the State Secretary of the Imperial Navy Office and oversaw the German naval war during the latter three years of World War I Initially against unrestricted submarine warfare he was persuaded to support it the continuation of this policy caused the United States to declare war on Germany Nevertheless he maintained his belief in the supremacy of battleships and argued against halting their construction Facing opposition from those who saw him as too much of a conservative in naval affairs he was asked by Kaiser Wilhelm II to resign which he did in October 1918 He resided in Wiesbaden until his death on 23 February 1931 Contents 1 Early career 2 World War I 3 Decorations and awards 4 Citations 5 ReferencesEarly career editEduard Capelle was born on 10 October 1855 in Celle in what was then the Kingdom of Hanover 1 His father Eduard 1832 1897 was a factory owner and his mother was Emilie Kraus 1831 1903 the younger Eduard had a brother Hans 1864 1948 a physicist who served as President of the German Naval Observatory 2 Capelle joined the Imperial German Navy in 1872 as a naval cadet He served in various capacities in the fleet 1 including in the Torpedowesen Torpedo Department with Alfred von Tirpitz 3 In December 1894 he was serving as the executive officer of the battleship SMS Weissenburg 4 He was later assigned to the Reichsmarineamt RMA the Imperial Navy Office as the chief of the administrative department 5 In this capacity he began to work closely with now Admiral von Tirpitz who had been promoted to become the State Secretary for the Navy 1 Capelle was responsible for drafting the legislation that became the Flottengesetz the Fleet Laws and the supplementary laws in 1906 1908 and 1912 6 During this period he and other senior members of the naval command worked repeatedly to break monopolies in the shipbuilding industry as a means to keep costs low and stable 7 The only firm that proved resistant to their efforts was Krupp which held a near monopoly on armor plating and large caliber guns and proved to be too powerful for the RMA to effectively pressure 8 Capelle was promoted to konteradmiral rear admiral in 1906 and to vizeadmiral vice admiral three years later 9 In 1912 Capelle was elevated to the nobility which allowed him to add von to his name 10 He rose to the rank of admiral in 1913 9 and by 1914 he was Tirpitz s deputy During the July Crisis that instigated World War I Capelle was temporarily the acting state secretary as Tirpitz was away at his summer home 11 In this capacity he endorsed the blank check Kaiser Wilhelm II had extended to Austria Hungary in the aftermath of the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand by Serbian terrorists the previous month 12 With regard to the deepening crisis Capelle stated that while many swords will be rattled and much poisonous ink spilled Europe will not tear itself to pieces over Serbia 13 World War I editBy late August 1915 Capelle had fallen ill and so requested retirement from the navy though he agreed to remain in the post until 1 November 14 In March 1916 Capelle was recalled to service and replaced Tirpitz whose views on the naval war had become unpopular as the State Secretary for the Navy 9 Tirpitz had by this point pushed for unrestricted submarine warfare in order to break the deadlock on the Western Front Chancellor Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg fearing war with the United States manoeuvred to have Tirpitz relieved of command He meanwhile secured the support of Capelle and brought him out of retirement 15 Capelle s position as state secretary was decidedly weaker than under Tirpitz s tenure this was in large part due to the course of the war and the discrediting of the surface fleet policy advocated at first by Tirpitz and then by Capelle Admiral Paul Behncke who would later serve as Capelle s deputy stated that In the Navy the position of the RMA has become purely administrative it no longer plays a leading role 16 Though Capelle was initially opposed to unrestricted submarine warfare a group of senior officers led by the commander of the High Seas Fleet Admiral Reinhard Scheer convinced Capelle to change his mind who in turn worked to convince Wilhelm II to permit a return to unrestricted submarine warfare By January 1917 Wilhelm II had consented and Germany resumed the U boat campaign against Britain on 1 February 9 The US Congress voted to declare war with Germany on 6 April 1917 Even though he agreed to resume the U boat campaign Capelle did not believe that submarines had replaced the battleship as the decisive naval weapon arguing in February 1917 that new battleship construction that of the L 20e a design should not be stopped 17 In order to keep costs down Capelle announced that the Navy would not build any ships over 41 000 t 40 000 long tons 45 000 short tons displacement or with a draft in excess of 9 8 m 32 ft these were the maximum dimensions of the existing harbours and dry docks Larger designs would require prohibitively expensive dredging on harbours and channels and new docks 18 Nevertheless by February 1918 design work on the new class of battleships had ground to a halt and Capelle could do nothing about it by this far into the war the U boat arm had absorbed all of the limited production capabilities of the Navy 19 Capelle also advocated for shipbuilding contracts with the Ottoman Empire Germany s wartime ally he secured contracts for twelve torpedo boats and twelve U boats for the Ottoman Navy 20 Capelle also used the naval construction program to keep skilled workers out of the Army in order to preserve their expertise for the Navy s needs 21 In August 1917 Capelle banned socialist literature from the fleet in the aftermath of several disturbances On 9 October 1917 in a speech to the Reichstag he accused the radical independent branch of the Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands SPD Social Democratic Party of knowingly supporting these revolutionary actions which drove moderate SPD members closer to the radical independent faction This led to the toppling of Chancellor Georg Michaelis who was replaced by Georg von Hertling 9 On 9 January 1918 Capelle was awarded the Pour le Merite Germany s highest military award 22 By August 1918 Scheer and a group of prominent commanders in the High Seas Fleet had convinced Wilhelm II that the senior officers in the naval high command needed to be replaced by more dynamic individuals To this end Wilhelm II requested the resignation of Capelle Henning von Holtzendorff the Admiralty Chief and Georg Alexander von Muller the head of the Naval Cabinet 23 Capelle resigned from the Navy in October 1918 shortly before the end of the war His deputy Paul Behnke briefly replaced him but was also forced out due to his opposition to Scheer who had by this time been promoted to the Seekriegsleitung Chief of Naval Staff 24 In 1919 Capelle testified before the Reichstag War Failures Committee about his tenure as State Secretary during the war particularly relating to the U boat campaign against Britain 25 Capelle died in Wiesbaden on 23 February 1931 9 Decorations and awards edit nbsp Kingdom of Prussia nbsp German EmpireOrder of the Red Eagle 1st class with Oak Leaves and Swords Order of the Crown 1st class Pour le Merite 9 January 1918 Knight s Cross of the Royal House Order of Hohenzollern Iron Cross of 1914 1st and 2nd class Service AwardOther German states nbsp Kingdom of Bavaria Military Merit Order 1st class with Swords nbsp Bremen nbsp Hamburg and nbsp Lubeck Hanseatic Cross nbsp Grand Duchy of Hesse Commander Second Class of the Order of Philip nbsp Mecklenburg Schwerin Commander of the Order of the Griffon nbsp Oldenburg Honorary Grand Cross of the House and Merit Order of Peter Frederick Louis nbsp Oldenburg Friedrich August Cross 1st class nbsp Kingdom of Saxony Grand Cross of the Albert Order with golden star and swordsCitations edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eduard von Capelle a b c Tucker amp Roberts p 426 Hubatsch p 131 Gottschall p 225 Hildebrand Rohr amp Steinmetz p 175 Weir p 23 Tucker amp Roberts pp 426 427 Weir p 55 Weir p 70 a b c d e f Tucker amp Roberts p 427 Tucker p 46 Hamilton amp Herwig pp 157 158 Fischer p 54 Herwig 1972 p 211 Kelly p 404 Scheck pp 30 31 Weir p 144 Forstmeier amp Breyer p 44 Herwig 1980 p 203 Weir p 179 Weir p 151 Weir pp 180 181 Rangliste der Kaiserlich Deutschen Marine fur das Jahr 1918 p 6 Weir p 171 Weir p 176 Rose p 261References editFischer Fritz 1967 Germany s Aims in the First World War New York W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 09798 6 Forstmeier Friedrich Breyer Siegfried 2002 Deutsche Grosskampfschiffe 1915 bis 1918 Die Entwicklung der Typenfrage im Ersten Weltkrieg in German Bonn Bernard amp Graefe ISBN 3 7637 6230 2 Gottschall Terrell D 2003 By Order of the Kaiser Annapolis Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 55750 309 5 Hamilton Richard F Herwig Holger 2003 The Origins of World War I Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 81735 8 Herwig Holger 1972 Admirals versus Generals The War Aims of the Imperial German Navy 1914 1918 Central European History Cambridge University Press 5 3 208 233 doi 10 1017 S000893890001548X S2CID 145244594 Herwig Holger 1980 Luxury Fleet The Imperial German Navy 1888 1918 Amherst New York Humanity Books ISBN 978 1 57392 286 9 Hildebrand Hans H Rohr Albert Steinmetz Hans Otto 1993 Die Deutschen Kriegsschiffe Vol 5 Ratingen Mundus Verlag ISBN 978 3 8364 9743 5 Hubatsch Walther 1957 Capelle Eduard Carl Ernst von seit 1912 Deutsche Neue Biographie Vol 3 Kelly Patrick J 2011 Tirpitz and the Imperial German Navy Bloomington IN Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 35593 5 Rangliste der kaiserlich deutschen Marine fur das Jahr 1918 auf Befehl Seiner Majestat des Kaisers und Konigs in German Berlin Ernst Siegfried Mittler 1918 OCLC 742334601 Rose Lisle Abbott 2007 Power at Sea Columbia MO University of Missouri Press ISBN 978 0 8262 1701 1 Scheck Raffael 1998 Alfred Von Tirpitz and German Right Wing Politics 1914 1930 Atlantic Highlands Humanities Press ISBN 0 391 04043 X Tucker Spencer 2002 Who s Who in Twentieth Century Warfare London Routledge ISBN 0 203 40253 7 Tucker Spencer Roberts Priscilla 2005 World War I A Student Encyclopedia Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO ISBN 1 85109 879 8 Weir Gary 1992 Building the Kaiser s Navy Annapolis Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 55750 929 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eduard von Capelle amp oldid 1208480658, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.