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Franz von Papen

Franz Joseph Hermann Michael Maria von Papen, Erbsälzer zu Werl und Neuwerk (German: [ˈfʁants fɔn ˈpaːpn̩] ; 29 October 1879 – 2 May 1969) was a German conservative politician, diplomat, Prussian nobleman and General Staff officer. He served as the chancellor of Germany in 1932, and then as the vice-chancellor under Adolf Hitler from 1933 to 1934.

Franz von Papen
Papen in 1933
Chancellor of Germany
(Weimar Republic)
In office
1 June 1932 – 3 December 1932
PresidentPaul von Hindenburg
Preceded byHeinrich Brüning
Succeeded byKurt von Schleicher
Ambassador of Germany to Turkey
In office
April 1939 – August 1944
Nominated byAdolf Hitler
Preceded byFriedrich von Keller
Succeeded byWilhelm Haas (1952)
Ambassador of Germany to Austria
In office
August 1934 – February 1938
Nominated byAdolf Hitler
Preceded byKurt Rieth
Succeeded byCarl-Hermann Mueller-Graaf (1952)
Vice-Chancellor of Germany
In office
30 January 1933 – 7 August 1934
ChancellorAdolf Hitler
Preceded byHermann Dietrich
Succeeded byFranz Blücher (1949 as Vice-Chancellor of West Germany)
Reichskommissar of Prussia
In office
30 January 1933 – 10 April 1933
Preceded byKurt von Schleicher
Succeeded byHermann Göring
In office
20 July 1932 – 3 December 1932
Preceded byOtto Braun
Succeeded byKurt von Schleicher
Personal details
Born(1879-10-29)29 October 1879
Werl, Prussia, German Empire
Died2 May 1969(1969-05-02) (aged 89)
Sasbach, West Germany
Resting placeWallerfangen, Germany
Political partyCentre Party (1918–1932)
Independent (1932–1938)
Nazi Party (NSDAP; 1938–1945)
Spouse
Martha von Boch-Galhau
(m. 1905; died 1961)
ChildrenFriedrich

Antoinette

Isabella

Margaret

Stephanie
Alma materPreußische Hauptkadettenanstalt
ProfessionDiplomat, military officer
Signature
Military service
Allegiance German Empire
Branch/serviceImperial German Army
Years of service1898–1919
RankLieutenant-colonel
Battles/warsWorld War I
Awards

Born into a wealthy family of Westphalian Catholic aristocrats, Papen served in the Prussian Army from 1898 onward and was trained as a German General Staff officer. He served as military attaché in Mexico and the United States from 1913 to 1915, while also covertly organising acts of sabotage in the United States and quietly backing and financing Mexican forces in the Mexican Revolution on behalf of German military intelligence.

After being expelled as persona non grata by the United States State Department in 1915, he served as a battalion commander on the Western Front of World War I and finished his war service in the Middle Eastern theatre as a lieutenant colonel.

Asked to become chancellor of the Weimar Republic by President Paul von Hindenburg in 1932, Papen ruled by presidential decree. He negotiated the end of reparations at the Lausanne Conference of 1932. He also launched the Preußenschlag coup against the Social Democratic Party-led Government in the Free State of Prussia. His failure to secure a base of support in the Reichstag led to his removal by Hindenburg and replacement by General Kurt von Schleicher.

Determined to return to power, Papen, believing that Adolf Hitler could be controlled once he was in the government, pressured Hindenburg to appoint Hitler as chancellor and Papen as vice-chancellor in 1933 in a cabinet ostensibly not under Nazi Party domination. Seeing military dictatorship as the only alternative to a Nazi Party chancellor, Hindenburg consented. Papen and his allies were quickly marginalized by Hitler and he left the government after the Night of the Long Knives in 1934, during which the Nazis killed some of his allies and confidants. Subsequently, Papen served the German Foreign Office as the ambassador in Vienna from 1934 to 1938 and in Ankara from 1939 to 1944. He joined the Nazi Party in 1938.[1]

After the Second World War, Papen was indicted for Nazi war crimes in the Nuremberg trials before the International Military Tribunal but was acquitted of all charges. In 1947, a West German denazification court found Papen to have acted as the main culprit in crimes relating to the Nazi government. Papen was given a sentence of eight years' imprisonment at hard labour, but was released on appeal in 1949. Franz von Papen's memoirs were published in 1952 and 1953; he died in 1969.

Early life and education Edit

Papen was born into a wealthy and noble Catholic family in Werl, Westphalia, the third child of Friedrich von Papen-Köningen (1839–1906) and his wife Anna Laura von Steffens (1852–1939).[2]

Papen was sent to a cadet school in Bensberg of his own volition at the age of 11 in 1891. His four years there were followed by three years of training at the Preußische Hauptkadettenanstalt in Lichterfelde. He was trained as a Herrenreiter ("gentleman rider").[2] He served for a period as a military attendant in the Kaiser's Palace and as a second lieutenant in his father's old unit, the Westphalian Uhlan Regiment No. 5 in Düsseldorf. Papen joined the German General Staff as a captain in March 1913.

He married Martha von Boch-Galhau (1880–1961) on 3 May 1905. Papen's wife was the daughter of a wealthy Saarland industrialist whose dowry made him a very rich man.[3] An excellent horseman and a man of much charm, Papen cut a dashing figure and during this time, befriended Kurt von Schleicher.[3] Papen was proud of his family's having been granted hereditary rights since 1298 to mine brine salt at Werl. He always believed in the superiority of the aristocracy over commoners.[4] Fluent in both French and English, he travelled widely all over Europe, the Middle East and North America.[3] He was devoted to Kaiser Wilhelm II.[5] Influenced by the books of General Friedrich von Bernhardi, Papen was a militarist throughout his life.[5]

Military attaché in Washington, D.C. Edit

He entered the diplomatic service in December 1913 as a military attaché to the German ambassador in the United States.

In early 1914 he travelled to Mexico (to which he was also accredited) and observed the Mexican Revolution. At one time, when the anti-Huerta Zapatistas were advancing on Mexico City, Papen organised a group of European volunteers to fight for Mexican General Victoriano Huerta.[6] In the spring of 1914, as German military attaché to Mexico, Papen was deeply involved in selling arms to the government of General Huerta, believing he could place Mexico in the German sphere of influence, though the collapse of Huerta's regime in July 1914 ended that hope.[7] In April 1914, Papen personally observed the United States occupation of Veracruz when the US seized the city of Veracruz, despite orders from Berlin to stay in Mexico City.[8] During his time in Mexico, Papen acquired the love of international intrigue and adventure that characterised his later diplomatic postings in the United States, Austria and Turkey.[8] On 30 July 1914, Papen arrived in Washington, D.C., from Mexico to take up his post as German military attaché to the United States.[9]

 
Papen as the German Military Attaché for Washington, D.C. in 1915

During the First World War, Papen tried to buy weapons for Germany in the United States, but the British blockade made shipping arms to Germany almost impossible.[10] On 22 August 1914, Papen hired US private detective Paul Koeing, based in New York City, to conduct a sabotage and bombing campaign against businesses in New York owned by citizens from the Allied nations.[11] Papen, who was given an unlimited fund of cash to draw on by Berlin, attempted to block the British, French and Russian governments from buying war supplies in the United States.[10] Papen set up a front company that tried to preclusively purchase every hydraulic press in the US for the next two years to limit artillery shell production by US firms with contracts with the Allies.[10] To enable German citizens living in the Americas to return to Germany, Papen set up an operation in New York to forge US passports.[11]

Starting in September 1914, Papen abused his diplomatic immunity as German military attaché, violating US laws to start organising plans for incursions into Canada for a campaign of sabotage against canals, bridges and railroads.[12] In October 1914, Papen became involved with what was later dubbed "the Hindu–German Conspiracy", by covertly arranging with Indian nationalists based in California for arms trafficking to the latter for a planned uprising against the British Raj.[13] In February 1915, Papen also covertly organised the Vanceboro international bridge bombing, in which his diplomatic immunity protected him from arrest.[14] At the same time, he remained involved in plans to restore Huerta to power, and arranged for the arming and financing of a planned invasion of Mexico.[15]

 
Papen in New York City on 22 December 1915, after being declared persona non grata by the U.S. government and recalled to Germany

Papen's covert operations were known to British intelligence, which shared its information with the US government.[16] As a result, for complicity in the planning of acts of sabotage[17] on 28 December 1915, Captain von Papen was declared persona non grata and recalled to Germany.[18] Upon his return, he was awarded the Iron Cross.

Papen remained involved in covert operations in the Americas. In February 1916, he contacted Mexican Colonel Gonzalo Enrile, living in Cuba, in an attempt to arrange German support for Félix Díaz, the would-be strongman of Mexico.[19] Papen served as an intermediary between Roger Casement of the Irish Volunteers and German naval intelligence for the purchase and delivery of arms to be used in Dublin during the Easter Rising of 1916. He remained involved in further covert operations with Indian nationalists as well. In April 1916, a US federal grand jury returned an indictment against Papen for a plot to blow up Canada's Welland Canal; he remained under indictment until he became Chancellor of Germany, at which time the charges were dropped.[18]

Army service in World War I Edit

As a Catholic, Papen belonged to the Centre Party, the centrist party that almost all German Catholics supported, but during the course of the war, the nationalist conservative Papen became estranged from his party.[20] Papen disapproved of Matthias Erzberger's cooperation with Social Democrats, and regarded the Reichstag Peace Resolution of 19 July 1917 as almost treason.[20]

Later in World War I, Papen returned to the army on active service, at first on the Western Front. In 1916 Papen took command of the 2nd Battalion of the 93rd Reserve Infantry Regiment of the 4th Guards Infantry Division fighting in Flanders.[21] On 22 August 1916, Papen's battalion took heavy losses while successfully resisting a British attack during the Battle of the Somme.[22] Between November 1916 – February 1917, Papen's battalion was engaged in almost continuous heavy fighting.[23] He was awarded the Iron Cross, 1st Class. On 11 April 1917, Papen fought at Vimy Ridge, where his battalion was defeated with heavy losses by the Canadian Corps.[23]

After Vimy, Papen asked for a transfer to the Middle East, which was approved.[23] From June 1917 Papen served as an officer on the General Staff in the Middle East, and then as an officer attached to the Ottoman army in Palestine.[23][24] During his time in Constantinople, Papen befriended Joachim von Ribbentrop. Between October–December 1917, Papen took part in the heavy fighting in the Sinai and Palestine Campaign.[25] Promoted to the rank of lieutenant-colonel, he returned to Germany and left the army soon after the armistice which halted the fighting in November 1918.

After the Turks signed an armistice with the Allies on 30 October 1918, the German Asia Corps was ordered home, and Papen was in the mountains at Karapinar when he heard on 11 November 1918 that the war was over.[25] The new republic ordered soldiers' councils to be organised in the German Army, including the Asian corps, which General Otto Liman von Sanders attempted to obey, and which Papen refused to obey.[26] Sanders ordered Papen arrested for his insubordination, which caused Papen to leave his post without permission as he fled to Germany in civilian clothing to personally meet Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg, who had the charges dropped.[27]

Catholic politician Edit

After leaving the German Army in the spring of 1919, Papen purchased a country estate, the Haus Merfeld, living the life of a "gentleman farmer" in Dülmen.[28] In April 1920, during the Communist uprising in the Ruhr, Papen took command of a Freikorps unit to protect Catholicism from the "Red marauders".[29] Impressed with his leadership of his Freikorps unit, Papen was urged to pursue a career in politics.[30] In the fall of 1920, the president of the Westphalian Farmer's Association, Baron Engelbert von Kerkerinck zur Borg, told Papen his association would campaign for him if he ran for the Prussian Landtag.[31]

Papen entered politics and renewed his connection with the Centre Party. As a monarchist Papen positioned himself as part of the national conservative wing of the party that rejected both republicanism and the Weimar Coalition with the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD). In reality, Papen's political ideology was much closer to the German National People's Party (DVNP) and he seems to have belonged to the Centre Party out of loyalty to the Catholic Church in Germany and in the hope that he could shift his party's platform towards restoring the constitutional monarchy deposed in 1918.[3][32] Despite this ambiguity, Papen was undoubtedly a highly powerful dealmaker within the political party, particularly as the largest shareholder and the chief of the editorial board in the party's Catholic newspaper Germania, the most prestigious of the German Catholic media sources at the time.[33][34]

Papen was a member of the Landtag of Prussia from 1921 to 1928 and from 1930 to 1932, representing a heavily Catholic constituency in rural Westphalia.[35] However, he rarely attended Landtag sessions and never spoke at them during his elected mandate.[36] He subsequently tried to have his name entered as a candidate for the Centre Party for the Reichstag elections of May 1924, but this was blocked by the party leadership.[37] In February 1925, Papen was one of the six Centre deputies in the Landtag who voted with the German National People's Party and the German People's Party against the SPD-Centre coalition government.[32] Papen was nearly expelled from the party for disobeying orders from his party leadership through his votes in the Landtag.[32] In the 1925 presidential elections, Papen surprised his party by supporting the DVNP candidate Paul von Hindenburg over the Centre Party's own candidate Wilhelm Marx. Papen, along with two of his future cabinet ministers, was a member of Arthur Moeller van den Bruck's exclusive Berlin Deutscher Herrenklub (German Gentlemen's Club).[38][39]

In March 1930, Papen welcomed the coming of presidential government.[40] But with chancellor Heinrich Brüning's presidential government's dependence upon the Social Democrats in the Reichstag to "tolerate" it by not voting to cancel laws passed under Article 48, Papen grew more critical.[40] In a speech before a group of farmers in October 1931, Papen called for Brüning to disallow the SPD and base his presidential government on "tolerance" from the NSDAP instead.[41] Papen demanded that Brüning transform the "concealed dictatorship" of a presidential government into a dictatorship that would unite all of the German right under its banner.[41] In the March–April 1932 German presidential election, Papen voted for Hindenburg on the grounds he was the best man to unite the right, while in the Prussian Landtag's election for the Landtag speaker, Papen voted for the Nazi Hans Kerrl.[41]

Chancellorship Edit

 
Papen (left) with his eventual successor, Defence Minister Kurt von Schleicher, watching a horse race in Berlin-Karlshorst

On 1 June 1932, Papen was suddenly promoted to high office when President Hindenburg appointed him Chancellor, an appointment he owed to General Kurt von Schleicher, an old friend from the pre-war General Staff, and an influential advisor of President Hindenburg. Schleicher selected Papen because his conservative, aristocratic background and military career made him acceptable to Hindenburg and would create the groundwork for a possible coalition between the Centre Party and the Nazis.[42] It was Schleicher, who himself became Defence Minister, who was responsible for selecting the entire cabinet.[43] The day before, Papen had promised party chairman Ludwig Kaas he would not accept any appointment. After Papen broke his pledge, Kaas branded him the "Ephialtes of the Centre Party", after the infamous traitor of the Battle of Thermopylae. On 31 May 1932, in order to forestall being expelled from the party, Papen resigned from it.[38]

The cabinet over which Papen presided was labelled the "cabinet of barons" or "cabinet of monocles".[44] Papen had little support in the Reichstag; the only parties committed to supporting him were the national conservative German National People's Party (DNVP) and the conservative liberal German People's Party (DVP). The Centre Party refused its support for him on account of his betrayal of Chancellor Brüning.[38] Schleicher's planned Centre-Nazi coalition thus failed to materialize, and the Nazis now had little reason to prop up Papen's weak government.[38] Papen grew very close to Hindenburg and first met Adolf Hitler in June 1932.[39][43]

 
Papen's cabinet (2 June 1932)

Papen consented on 31 May to Hitler's and Hindenburg's agreement of 30 May that the Nazi Party would tolerate Papen's government if fresh elections were called, the ban on the SA cancelled, and the Nazis granted access to the radio network.[45] As agreed, the Papen government dissolved the Reichstag on 4 June and called a national election by 31 July 1932, in the hope that the Nazis would win the largest number of seats in the Reichstag, which would allow him the majority he needed to establish an authoritarian government.[36] In a so-called "presidential government", Papen would rule by Article 48, having emergency decrees signed by President Hindenburg.[36] On 16 June 1932, the new government lifted the ban on the SA and the SS, eliminating the last remaining rationale for Nazi support for Papen.[46]

 
Papen in June 1932

In June and July 1932, Papen represented Germany at the Lausanne conference where, on 9 July, German reparation obligations were abolished.[47] Germany had ceased paying reparations in June 1931 under the Hoover Moratorium, and most of the groundwork for the Lausanne conference laid by Brüning, but Papen took credit for the success.[47] In exchange for cancellation of reparations, Germany was supposed to make a one-time payment of 3 million Reichsmarks to France, a commitment that Papen repudiated immediately upon his return to Berlin.[47][48]

Through Article 48, Papen enacted on 4 September economic policies that cut the payments offered by the unemployment insurance fund, subjected jobless Germans seeking unemployment insurance to a means test, and lowered wages (including those reached by collective bargaining), while arranging tax cuts for corporations and the rich.[49][50] These austerity policies made Papen deeply unpopular with the general population but had the backing of the business elite.[51][52]

Negotiations between the Nazis, the Centre Party, and Papen for a new Prussian government began on 8 June but broke down due to the Centre Party's hostility to its deserter Papen.[46] On 11 July 1932 Papen received the support of the cabinet and the President for a decree allowing the national government to take over the Prussian government, which was dominated by the SPD. This move was later justified through the rumour that the Social Democrats and the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) were planning a merger.[53][54] The political violence of the so-called Altona Bloody Sunday clash between Nazis, Communists, and the police on 17 July, gave Papen his pretext.[55] On 20 July, Papen launched a coup against the SPD coalition government of Prussia in the so-called Preußenschlag (Prussian Coup). Berlin was put on military shutdown and Papen sent men to arrest the Prussian authorities, whom he accused, despite lack of evidence, of being in league with the Communists. Hereafter, Papen declared himself Commissioner (Reichskommissar) of Prussia by way of another emergency decree that he elicited from Hindenburg, further weakening the democracy of the Weimar Republic.[56] Papen viewed the coup as a gift to the Nazis, who had been informed of it by 9 July, and were now supposed to support his government.[55]

On 23 July, Papen instructed German representatives walk out of the World Disarmament Conference after the French delegation warned that allowing Germany Gleichberechtigung ("equality of status") in armaments would lead to another world war. Papen stated that Germany would not return to the conference until the other powers agreed to consider his demand for equal status.[47]

 
Papen arriving for the Reichstag session of 12 September 1932

In the Reichstag election of 31 July the Nazis won the largest number of seats. To combat the rise in SA and SS political terrorism that began right after the elections, Papen on 9 August brought in via Article 48 a new law that drastically streamlined the judicial process in death penalty cases while limiting the right of appeal.[57][58] New special courts were also created.[57] A few hours later in the town of Potempa, five SA men murdered Communist labourer Konrad Pietrzuch.[58] The "Potempa Five" were promptly arrested, then convicted and sentenced to death on 23 August by a special court.[59] The Potempa case generated enormous media attention, and Hitler made it clear that he would not support Papen's government if the "Five" were executed. On 2 September, Papen in his capacity as Commissioner of Prussia acquiesced to Hitler's demands and commuted the sentences of the "Five" to life imprisonment.[60]

On 11 August, the public holiday of Constitution Day, which commemorated the adoption of the Weimar Constitution in 1919, Papen and his Interior Minister Baron Wilhelm von Gayl called a press conference to announce plans for a new constitution that would, in effect, turn Germany into a dictatorship.[61] Two days later, Schleicher and Papen offered the position of vice-chancellor to Hitler, who rejected it.[62]

 
Reichstag on 12 September 1932 – Papen (standing, left) demands the floor and is ignored by Speaker Göring (right).

When the new Reichstag assembled on 12 September, Papen hoped to destroy the growing alliance between the Nazis and the Centre Party.[59] That day at the President's estate in Neudeck, Papen, Schleicher, and Gayl obtained in advance from Hindenburg a decree to dissolve the Reichstag, then secured another decree to suspend elections beyond the constitutional 60 days.[59] The Communists tabled a motion of no confidence in the Papen government.[63] Papen had anticipated this move by the Communists, but had been assured that there would be an immediate objection. However, when no one objected, Papen placed the red folder containing the dissolution decree on Reichstag president Hermann Göring's desk. He demanded the floor in order to read it, but Göring pretended not to see him; the Nazis and the Centre Party had decided to support the Communist motion.[64][65][66] The motion carried by 512 votes to 42.[67][68] Realizing that he did not have nearly enough support to go through with his plan to suspend elections, Papen decided to call another election to punish the Reichstag for the vote of no-confidence.[67]

 
Papen and Schleicher in 1932

On 27 October, the Supreme Court of Germany issued a ruling that Papen's coup deposing the Prussian government was illegal, but allowed Papen to retain control of Prussia.[69] In November 1932, Papen violated the terms of the Treaty of Versailles by approving a program of refurbishment for the German Navy of an aircraft carrier, six battleships, six cruisers, six destroyer flotillas, and 16 submarines, intended to allow Germany to control both the North Sea and the Baltic.[70]

In the November 1932 election, the Nazis lost seats, but Papen was still unable to secure a Reichstag that could be counted on not to pass another vote of no-confidence in his government.[71] Papen's attempt to negotiate with Hitler failed.[72] Under pressure from Schleicher, Papen resigned on 17 November and formed a caretaker government.[71] He told his cabinet that he planned to have martial law declared, which would allow him to rule as a dictator.[71] However, at a cabinet meeting on 2 December, Papen was informed by Schleicher's associate General Eugen Ott that Reichswehr war games showed there was no way to maintain order against the Nazis and Communists.[73][74] Realizing that Schleicher was moving to replace him, Papen asked Hindenburg to dismiss Schleicher as Defence Minister. Instead, Hindenburg appointed Schleicher as Chancellor.[73]

Bringing Hitler to power Edit

After his resignation, Papen regularly visited Hindenburg, missing no opportunity to attack Schleicher in these visits.[75] Schleicher had promised Hindenburg that he would never attack Papen in public when he became chancellor, but in a bid to distance himself from the very unpopular Papen, Schleicher in a series of speeches in December 1932 – January 1933 did just that, upsetting Hindenburg.[76] Papen was embittered by the way his former best friend, Schleicher, had brought him down, and was determined to become chancellor again.[39] On 4 January 1933, Hitler and Papen met in secret at the banker Kurt Baron von Schröder's house in Cologne to discuss a common strategy against Schleicher.[77]

On 9 January 1933, Papen and Hindenburg agreed to form a new government that would bring in Hitler.[78] On the evening of 22 January in a meeting at the villa of Joachim von Ribbentrop in Berlin, Papen made the concession of abandoning his claim to the chancellorship and committed to support Hitler as chancellor in a proposed "Government of National Concentration", in which Papen would serve as vice-chancellor and Minister-President of Prussia.[79] On 23 January, Papen presented to Hindenburg his idea for Hitler to be made chancellor, while keeping him "boxed" in.[80] On the same day Schleicher, to avoid a vote of no-confidence in the Reichstag when it reconvened on 31 January, asked the president to declare a state of emergency. Hindenburg declined and Schleicher resigned at midday on 28 January. Hindenburg formally gave Papen the task of forming a new government.[81]

 
The Hitler cabinet on 30 January 1933

In the morning of 29 January, Papen met with Hitler and Hermann Göring at his apartment, where it was agreed that Papen would serve as vice-chancellor and Commissioner for Prussia.[82][83] It was in the same meeting that Papen first learned that Hitler wanted to dissolve the Reichstag when he became chancellor and, once the Nazis had won a majority of the seats in the ensuing elections, to activate the Enabling Act in order to be able to enact laws without the involvement of the Reichstag.[84] When the people around Papen voiced their concerns about putting Hitler in power, he asked them, "What do you want?" and reassured them, "I have the confidence of Hindenburg! In two months, we'll have pushed Hitler so far into the corner that he'll squeal."[85][86]

Editor-in-Chief Theodor Wolff commented in an editorial in the "Berliner Tagblatt" on January 29, 1933: "The strongest natures, those with the iron forehead or the board before the head, will insist on the anti-parliamentary solution, on the closing of the Reichstag House, on the coup d'état."[87]

In the end, the president, who had previously vowed never to let Hitler become chancellor, appointed Hitler to the post at 11:30 am on 30 January 1933, with Papen as vice-chancellor.[88] While Papen's intrigues appeared to have brought Hitler into power, the crucial dynamic was in fact provided by the Nazi Party's electoral support, which made military dictatorship the only alternative to Nazi rule for Hindenburg and his circle.[89]

At the formation of Hitler's cabinet on 30 January, only three Nazis held cabinet portfolios: Hitler, Göring, and Wilhelm Frick. The other eight posts were held by conservatives close to Papen, including the DNVP chairman, Alfred Hugenberg. Additionally, as part of the deal that allowed Hitler to become chancellor, Papen was granted the right to attend every meeting between Hitler and Hindenburg. Moreover, cabinet decisions were made by majority vote. Papen naively believed that his conservative friends' majority in the cabinet and his closeness to Hindenburg would keep Hitler in check.[90]

Vice-chancellor Edit

Hitler and his allies instead quickly marginalised Papen and the rest of the cabinet. For example, as part of the deal between Hitler and Papen, Göring had been appointed interior minister of Prussia, thus putting the largest police force in Germany under Nazi control. Göring frequently acted without consulting his nominal superior, Papen. On 1 February 1933, Hitler presented to the cabinet an Article 48 decree law that had been drafted by Papen in November 1932 allowing the police to take people into "protective custody" without charges. It was signed into law by Hindenburg on 4 February as the "Decree for the Protection of the German People".[91]

On the evening of 27 February 1933, Papen joined Hitler, Göring and Goebbels at the burning Reichstag and told him that he shared their belief that this was the signal for Communist revolution.[92] On 18 March 1933, in his capacity as Reich Commissioner for Prussia, Papen freed the "Potempa Five" under the grounds the murder of Konrad Pietzuch was an act of self-defense, making the five SA men "innocent victims" of a miscarriage of justice.[93] Neither Papen nor his conservative allies waged a fight against the Reichstag Fire Decree in late February or the Enabling Act in March. After the Enabling Act was passed, serious deliberations more or less ceased at cabinet meetings when they took place at all, which subsequently neutralised Papen's attempt to "box" Hitler in through cabinet-based decision-making.

At the Reichstag election of 5 March 1933, Papen was elected as a deputy in an electoral alliance with Hugenberg's DNVP. Papen endorsed Hitler's plan, presented at a cabinet meeting on 7 March 1933, to destroy the Centre Party by severing the Catholic Church from it.[94] This was the origin of the Reichskonkordat that Papen was to negotiate with the Catholic Church later in the spring of 1933.[95] On 5 April 1933, Papen founded a new political party called the League of German Catholics Cross and Eagle, which was intended as a conservative Catholic party that would hold the NSDAP in check while at the same time working with the NSDAP.[96] Both the Centre Party and the Bavarian People's Party declined to merge into Papen's new party while the rival Coalition of Catholic Germans, which was sponsored by the NSDAP, proved more effective at recruiting German Catholics.[97]

 
Papen at the signing of the Reichskonkordat in Rome on 20 July 1933

On 8 April Papen travelled to the Vatican to offer a Reichskonkordat that defined the German state's relationship with the Catholic Church. During his stay in Rome, Papen met the Italian Prime Minister Benito Mussolini and failed to persuade him to drop his support for the Austrian chancellor Dollfuss.[98] Papen was euphoric at the Reichskonkordat that he negotiated with Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli in Rome, believing that this was a diplomatic success that restored his status in Germany, guaranteed the rights of German Catholics in the Third Reich, and required the disbandment of the Centre Party and the Bavarian People's Party, thereby achieving one of Papen's main political goals since June 1932.[94] During Papen's absence, the Landtag of Prussia elected Göring as prime minister on 10 April. Papen saw the end of the Centre Party that he had engineered as one of his greatest achievements.[94] Later in May 1933, he was forced to disband the League of German Catholics Cross and Eagle owing to lack of public interest.[99]

 
Papen with Hitler on 1 May 1933

In September 1933, Papen visited Budapest to meet the Hungarian Prime Minister Gyula Gömbös, and to discuss how Germany and Hungary might best co-operate against Czechoslovakia.[100] The Hungarians wanted the volksdeutsche (ethnic German) minorities in the Banat, Transylvania, Slovakia and Carpathia to agitate to return to Hungary in co-operation with the Magyar minorities, a demand that Papen refused to meet.[101] In September 1933, when the Soviet Union ended its secret military co-operation with Germany, the Soviets justified their move under the grounds that Papen had informed the French of the Soviet support for German violations of the Versailles Treaty.[102]

On 3 October 1933, Papen was named a member of the Academy for German Law at its inaugural meeting.[103] Then, on 14 November 1933, Papen was appointed the Reich Commissioner for the Saar.[104] The Saarland was under the rule of the League of Nations and a referendum was scheduled for 1935 under which the Saarlanders had the option to return to Germany, join France, or retain the status quo.[104] As a conservative Catholic whose wife was from the Saarland, Papen had much understanding of the heavily Catholic region, and he gave numerous speeches urging the Saarlanders to vote to return to Germany.[104] Papen was successful in persuading the majority of the Catholic clergy in the Saarland to campaign for a return to Germany, and 90% of the Saarland voted to return to Germany in the 1935 referendum.[105]

Papen began covert talks with other conservative forces with the aim of convincing Hindenburg to restore the balance of power back to the conservatives.[106] By May 1934, it had become clear that Hindenburg was dying, with doctors telling Papen that the president only had a few months left to live.[107] Papen together with Otto Meissner, Hindenburg's chief of staff, and Major Oskar von Hindenburg, Hindenburg's son, drafted a "political will and last testament", which the president signed on 11 May 1934.[107] At Papen's request, the will called for the dismissal of certain Nazi ministers from the cabinet, and regular cabinet meetings, which would have achieved Papen's plan of January 1933 for a broad governing coalition of the right.[107]

The Marburg speech Edit

With the Army command recently having hinted at the need for Hitler to control the SA, Papen delivered an address at the University of Marburg on 17 June 1934 where he called for the restoration of some freedoms, demanded an end to the calls for a "second revolution" and advocated the cessation of SA terror in the streets.[108] Papen intended to "tame" Hitler with the Marburg speech, and gave the speech without any effort at co-ordination beforehand with either Hindenburg or the Reichswehr.[109] The speech was crafted by Papen's speech writer, Edgar Julius Jung, with the assistance of Papen's secretary Herbert von Bose and Catholic leader Erich Klausener, and Papen had first seen the text of the speech only two hours before he delivered it at the University of Marburg. [110] The "Marburg speech" was well received by the graduating students of Marburg university who all loudly cheered the vice-chancellor.[111] Extracts were reproduced in the Frankfurter Zeitung, the most prestigious newspaper in Germany, and from there picked up by the foreign press.[108]

The speech incensed Hitler, and its publication was suppressed by the Propaganda Ministry.[112] Papen told Hitler that unless the ban on the Marburg speech was lifted and Hitler declared himself willing to follow the line recommended by Papen in the speech, he would resign and would inform Hindenburg why he had resigned.[112] Hitler outwitted Papen by telling him that he agreed with all of the criticism of his regime made in the Marburg speech; told him Goebbels was wrong to ban the speech and he would have the ban lifted at once; and promised that the SA would be put in their place, provided Papen agreed not to resign and would meet with Hindenburg in a joint interview with him.[112] Papen accepted Hitler's suggestions.[113]

Night of the Long Knives Edit

 
The architects of the purge: Hitler, Göring, Goebbels, and Hess. Only Himmler and Heydrich are missing.

Two weeks after the Marburg speech, Hitler responded to the armed forces' demands to suppress the ambitions of Ernst Röhm and the SA by purging the SA leadership. The purge, known as the Night of the Long Knives, took place between 30 June and 2 July 1934. Though Papen's bold speech against some of the excesses committed by the Nazis had angered Hitler, the latter was aware that he could not act directly against the vice-chancellor without offending Hindenburg. Instead, in the Night of the Long Knives, the Vice-Chancellery, Papen's office, was ransacked by the Schutzstaffel (SS); his associates Herbert von Bose, Erich Klausener and Edgar Julius Jung were shot. Papen himself was placed under house arrest at his villa with his telephone line cut. Some accounts indicate that this "protective custody" was ordered by Göring, who felt the ex-diplomat could be useful in the future.[114]

Reportedly Papen arrived at the Chancellery, exhausted from days of house arrest without sleep, to find the chancellor seated with other Nazi ministers around a round table, with no place for him but a hole in the middle. He insisted on a private audience with Hitler and announced his resignation, stating, "My service to the Fatherland is over!" The following day, Papen's resignation as vice-chancellor was formally accepted and publicised, with no successor appointed. When Hindenburg died on 2 August, the last conservative obstacle to complete Nazi rule was gone.[115]

Ambassador to Austria Edit

 
Papen at Berlin Tempelhof Airport in July 1934, just before departing for Vienna

Hitler offered Papen the assignment of German ambassador to Vienna, which Papen accepted.[116] Papen was a German nationalist who always believed that Austria was destined to join Germany in an Anschluss (annexation), and felt that a success in bringing that about might restore his career.[117] During his time as ambassador to Austria, Papen stood outside the normal chain of command of the Auswärtiges Amt (Foreign Office) as he refused to take orders from Konstantin von Neurath, his own former Foreign Minister. Instead, Papen reported directly to Hitler.[118]

Papen met often with Austrian Chancellor Kurt von Schuschnigg to assure him that Germany did not wish to annex his country, and only wanted the banned Austrian Nazi Party to participate in Austrian politics.[119] In late 1934-early 1935, Papen took a break from his duties as German ambassador in Vienna to lead the Deutsche Front ("German Front") in the Saarland plebiscite on 13 January 1935, where the League of Nations observers monitoring the vote noted Papen's "ruthless methods" as he campaigned for the region to return to Germany.[120]

 
Papen on his way to Berchtesgaden, 21 February 1938

Papen also contributed to achieving Hitler's goal of undermining Austrian sovereignty and bringing about the Anschluss.[121] On 28 August 1935, Papen negotiated a deal under which the German press would cease its attacks on the Austrian government, in return for which the Austrian press would cease its attacks on Germany's.[122] Papen played a major role in negotiating the 1936 Austro-German agreement under which Austria declared itself a "German state" whose foreign policy would always be aligned with Berlin's and allowed for members of the "national opposition" to enter the Austrian cabinet in exchange for which the Austrian Nazis abandoned their terrorist campaign against the government.[123][124] The treaty Papen signed in Vienna on 11 July 1936 promised that Germany would not seek to annex Austria and largely placed Austria in the German sphere of influence, greatly reducing Italian influence on Austria.[125] In July 1936, Papen reported to Hitler that the Austro-German treaty he had just signed was the "decisive step" towards ending Austrian independence, and it was only a matter of time before the Anschluss took place.[126]

In the summer and fall of 1937, Papen pressured the Austrians to include more Nazis in the government.[127] In September 1937, Papen returned to Berlin when Benito Mussolini visited Germany, serving as Hitler's adviser on Italo-German talks about Austria.[128] Though Papen was dismissed from his mission in Austria on 4 February 1938, Hitler drafted him to arrange a meeting between the German dictator and Schuschnigg at Berchtesgaden.[129] The ultimatum that Hitler presented to Schuschnigg at the meeting on 12 February 1938 led to the Austrian government's capitulation to German threats and pressure, and paved the way for the Anschluss.

Ambassador to Turkey Edit

Papen later served the German government as Ambassador to Turkey from 1939 to 1944. In April 1938, after the retirement of the previous ambassador, Frederich von Keller on his 65th birthday, the German foreign minister Joachim von Ribbentrop attempted to appoint Papen as ambassador in Ankara, but the appointment was vetoed by the Turkish president Mustafa Kemal Atatürk who remembered Papen well with considerable distaste when he had served alongside him in World War I.[130] In November 1938 and in February 1939, the new Turkish president General İsmet İnönü again vetoed Ribbentrop's attempts to have Papen appointed as German ambassador to Turkey.[131] In April 1939, Turkey accepted Papen as ambassador.[131] Papen was keen to return to Turkey, where he had served during World War I.[132]

Papen arrived in Turkey on 27 April 1939, just after the signing of a UK-Turkish declaration of friendship.[133] İnönü wanted Turkey to join the UK-inspired "peace front" that was meant to stop Germany.[134] On 24 June 1939, France and Turkey signed a declaration committing them to upholding collective security in the Balkans.[135] On 21 August 1939, Papen presented Turkey with a diplomatic note threatening economic sanctions and the cancellation of all arms contracts if Turkey did not cease leaning towards joining the UK-French "peace front", a threat that Turkey rebuffed.[136]

On 1 September 1939, Germany invaded Poland, and two days later on 3 September 1939 the UK and France declared war on Germany.[137] Papen claimed later to have been opposed to Hitler's foreign policy in 1939, and was very depressed when he heard the news of the German attack on Poland on the radio.[137] Papen continued his work of representing the Reich in Turkey under the grounds that resigning in protest "would indicate the moral weakening in Germany", which was something he could never do.[137]

On 19 October 1939, Papen suffered a notable setback when Turkey signed a treaty of alliance with France and the UK.[138] During the Phoney War, the conservative Catholic Papen found himself to his own discomfort working together with Soviet diplomats in Ankara to pressure Turkey not to enter the war on the Allied side.[139] In June 1940, with France's defeat, İnönü abandoned his pro-Allied neutrality, and Papen's influence in Ankara dramatically increased.[140]

Between 1940 and 1942 Papen signed three economic agreements that placed Turkey in the German economic sphere of influence.[141] Papen hinted more than once to Turkey that Germany was prepared to support Bulgarian claims to Thrace if Turkey did not prove more accommodating to Germany.[142] In May 1941, when the Germans dispatched an expeditionary force to Iraq to fight against the UK in the Anglo-Iraqi War, Papen persuaded Turkey to allow arms in Syria to be shipped along a railroad linking Syria to Iraq.[143] In June 1941, Papen successfully negotiated a Treaty of Friendship and Non-aggression with Turkey, signed on 17 June 1941, which prevented Turkey from entering the war on the Allied side.[144] After Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of the Soviet Union that began on 22 June 1941, Papen persuaded Turkey to close the Turkish straits to Soviet warships, but was unable to have the straits closed to Soviet merchant ships as he demanded.[145]

Papen claimed after the war to have done everything within his power to save Turkish Jews living in countries occupied by Germany from deportation to the death camps, but an examination of the Auswärtige Amt's records does not support him.[146] During the war, Papen used his connections with Turkish Army officers with whom he served in World War I to try to influence Turkey into joining the Axis, held parties at the German embassy which were attended by leading Turkish politicians and used "special funds" to bribe Turks into following a pro-German line.[147] As an ambassador to Turkey, Papen survived a Soviet assassination attempt on 24 February 1942 by agents from the NKVD:[148] a bomb exploded prematurely, killing the bomber and no one else, although Papen was slightly injured. In 1943, Papen frustrated a UK attempt to have Turkey join the war on the Allied side by getting Hitler to send a letter to Inönü assuring him that Germany had no interest in invading Turkey and by threatening to have the Luftwaffe bomb Istanbul if Turkey joined the Allies.[149]

In the summer and fall of 1943, realizing the war was lost, Papen attended secret meetings with the agents of the US Office of Strategic Services (OSS) in Istanbul.[150] Papen exaggerated his power in Germany to the OSS, and asked for US support to make him dictator of a post-Hitler Germany.[150] US President Franklin D. Roosevelt rejected the offer when he heard of it and told the OSS to stop talking to Papen.[151] From October 1943, Papen and the German embassy gained access to the "Cicero" documents of secret agent Elyesa Bazna, including information and the Tehran Conference, which Papen revealed selectively to Inönu to strain Allied-Turkish relations.[152][153] In January 1944, Papen, after learning via the "Cicero" documents of a UK plan to have the Royal Air Force use airfields in Turkey to bomb the oil fields of Ploiești in Romania, told the Turkish foreign minister Hüseyin Numan Menemencioğlu that if Turkey allowed the RAF to use Turkish air fields to bomb Ploiești, the Luftwaffe would use its bases in Bulgaria and Greece to bomb and destroy Istanbul and Izmir.[154]

On 20 April 1944, Turkey, wishing to ingratiate itself with the Allies, ceased selling chromium to Germany.[155] On 26 May 1944 Menemencioğlu announced that Turkey was reducing exports to Germany by 50%, and on 2 August 1944 Turkey severed diplomatic relations with Germany, forcing Papen to return to Berlin.[156] After Pope Pius XI died in February 1939, his successor Pope Pius XII did not renew Papen's honorary title of Papal chamberlain. As nuncio, the future Pope John XXIII, Angelo Roncalli, became acquainted with Papen in Greece and Turkey during World War II. The German government considered appointing Papen ambassador to the Holy See, but Pope Pius XII, after consulting Konrad von Preysing, Bishop of Berlin, rejected this proposal. In August 1944, Papen had his last meeting with Hitler after arriving back in Germany from Turkey. Here, Hitler awarded Papen the Knight's Cross of the War Merit Cross.[157] In September 1944, Papen settled at his estate at Wallerfangen in the Saarland that had been given to him by his father-in-law.[158] On 29 November 1944, Papen could hear in the distance the guns of the advancing US Third Army, which caused him and his family to flee deeper into Germany.[159]

Post-war years Edit

 
Papen at the Nuremberg Trials

Papen was captured along with his son Franz Jr. at his own home by First Lieutenant Thomas McKinley[160] and members of the US 194th Glider Infantry Regiment, on 14 April 1945. Also present during the capture was a small band from the 550th Airborne glider infantry.[161] Papen was forced by the US to visit a concentration camp to see firsthand the nature of the regime he had served from start to finish and had fostered.[158]

 
Papen in April 1964

Papen was one of the defendants at the main Nuremberg War Crimes Trial. The investigating tribunal found no solid evidence to support claims that Papen had been involved in the annexation of Austria.[162] The court acquitted him, stating that while he had committed a number of "political immoralities", these actions were not punishable under the "conspiracy to commit crimes against peace" written in Papen's indictment. The Soviets wanted to execute him.[163]

Papen was subsequently sentenced to eight years' hard labour by a West German denazification court, but he was released on appeal in 1949. Until 1954, Papen was forbidden to publish in West Germany, and so he wrote a series of articles in newspapers in Spain, attacking the Federal Republic from a conservative Catholic position in much the same terms that he had attacked the Weimar Republic.[164]

Papen unsuccessfully tried to restart his political career in the 1950s; he lived at the Castle of Benzenhofen near Ravensburg in Upper Swabia. Pope John XXIII restored his title of Papal Chamberlain on 24 July 1959. Papen was also a Knight of Malta, and he was awarded the Grand Cross of the Pontifical Order of Pius IX.

 
Von Papen's grave in Wallerfangen, Saarland

Papen published a number of books and memoirs, in which he defended his policies and dealt with the years 1930 to 1933 as well as early Western Cold War politics. Papen praised the Schuman Plan to pacify relations between France and West Germany as "wise and statesmanlike" and claimed to believe in the economic and military unification and integration of Western Europe.[165] In 1952 and 1953, Papen published his memoirs in two volumes in Switzerland. Right up until his death in 1969, Papen gave speeches and wrote articles in the newspapers, defending himself against the charge that he had played a crucial role in having Hitler appointed chancellor and that he had served a criminal regime; these led to vitriolic exchanges with West German historians, journalists and political scientists.[166] Franz von Papen died in Obersasbach, West Germany, on 2 May 1969 at the age of 89.[167]

Publications Edit

  • Appell an das deutsche Gewissen. Reden zur nationalen Revolution, Stalling, Oldenburg, 1933 (OCLC 490719263)
  • Memoirs (German title: Der Wahrheit eine Gasse), Translated by Brian Connell, Andre Deutsch, London, 1952 (OCLC 86049352)
  • Europa, was nun? Betrachtungen zur Politik der Westmächte, Göttinger Verlags-Anstalt, Göttingen, 1954 (OCLC 4027794)
  • Vom Scheitern einer Demokratie. 1930 – 1933, Hase und Koehler, Mainz, 1968 (OCLC 1970844)

In popular culture Edit

Franz von Papen has been portrayed by these actors in these film, television and theatrical productions:[168]

See also Edit

References Edit

Citations Edit

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  157. ^ Franz von Papen, Memoirs, p. 532.
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  162. ^ Grzebyk 2013, p. 147.
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  164. ^ Turner 1996, p. 238.
  165. ^ Franz von Papen, Memoirs, pp. 586–587.
  166. ^ Rolfs 1995, p. 441.
  167. ^ Wistrich, Robert S. (2002). Papen, Franz von. p. 189. ISBN 9780415260381. {{cite encyclopedia}}: |work= ignored (help)
  168. ^ "Franz von Papen (Character)". IMDb.com. Retrieved 20 May 2008.

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Further reading Edit

  • Bracher, Karl Dietrich Die Auflösung der Weimarer Republik; eine Studie zum Problem des Machtverfalls in der Demokratie Villingen: Schwarzwald, Ring-Verlag, 1971.
  • Bracher, Karl Dietrich. The German Dictatorship: The Origins, Structure, and Effects of National Socialism. New York: Praeger Publishers, 1970.
  • Evans, Richard J. The Third Reich in Power. New York: Penguin, 2006.
  • Fest, Joachim C. and Bullock, Michael (trans.) "Franz von Papen and the Conservative Collaboration" in The Face of the Third Reich New York: Penguin, 1979 (orig. published in German in 1963), pp. 229–246. ISBN 978-0201407143.
  • Jones, Larry Eugene. "From Democracy to Dictatorship: The Fall of Weimar and the Triumph of Nazism, 1930–1933". in The Oxford Handbook of the Weimar Republic (2022) pp 95–108. excerpt
  • Weinberg, Gerhard (2005). Hitler's Foreign Policy 1933–1939: The Road to World War II. New York: Enigma Books.
  • Weinberg, Gerhard (1996). Germany, Hitler, and World War II: Essays in Modern German and World History. New York & Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

External links Edit

  • Biographical timeline
  • Vice-Chancellor Franz von Papen speaks in Trier about the Saarland referendum, 1934
  • Papen at the Republic Day celebrations in Turkey, 1941
  • Newspaper clippings about Franz von Papen in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
  • Information about Franz von Papen in the Reichstag database
Political offices
Preceded by Chancellor of Germany
1932
Succeeded by
Preceded byas Minister President Reichskommissar of Prussia
1932
Preceded by Vice-Chancellor of Germany
1933–1934
Vacant
Title next held by
Franz Blücher
Preceded by Reichskommissar of Prussia
1933
Succeeded byas Minister President
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
Kurt Rieth
Ambassador of Germany to Austria
1934–1938
Vacant
Title next held by
Carl-Hermann Mueller-Graaf
Preceded by Ambassador of Germany to Turkey
1939–1944
Vacant
Title next held by
Wilhelm Haas

franz, papen, franz, joseph, hermann, michael, maria, papen, erbsälzer, werl, neuwerk, german, ˈfʁants, fɔn, ˈpaːpn, october, 1879, 1969, german, conservative, politician, diplomat, prussian, nobleman, general, staff, officer, served, chancellor, germany, 1932. Franz Joseph Hermann Michael Maria von Papen Erbsalzer zu Werl und Neuwerk German ˈfʁants fɔn ˈpaːpn 29 October 1879 2 May 1969 was a German conservative politician diplomat Prussian nobleman and General Staff officer He served as the chancellor of Germany in 1932 and then as the vice chancellor under Adolf Hitler from 1933 to 1934 Franz von PapenPapen in 1933Chancellor of Germany Weimar Republic In office 1 June 1932 3 December 1932PresidentPaul von HindenburgPreceded byHeinrich BruningSucceeded byKurt von SchleicherAmbassador of Germany to TurkeyIn office April 1939 August 1944Nominated byAdolf HitlerPreceded byFriedrich von KellerSucceeded byWilhelm Haas 1952 Ambassador of Germany to AustriaIn office August 1934 February 1938Nominated byAdolf HitlerPreceded byKurt RiethSucceeded byCarl Hermann Mueller Graaf 1952 Vice Chancellor of GermanyIn office 30 January 1933 7 August 1934ChancellorAdolf HitlerPreceded byHermann DietrichSucceeded byFranz Blucher 1949 as Vice Chancellor of West Germany Reichskommissar of PrussiaIn office 30 January 1933 10 April 1933Preceded byKurt von SchleicherSucceeded byHermann GoringIn office 20 July 1932 3 December 1932Preceded byOtto BraunSucceeded byKurt von SchleicherPersonal detailsBorn 1879 10 29 29 October 1879Werl Prussia German EmpireDied2 May 1969 1969 05 02 aged 89 Sasbach West GermanyResting placeWallerfangen GermanyPolitical partyCentre Party 1918 1932 Independent 1932 1938 Nazi Party NSDAP 1938 1945 SpouseMartha von Boch Galhau m 1905 died 1961 wbr ChildrenFriedrich AntoinetteIsabellaMargaret StephanieAlma materPreussische HauptkadettenanstaltProfessionDiplomat military officerSignatureMilitary serviceAllegiance German EmpireBranch serviceImperial German ArmyYears of service1898 1919RankLieutenant colonelBattles warsWorld War I Western Front Battle of the Somme Battle of Vimy Ridge Middle Eastern theatre Sinai and Palestine CampaignAwardsIron Cross 1st Class War Merit CrossBorn into a wealthy family of Westphalian Catholic aristocrats Papen served in the Prussian Army from 1898 onward and was trained as a German General Staff officer He served as military attache in Mexico and the United States from 1913 to 1915 while also covertly organising acts of sabotage in the United States and quietly backing and financing Mexican forces in the Mexican Revolution on behalf of German military intelligence After being expelled as persona non grata by the United States State Department in 1915 he served as a battalion commander on the Western Front of World War I and finished his war service in the Middle Eastern theatre as a lieutenant colonel Asked to become chancellor of the Weimar Republic by President Paul von Hindenburg in 1932 Papen ruled by presidential decree He negotiated the end of reparations at the Lausanne Conference of 1932 He also launched the Preussenschlag coup against the Social Democratic Party led Government in the Free State of Prussia His failure to secure a base of support in the Reichstag led to his removal by Hindenburg and replacement by General Kurt von Schleicher Determined to return to power Papen believing that Adolf Hitler could be controlled once he was in the government pressured Hindenburg to appoint Hitler as chancellor and Papen as vice chancellor in 1933 in a cabinet ostensibly not under Nazi Party domination Seeing military dictatorship as the only alternative to a Nazi Party chancellor Hindenburg consented Papen and his allies were quickly marginalized by Hitler and he left the government after the Night of the Long Knives in 1934 during which the Nazis killed some of his allies and confidants Subsequently Papen served the German Foreign Office as the ambassador in Vienna from 1934 to 1938 and in Ankara from 1939 to 1944 He joined the Nazi Party in 1938 1 After the Second World War Papen was indicted for Nazi war crimes in the Nuremberg trials before the International Military Tribunal but was acquitted of all charges In 1947 a West German denazification court found Papen to have acted as the main culprit in crimes relating to the Nazi government Papen was given a sentence of eight years imprisonment at hard labour but was released on appeal in 1949 Franz von Papen s memoirs were published in 1952 and 1953 he died in 1969 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Military attache in Washington D C 3 Army service in World War I 4 Catholic politician 5 Chancellorship 6 Bringing Hitler to power 7 Vice chancellor 7 1 The Marburg speech 7 2 Night of the Long Knives 8 Ambassador to Austria 9 Ambassador to Turkey 10 Post war years 11 Publications 12 In popular culture 13 See also 14 References 14 1 Citations 14 2 Sources 15 Further reading 16 External linksEarly life and education EditPapen was born into a wealthy and noble Catholic family in Werl Westphalia the third child of Friedrich von Papen Koningen 1839 1906 and his wife Anna Laura von Steffens 1852 1939 2 Papen was sent to a cadet school in Bensberg of his own volition at the age of 11 in 1891 His four years there were followed by three years of training at the Preussische Hauptkadettenanstalt in Lichterfelde He was trained as a Herrenreiter gentleman rider 2 He served for a period as a military attendant in the Kaiser s Palace and as a second lieutenant in his father s old unit the Westphalian Uhlan Regiment No 5 in Dusseldorf Papen joined the German General Staff as a captain in March 1913 He married Martha von Boch Galhau 1880 1961 on 3 May 1905 Papen s wife was the daughter of a wealthy Saarland industrialist whose dowry made him a very rich man 3 An excellent horseman and a man of much charm Papen cut a dashing figure and during this time befriended Kurt von Schleicher 3 Papen was proud of his family s having been granted hereditary rights since 1298 to mine brine salt at Werl He always believed in the superiority of the aristocracy over commoners 4 Fluent in both French and English he travelled widely all over Europe the Middle East and North America 3 He was devoted to Kaiser Wilhelm II 5 Influenced by the books of General Friedrich von Bernhardi Papen was a militarist throughout his life 5 Military attache in Washington D C EditHe entered the diplomatic service in December 1913 as a military attache to the German ambassador in the United States In early 1914 he travelled to Mexico to which he was also accredited and observed the Mexican Revolution At one time when the anti Huerta Zapatistas were advancing on Mexico City Papen organised a group of European volunteers to fight for Mexican General Victoriano Huerta 6 In the spring of 1914 as German military attache to Mexico Papen was deeply involved in selling arms to the government of General Huerta believing he could place Mexico in the German sphere of influence though the collapse of Huerta s regime in July 1914 ended that hope 7 In April 1914 Papen personally observed the United States occupation of Veracruz when the US seized the city of Veracruz despite orders from Berlin to stay in Mexico City 8 During his time in Mexico Papen acquired the love of international intrigue and adventure that characterised his later diplomatic postings in the United States Austria and Turkey 8 On 30 July 1914 Papen arrived in Washington D C from Mexico to take up his post as German military attache to the United States 9 nbsp Papen as the German Military Attache for Washington D C in 1915During the First World War Papen tried to buy weapons for Germany in the United States but the British blockade made shipping arms to Germany almost impossible 10 On 22 August 1914 Papen hired US private detective Paul Koeing based in New York City to conduct a sabotage and bombing campaign against businesses in New York owned by citizens from the Allied nations 11 Papen who was given an unlimited fund of cash to draw on by Berlin attempted to block the British French and Russian governments from buying war supplies in the United States 10 Papen set up a front company that tried to preclusively purchase every hydraulic press in the US for the next two years to limit artillery shell production by US firms with contracts with the Allies 10 To enable German citizens living in the Americas to return to Germany Papen set up an operation in New York to forge US passports 11 Starting in September 1914 Papen abused his diplomatic immunity as German military attache violating US laws to start organising plans for incursions into Canada for a campaign of sabotage against canals bridges and railroads 12 In October 1914 Papen became involved with what was later dubbed the Hindu German Conspiracy by covertly arranging with Indian nationalists based in California for arms trafficking to the latter for a planned uprising against the British Raj 13 In February 1915 Papen also covertly organised the Vanceboro international bridge bombing in which his diplomatic immunity protected him from arrest 14 At the same time he remained involved in plans to restore Huerta to power and arranged for the arming and financing of a planned invasion of Mexico 15 nbsp Papen in New York City on 22 December 1915 after being declared persona non grata by the U S government and recalled to GermanyPapen s covert operations were known to British intelligence which shared its information with the US government 16 As a result for complicity in the planning of acts of sabotage 17 on 28 December 1915 Captain von Papen was declared persona non grata and recalled to Germany 18 Upon his return he was awarded the Iron Cross Papen remained involved in covert operations in the Americas In February 1916 he contacted Mexican Colonel Gonzalo Enrile living in Cuba in an attempt to arrange German support for Felix Diaz the would be strongman of Mexico 19 Papen served as an intermediary between Roger Casement of the Irish Volunteers and German naval intelligence for the purchase and delivery of arms to be used in Dublin during the Easter Rising of 1916 He remained involved in further covert operations with Indian nationalists as well In April 1916 a US federal grand jury returned an indictment against Papen for a plot to blow up Canada s Welland Canal he remained under indictment until he became Chancellor of Germany at which time the charges were dropped 18 Army service in World War I EditAs a Catholic Papen belonged to the Centre Party the centrist party that almost all German Catholics supported but during the course of the war the nationalist conservative Papen became estranged from his party 20 Papen disapproved of Matthias Erzberger s cooperation with Social Democrats and regarded the Reichstag Peace Resolution of 19 July 1917 as almost treason 20 Later in World War I Papen returned to the army on active service at first on the Western Front In 1916 Papen took command of the 2nd Battalion of the 93rd Reserve Infantry Regiment of the 4th Guards Infantry Division fighting in Flanders 21 On 22 August 1916 Papen s battalion took heavy losses while successfully resisting a British attack during the Battle of the Somme 22 Between November 1916 February 1917 Papen s battalion was engaged in almost continuous heavy fighting 23 He was awarded the Iron Cross 1st Class On 11 April 1917 Papen fought at Vimy Ridge where his battalion was defeated with heavy losses by the Canadian Corps 23 After Vimy Papen asked for a transfer to the Middle East which was approved 23 From June 1917 Papen served as an officer on the General Staff in the Middle East and then as an officer attached to the Ottoman army in Palestine 23 24 During his time in Constantinople Papen befriended Joachim von Ribbentrop Between October December 1917 Papen took part in the heavy fighting in the Sinai and Palestine Campaign 25 Promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel he returned to Germany and left the army soon after the armistice which halted the fighting in November 1918 After the Turks signed an armistice with the Allies on 30 October 1918 the German Asia Corps was ordered home and Papen was in the mountains at Karapinar when he heard on 11 November 1918 that the war was over 25 The new republic ordered soldiers councils to be organised in the German Army including the Asian corps which General Otto Liman von Sanders attempted to obey and which Papen refused to obey 26 Sanders ordered Papen arrested for his insubordination which caused Papen to leave his post without permission as he fled to Germany in civilian clothing to personally meet Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg who had the charges dropped 27 Catholic politician EditAfter leaving the German Army in the spring of 1919 Papen purchased a country estate the Haus Merfeld living the life of a gentleman farmer in Dulmen 28 In April 1920 during the Communist uprising in the Ruhr Papen took command of a Freikorps unit to protect Catholicism from the Red marauders 29 Impressed with his leadership of his Freikorps unit Papen was urged to pursue a career in politics 30 In the fall of 1920 the president of the Westphalian Farmer s Association Baron Engelbert von Kerkerinck zur Borg told Papen his association would campaign for him if he ran for the Prussian Landtag 31 Papen entered politics and renewed his connection with the Centre Party As a monarchist Papen positioned himself as part of the national conservative wing of the party that rejected both republicanism and the Weimar Coalition with the Social Democratic Party of Germany SPD In reality Papen s political ideology was much closer to the German National People s Party DVNP and he seems to have belonged to the Centre Party out of loyalty to the Catholic Church in Germany and in the hope that he could shift his party s platform towards restoring the constitutional monarchy deposed in 1918 3 32 Despite this ambiguity Papen was undoubtedly a highly powerful dealmaker within the political party particularly as the largest shareholder and the chief of the editorial board in the party s Catholic newspaper Germania the most prestigious of the German Catholic media sources at the time 33 34 Papen was a member of the Landtag of Prussia from 1921 to 1928 and from 1930 to 1932 representing a heavily Catholic constituency in rural Westphalia 35 However he rarely attended Landtag sessions and never spoke at them during his elected mandate 36 He subsequently tried to have his name entered as a candidate for the Centre Party for the Reichstag elections of May 1924 but this was blocked by the party leadership 37 In February 1925 Papen was one of the six Centre deputies in the Landtag who voted with the German National People s Party and the German People s Party against the SPD Centre coalition government 32 Papen was nearly expelled from the party for disobeying orders from his party leadership through his votes in the Landtag 32 In the 1925 presidential elections Papen surprised his party by supporting the DVNP candidate Paul von Hindenburg over the Centre Party s own candidate Wilhelm Marx Papen along with two of his future cabinet ministers was a member of Arthur Moeller van den Bruck s exclusive Berlin Deutscher Herrenklub German Gentlemen s Club 38 39 In March 1930 Papen welcomed the coming of presidential government 40 But with chancellor Heinrich Bruning s presidential government s dependence upon the Social Democrats in the Reichstag to tolerate it by not voting to cancel laws passed under Article 48 Papen grew more critical 40 In a speech before a group of farmers in October 1931 Papen called for Bruning to disallow the SPD and base his presidential government on tolerance from the NSDAP instead 41 Papen demanded that Bruning transform the concealed dictatorship of a presidential government into a dictatorship that would unite all of the German right under its banner 41 In the March April 1932 German presidential election Papen voted for Hindenburg on the grounds he was the best man to unite the right while in the Prussian Landtag s election for the Landtag speaker Papen voted for the Nazi Hans Kerrl 41 Chancellorship Edit nbsp Papen left with his eventual successor Defence Minister Kurt von Schleicher watching a horse race in Berlin KarlshorstOn 1 June 1932 Papen was suddenly promoted to high office when President Hindenburg appointed him Chancellor an appointment he owed to General Kurt von Schleicher an old friend from the pre war General Staff and an influential advisor of President Hindenburg Schleicher selected Papen because his conservative aristocratic background and military career made him acceptable to Hindenburg and would create the groundwork for a possible coalition between the Centre Party and the Nazis 42 It was Schleicher who himself became Defence Minister who was responsible for selecting the entire cabinet 43 The day before Papen had promised party chairman Ludwig Kaas he would not accept any appointment After Papen broke his pledge Kaas branded him the Ephialtes of the Centre Party after the infamous traitor of the Battle of Thermopylae On 31 May 1932 in order to forestall being expelled from the party Papen resigned from it 38 The cabinet over which Papen presided was labelled the cabinet of barons or cabinet of monocles 44 Papen had little support in the Reichstag the only parties committed to supporting him were the national conservative German National People s Party DNVP and the conservative liberal German People s Party DVP The Centre Party refused its support for him on account of his betrayal of Chancellor Bruning 38 Schleicher s planned Centre Nazi coalition thus failed to materialize and the Nazis now had little reason to prop up Papen s weak government 38 Papen grew very close to Hindenburg and first met Adolf Hitler in June 1932 39 43 nbsp Papen s cabinet 2 June 1932 Papen consented on 31 May to Hitler s and Hindenburg s agreement of 30 May that the Nazi Party would tolerate Papen s government if fresh elections were called the ban on the SA cancelled and the Nazis granted access to the radio network 45 As agreed the Papen government dissolved the Reichstag on 4 June and called a national election by 31 July 1932 in the hope that the Nazis would win the largest number of seats in the Reichstag which would allow him the majority he needed to establish an authoritarian government 36 In a so called presidential government Papen would rule by Article 48 having emergency decrees signed by President Hindenburg 36 On 16 June 1932 the new government lifted the ban on the SA and the SS eliminating the last remaining rationale for Nazi support for Papen 46 nbsp Papen in June 1932In June and July 1932 Papen represented Germany at the Lausanne conference where on 9 July German reparation obligations were abolished 47 Germany had ceased paying reparations in June 1931 under the Hoover Moratorium and most of the groundwork for the Lausanne conference laid by Bruning but Papen took credit for the success 47 In exchange for cancellation of reparations Germany was supposed to make a one time payment of 3 million Reichsmarks to France a commitment that Papen repudiated immediately upon his return to Berlin 47 48 Through Article 48 Papen enacted on 4 September economic policies that cut the payments offered by the unemployment insurance fund subjected jobless Germans seeking unemployment insurance to a means test and lowered wages including those reached by collective bargaining while arranging tax cuts for corporations and the rich 49 50 These austerity policies made Papen deeply unpopular with the general population but had the backing of the business elite 51 52 Negotiations between the Nazis the Centre Party and Papen for a new Prussian government began on 8 June but broke down due to the Centre Party s hostility to its deserter Papen 46 On 11 July 1932 Papen received the support of the cabinet and the President for a decree allowing the national government to take over the Prussian government which was dominated by the SPD This move was later justified through the rumour that the Social Democrats and the Communist Party of Germany KPD were planning a merger 53 54 The political violence of the so called Altona Bloody Sunday clash between Nazis Communists and the police on 17 July gave Papen his pretext 55 On 20 July Papen launched a coup against the SPD coalition government of Prussia in the so called Preussenschlag Prussian Coup Berlin was put on military shutdown and Papen sent men to arrest the Prussian authorities whom he accused despite lack of evidence of being in league with the Communists Hereafter Papen declared himself Commissioner Reichskommissar of Prussia by way of another emergency decree that he elicited from Hindenburg further weakening the democracy of the Weimar Republic 56 Papen viewed the coup as a gift to the Nazis who had been informed of it by 9 July and were now supposed to support his government 55 On 23 July Papen instructed German representatives walk out of the World Disarmament Conference after the French delegation warned that allowing Germany Gleichberechtigung equality of status in armaments would lead to another world war Papen stated that Germany would not return to the conference until the other powers agreed to consider his demand for equal status 47 nbsp Papen arriving for the Reichstag session of 12 September 1932In the Reichstag election of 31 July the Nazis won the largest number of seats To combat the rise in SA and SS political terrorism that began right after the elections Papen on 9 August brought in via Article 48 a new law that drastically streamlined the judicial process in death penalty cases while limiting the right of appeal 57 58 New special courts were also created 57 A few hours later in the town of Potempa five SA men murdered Communist labourer Konrad Pietrzuch 58 The Potempa Five were promptly arrested then convicted and sentenced to death on 23 August by a special court 59 The Potempa case generated enormous media attention and Hitler made it clear that he would not support Papen s government if the Five were executed On 2 September Papen in his capacity as Commissioner of Prussia acquiesced to Hitler s demands and commuted the sentences of the Five to life imprisonment 60 On 11 August the public holiday of Constitution Day which commemorated the adoption of the Weimar Constitution in 1919 Papen and his Interior Minister Baron Wilhelm von Gayl called a press conference to announce plans for a new constitution that would in effect turn Germany into a dictatorship 61 Two days later Schleicher and Papen offered the position of vice chancellor to Hitler who rejected it 62 nbsp Reichstag on 12 September 1932 Papen standing left demands the floor and is ignored by Speaker Goring right When the new Reichstag assembled on 12 September Papen hoped to destroy the growing alliance between the Nazis and the Centre Party 59 That day at the President s estate in Neudeck Papen Schleicher and Gayl obtained in advance from Hindenburg a decree to dissolve the Reichstag then secured another decree to suspend elections beyond the constitutional 60 days 59 The Communists tabled a motion of no confidence in the Papen government 63 Papen had anticipated this move by the Communists but had been assured that there would be an immediate objection However when no one objected Papen placed the red folder containing the dissolution decree on Reichstag president Hermann Goring s desk He demanded the floor in order to read it but Goring pretended not to see him the Nazis and the Centre Party had decided to support the Communist motion 64 65 66 The motion carried by 512 votes to 42 67 68 Realizing that he did not have nearly enough support to go through with his plan to suspend elections Papen decided to call another election to punish the Reichstag for the vote of no confidence 67 nbsp Papen and Schleicher in 1932On 27 October the Supreme Court of Germany issued a ruling that Papen s coup deposing the Prussian government was illegal but allowed Papen to retain control of Prussia 69 In November 1932 Papen violated the terms of the Treaty of Versailles by approving a program of refurbishment for the German Navy of an aircraft carrier six battleships six cruisers six destroyer flotillas and 16 submarines intended to allow Germany to control both the North Sea and the Baltic 70 In the November 1932 election the Nazis lost seats but Papen was still unable to secure a Reichstag that could be counted on not to pass another vote of no confidence in his government 71 Papen s attempt to negotiate with Hitler failed 72 Under pressure from Schleicher Papen resigned on 17 November and formed a caretaker government 71 He told his cabinet that he planned to have martial law declared which would allow him to rule as a dictator 71 However at a cabinet meeting on 2 December Papen was informed by Schleicher s associate General Eugen Ott that Reichswehr war games showed there was no way to maintain order against the Nazis and Communists 73 74 Realizing that Schleicher was moving to replace him Papen asked Hindenburg to dismiss Schleicher as Defence Minister Instead Hindenburg appointed Schleicher as Chancellor 73 Bringing Hitler to power EditAfter his resignation Papen regularly visited Hindenburg missing no opportunity to attack Schleicher in these visits 75 Schleicher had promised Hindenburg that he would never attack Papen in public when he became chancellor but in a bid to distance himself from the very unpopular Papen Schleicher in a series of speeches in December 1932 January 1933 did just that upsetting Hindenburg 76 Papen was embittered by the way his former best friend Schleicher had brought him down and was determined to become chancellor again 39 On 4 January 1933 Hitler and Papen met in secret at the banker Kurt Baron von Schroder s house in Cologne to discuss a common strategy against Schleicher 77 On 9 January 1933 Papen and Hindenburg agreed to form a new government that would bring in Hitler 78 On the evening of 22 January in a meeting at the villa of Joachim von Ribbentrop in Berlin Papen made the concession of abandoning his claim to the chancellorship and committed to support Hitler as chancellor in a proposed Government of National Concentration in which Papen would serve as vice chancellor and Minister President of Prussia 79 On 23 January Papen presented to Hindenburg his idea for Hitler to be made chancellor while keeping him boxed in 80 On the same day Schleicher to avoid a vote of no confidence in the Reichstag when it reconvened on 31 January asked the president to declare a state of emergency Hindenburg declined and Schleicher resigned at midday on 28 January Hindenburg formally gave Papen the task of forming a new government 81 nbsp The Hitler cabinet on 30 January 1933In the morning of 29 January Papen met with Hitler and Hermann Goring at his apartment where it was agreed that Papen would serve as vice chancellor and Commissioner for Prussia 82 83 It was in the same meeting that Papen first learned that Hitler wanted to dissolve the Reichstag when he became chancellor and once the Nazis had won a majority of the seats in the ensuing elections to activate the Enabling Act in order to be able to enact laws without the involvement of the Reichstag 84 When the people around Papen voiced their concerns about putting Hitler in power he asked them What do you want and reassured them I have the confidence of Hindenburg In two months we ll have pushed Hitler so far into the corner that he ll squeal 85 86 Editor in Chief Theodor Wolff commented in an editorial in the Berliner Tagblatt on January 29 1933 The strongest natures those with the iron forehead or the board before the head will insist on the anti parliamentary solution on the closing of the Reichstag House on the coup d etat 87 In the end the president who had previously vowed never to let Hitler become chancellor appointed Hitler to the post at 11 30 am on 30 January 1933 with Papen as vice chancellor 88 While Papen s intrigues appeared to have brought Hitler into power the crucial dynamic was in fact provided by the Nazi Party s electoral support which made military dictatorship the only alternative to Nazi rule for Hindenburg and his circle 89 At the formation of Hitler s cabinet on 30 January only three Nazis held cabinet portfolios Hitler Goring and Wilhelm Frick The other eight posts were held by conservatives close to Papen including the DNVP chairman Alfred Hugenberg Additionally as part of the deal that allowed Hitler to become chancellor Papen was granted the right to attend every meeting between Hitler and Hindenburg Moreover cabinet decisions were made by majority vote Papen naively believed that his conservative friends majority in the cabinet and his closeness to Hindenburg would keep Hitler in check 90 Vice chancellor EditHitler and his allies instead quickly marginalised Papen and the rest of the cabinet For example as part of the deal between Hitler and Papen Goring had been appointed interior minister of Prussia thus putting the largest police force in Germany under Nazi control Goring frequently acted without consulting his nominal superior Papen On 1 February 1933 Hitler presented to the cabinet an Article 48 decree law that had been drafted by Papen in November 1932 allowing the police to take people into protective custody without charges It was signed into law by Hindenburg on 4 February as the Decree for the Protection of the German People 91 On the evening of 27 February 1933 Papen joined Hitler Goring and Goebbels at the burning Reichstag and told him that he shared their belief that this was the signal for Communist revolution 92 On 18 March 1933 in his capacity as Reich Commissioner for Prussia Papen freed the Potempa Five under the grounds the murder of Konrad Pietzuch was an act of self defense making the five SA men innocent victims of a miscarriage of justice 93 Neither Papen nor his conservative allies waged a fight against the Reichstag Fire Decree in late February or the Enabling Act in March After the Enabling Act was passed serious deliberations more or less ceased at cabinet meetings when they took place at all which subsequently neutralised Papen s attempt to box Hitler in through cabinet based decision making At the Reichstag election of 5 March 1933 Papen was elected as a deputy in an electoral alliance with Hugenberg s DNVP Papen endorsed Hitler s plan presented at a cabinet meeting on 7 March 1933 to destroy the Centre Party by severing the Catholic Church from it 94 This was the origin of the Reichskonkordat that Papen was to negotiate with the Catholic Church later in the spring of 1933 95 On 5 April 1933 Papen founded a new political party called the League of German Catholics Cross and Eagle which was intended as a conservative Catholic party that would hold the NSDAP in check while at the same time working with the NSDAP 96 Both the Centre Party and the Bavarian People s Party declined to merge into Papen s new party while the rival Coalition of Catholic Germans which was sponsored by the NSDAP proved more effective at recruiting German Catholics 97 nbsp Papen at the signing of the Reichskonkordat in Rome on 20 July 1933On 8 April Papen travelled to the Vatican to offer a Reichskonkordat that defined the German state s relationship with the Catholic Church During his stay in Rome Papen met the Italian Prime Minister Benito Mussolini and failed to persuade him to drop his support for the Austrian chancellor Dollfuss 98 Papen was euphoric at the Reichskonkordat that he negotiated with Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli in Rome believing that this was a diplomatic success that restored his status in Germany guaranteed the rights of German Catholics in the Third Reich and required the disbandment of the Centre Party and the Bavarian People s Party thereby achieving one of Papen s main political goals since June 1932 94 During Papen s absence the Landtag of Prussia elected Goring as prime minister on 10 April Papen saw the end of the Centre Party that he had engineered as one of his greatest achievements 94 Later in May 1933 he was forced to disband the League of German Catholics Cross and Eagle owing to lack of public interest 99 nbsp Papen with Hitler on 1 May 1933In September 1933 Papen visited Budapest to meet the Hungarian Prime Minister Gyula Gombos and to discuss how Germany and Hungary might best co operate against Czechoslovakia 100 The Hungarians wanted the volksdeutsche ethnic German minorities in the Banat Transylvania Slovakia and Carpathia to agitate to return to Hungary in co operation with the Magyar minorities a demand that Papen refused to meet 101 In September 1933 when the Soviet Union ended its secret military co operation with Germany the Soviets justified their move under the grounds that Papen had informed the French of the Soviet support for German violations of the Versailles Treaty 102 On 3 October 1933 Papen was named a member of the Academy for German Law at its inaugural meeting 103 Then on 14 November 1933 Papen was appointed the Reich Commissioner for the Saar 104 The Saarland was under the rule of the League of Nations and a referendum was scheduled for 1935 under which the Saarlanders had the option to return to Germany join France or retain the status quo 104 As a conservative Catholic whose wife was from the Saarland Papen had much understanding of the heavily Catholic region and he gave numerous speeches urging the Saarlanders to vote to return to Germany 104 Papen was successful in persuading the majority of the Catholic clergy in the Saarland to campaign for a return to Germany and 90 of the Saarland voted to return to Germany in the 1935 referendum 105 Papen began covert talks with other conservative forces with the aim of convincing Hindenburg to restore the balance of power back to the conservatives 106 By May 1934 it had become clear that Hindenburg was dying with doctors telling Papen that the president only had a few months left to live 107 Papen together with Otto Meissner Hindenburg s chief of staff and Major Oskar von Hindenburg Hindenburg s son drafted a political will and last testament which the president signed on 11 May 1934 107 At Papen s request the will called for the dismissal of certain Nazi ministers from the cabinet and regular cabinet meetings which would have achieved Papen s plan of January 1933 for a broad governing coalition of the right 107 The Marburg speech Edit Main article Marburg speech With the Army command recently having hinted at the need for Hitler to control the SA Papen delivered an address at the University of Marburg on 17 June 1934 where he called for the restoration of some freedoms demanded an end to the calls for a second revolution and advocated the cessation of SA terror in the streets 108 Papen intended to tame Hitler with the Marburg speech and gave the speech without any effort at co ordination beforehand with either Hindenburg or the Reichswehr 109 The speech was crafted by Papen s speech writer Edgar Julius Jung with the assistance of Papen s secretary Herbert von Bose and Catholic leader Erich Klausener and Papen had first seen the text of the speech only two hours before he delivered it at the University of Marburg 110 The Marburg speech was well received by the graduating students of Marburg university who all loudly cheered the vice chancellor 111 Extracts were reproduced in the Frankfurter Zeitung the most prestigious newspaper in Germany and from there picked up by the foreign press 108 The speech incensed Hitler and its publication was suppressed by the Propaganda Ministry 112 Papen told Hitler that unless the ban on the Marburg speech was lifted and Hitler declared himself willing to follow the line recommended by Papen in the speech he would resign and would inform Hindenburg why he had resigned 112 Hitler outwitted Papen by telling him that he agreed with all of the criticism of his regime made in the Marburg speech told him Goebbels was wrong to ban the speech and he would have the ban lifted at once and promised that the SA would be put in their place provided Papen agreed not to resign and would meet with Hindenburg in a joint interview with him 112 Papen accepted Hitler s suggestions 113 Night of the Long Knives Edit nbsp The architects of the purge Hitler Goring Goebbels and Hess Only Himmler and Heydrich are missing Two weeks after the Marburg speech Hitler responded to the armed forces demands to suppress the ambitions of Ernst Rohm and the SA by purging the SA leadership The purge known as the Night of the Long Knives took place between 30 June and 2 July 1934 Though Papen s bold speech against some of the excesses committed by the Nazis had angered Hitler the latter was aware that he could not act directly against the vice chancellor without offending Hindenburg Instead in the Night of the Long Knives the Vice Chancellery Papen s office was ransacked by the Schutzstaffel SS his associates Herbert von Bose Erich Klausener and Edgar Julius Jung were shot Papen himself was placed under house arrest at his villa with his telephone line cut Some accounts indicate that this protective custody was ordered by Goring who felt the ex diplomat could be useful in the future 114 Reportedly Papen arrived at the Chancellery exhausted from days of house arrest without sleep to find the chancellor seated with other Nazi ministers around a round table with no place for him but a hole in the middle He insisted on a private audience with Hitler and announced his resignation stating My service to the Fatherland is over The following day Papen s resignation as vice chancellor was formally accepted and publicised with no successor appointed When Hindenburg died on 2 August the last conservative obstacle to complete Nazi rule was gone 115 Ambassador to Austria Edit nbsp Papen at Berlin Tempelhof Airport in July 1934 just before departing for ViennaHitler offered Papen the assignment of German ambassador to Vienna which Papen accepted 116 Papen was a German nationalist who always believed that Austria was destined to join Germany in an Anschluss annexation and felt that a success in bringing that about might restore his career 117 During his time as ambassador to Austria Papen stood outside the normal chain of command of the Auswartiges Amt Foreign Office as he refused to take orders from Konstantin von Neurath his own former Foreign Minister Instead Papen reported directly to Hitler 118 Papen met often with Austrian Chancellor Kurt von Schuschnigg to assure him that Germany did not wish to annex his country and only wanted the banned Austrian Nazi Party to participate in Austrian politics 119 In late 1934 early 1935 Papen took a break from his duties as German ambassador in Vienna to lead the Deutsche Front German Front in the Saarland plebiscite on 13 January 1935 where the League of Nations observers monitoring the vote noted Papen s ruthless methods as he campaigned for the region to return to Germany 120 nbsp Papen on his way to Berchtesgaden 21 February 1938Papen also contributed to achieving Hitler s goal of undermining Austrian sovereignty and bringing about the Anschluss 121 On 28 August 1935 Papen negotiated a deal under which the German press would cease its attacks on the Austrian government in return for which the Austrian press would cease its attacks on Germany s 122 Papen played a major role in negotiating the 1936 Austro German agreement under which Austria declared itself a German state whose foreign policy would always be aligned with Berlin s and allowed for members of the national opposition to enter the Austrian cabinet in exchange for which the Austrian Nazis abandoned their terrorist campaign against the government 123 124 The treaty Papen signed in Vienna on 11 July 1936 promised that Germany would not seek to annex Austria and largely placed Austria in the German sphere of influence greatly reducing Italian influence on Austria 125 In July 1936 Papen reported to Hitler that the Austro German treaty he had just signed was the decisive step towards ending Austrian independence and it was only a matter of time before the Anschluss took place 126 In the summer and fall of 1937 Papen pressured the Austrians to include more Nazis in the government 127 In September 1937 Papen returned to Berlin when Benito Mussolini visited Germany serving as Hitler s adviser on Italo German talks about Austria 128 Though Papen was dismissed from his mission in Austria on 4 February 1938 Hitler drafted him to arrange a meeting between the German dictator and Schuschnigg at Berchtesgaden 129 The ultimatum that Hitler presented to Schuschnigg at the meeting on 12 February 1938 led to the Austrian government s capitulation to German threats and pressure and paved the way for the Anschluss Ambassador to Turkey EditPapen later served the German government as Ambassador to Turkey from 1939 to 1944 In April 1938 after the retirement of the previous ambassador Frederich von Keller on his 65th birthday the German foreign minister Joachim von Ribbentrop attempted to appoint Papen as ambassador in Ankara but the appointment was vetoed by the Turkish president Mustafa Kemal Ataturk who remembered Papen well with considerable distaste when he had served alongside him in World War I 130 In November 1938 and in February 1939 the new Turkish president General Ismet Inonu again vetoed Ribbentrop s attempts to have Papen appointed as German ambassador to Turkey 131 In April 1939 Turkey accepted Papen as ambassador 131 Papen was keen to return to Turkey where he had served during World War I 132 Papen arrived in Turkey on 27 April 1939 just after the signing of a UK Turkish declaration of friendship 133 Inonu wanted Turkey to join the UK inspired peace front that was meant to stop Germany 134 On 24 June 1939 France and Turkey signed a declaration committing them to upholding collective security in the Balkans 135 On 21 August 1939 Papen presented Turkey with a diplomatic note threatening economic sanctions and the cancellation of all arms contracts if Turkey did not cease leaning towards joining the UK French peace front a threat that Turkey rebuffed 136 On 1 September 1939 Germany invaded Poland and two days later on 3 September 1939 the UK and France declared war on Germany 137 Papen claimed later to have been opposed to Hitler s foreign policy in 1939 and was very depressed when he heard the news of the German attack on Poland on the radio 137 Papen continued his work of representing the Reich in Turkey under the grounds that resigning in protest would indicate the moral weakening in Germany which was something he could never do 137 On 19 October 1939 Papen suffered a notable setback when Turkey signed a treaty of alliance with France and the UK 138 During the Phoney War the conservative Catholic Papen found himself to his own discomfort working together with Soviet diplomats in Ankara to pressure Turkey not to enter the war on the Allied side 139 In June 1940 with France s defeat Inonu abandoned his pro Allied neutrality and Papen s influence in Ankara dramatically increased 140 Between 1940 and 1942 Papen signed three economic agreements that placed Turkey in the German economic sphere of influence 141 Papen hinted more than once to Turkey that Germany was prepared to support Bulgarian claims to Thrace if Turkey did not prove more accommodating to Germany 142 In May 1941 when the Germans dispatched an expeditionary force to Iraq to fight against the UK in the Anglo Iraqi War Papen persuaded Turkey to allow arms in Syria to be shipped along a railroad linking Syria to Iraq 143 In June 1941 Papen successfully negotiated a Treaty of Friendship and Non aggression with Turkey signed on 17 June 1941 which prevented Turkey from entering the war on the Allied side 144 After Operation Barbarossa the invasion of the Soviet Union that began on 22 June 1941 Papen persuaded Turkey to close the Turkish straits to Soviet warships but was unable to have the straits closed to Soviet merchant ships as he demanded 145 Papen claimed after the war to have done everything within his power to save Turkish Jews living in countries occupied by Germany from deportation to the death camps but an examination of the Auswartige Amt s records does not support him 146 During the war Papen used his connections with Turkish Army officers with whom he served in World War I to try to influence Turkey into joining the Axis held parties at the German embassy which were attended by leading Turkish politicians and used special funds to bribe Turks into following a pro German line 147 As an ambassador to Turkey Papen survived a Soviet assassination attempt on 24 February 1942 by agents from the NKVD 148 a bomb exploded prematurely killing the bomber and no one else although Papen was slightly injured In 1943 Papen frustrated a UK attempt to have Turkey join the war on the Allied side by getting Hitler to send a letter to Inonu assuring him that Germany had no interest in invading Turkey and by threatening to have the Luftwaffe bomb Istanbul if Turkey joined the Allies 149 In the summer and fall of 1943 realizing the war was lost Papen attended secret meetings with the agents of the US Office of Strategic Services OSS in Istanbul 150 Papen exaggerated his power in Germany to the OSS and asked for US support to make him dictator of a post Hitler Germany 150 US President Franklin D Roosevelt rejected the offer when he heard of it and told the OSS to stop talking to Papen 151 From October 1943 Papen and the German embassy gained access to the Cicero documents of secret agent Elyesa Bazna including information and the Tehran Conference which Papen revealed selectively to Inonu to strain Allied Turkish relations 152 153 In January 1944 Papen after learning via the Cicero documents of a UK plan to have the Royal Air Force use airfields in Turkey to bomb the oil fields of Ploiești in Romania told the Turkish foreign minister Huseyin Numan Menemencioglu that if Turkey allowed the RAF to use Turkish air fields to bomb Ploiești the Luftwaffe would use its bases in Bulgaria and Greece to bomb and destroy Istanbul and Izmir 154 On 20 April 1944 Turkey wishing to ingratiate itself with the Allies ceased selling chromium to Germany 155 On 26 May 1944 Menemencioglu announced that Turkey was reducing exports to Germany by 50 and on 2 August 1944 Turkey severed diplomatic relations with Germany forcing Papen to return to Berlin 156 After Pope Pius XI died in February 1939 his successor Pope Pius XII did not renew Papen s honorary title of Papal chamberlain As nuncio the future Pope John XXIII Angelo Roncalli became acquainted with Papen in Greece and Turkey during World War II The German government considered appointing Papen ambassador to the Holy See but Pope Pius XII after consulting Konrad von Preysing Bishop of Berlin rejected this proposal In August 1944 Papen had his last meeting with Hitler after arriving back in Germany from Turkey Here Hitler awarded Papen the Knight s Cross of the War Merit Cross 157 In September 1944 Papen settled at his estate at Wallerfangen in the Saarland that had been given to him by his father in law 158 On 29 November 1944 Papen could hear in the distance the guns of the advancing US Third Army which caused him and his family to flee deeper into Germany 159 Post war years Edit nbsp Papen at the Nuremberg TrialsPapen was captured along with his son Franz Jr at his own home by First Lieutenant Thomas McKinley 160 and members of the US 194th Glider Infantry Regiment on 14 April 1945 Also present during the capture was a small band from the 550th Airborne glider infantry 161 Papen was forced by the US to visit a concentration camp to see firsthand the nature of the regime he had served from start to finish and had fostered 158 nbsp Papen in April 1964Papen was one of the defendants at the main Nuremberg War Crimes Trial The investigating tribunal found no solid evidence to support claims that Papen had been involved in the annexation of Austria 162 The court acquitted him stating that while he had committed a number of political immoralities these actions were not punishable under the conspiracy to commit crimes against peace written in Papen s indictment The Soviets wanted to execute him 163 Papen was subsequently sentenced to eight years hard labour by a West German denazification court but he was released on appeal in 1949 Until 1954 Papen was forbidden to publish in West Germany and so he wrote a series of articles in newspapers in Spain attacking the Federal Republic from a conservative Catholic position in much the same terms that he had attacked the Weimar Republic 164 Papen unsuccessfully tried to restart his political career in the 1950s he lived at the Castle of Benzenhofen near Ravensburg in Upper Swabia Pope John XXIII restored his title of Papal Chamberlain on 24 July 1959 Papen was also a Knight of Malta and he was awarded the Grand Cross of the Pontifical Order of Pius IX nbsp Von Papen s grave in Wallerfangen SaarlandPapen published a number of books and memoirs in which he defended his policies and dealt with the years 1930 to 1933 as well as early Western Cold War politics Papen praised the Schuman Plan to pacify relations between France and West Germany as wise and statesmanlike and claimed to believe in the economic and military unification and integration of Western Europe 165 In 1952 and 1953 Papen published his memoirs in two volumes in Switzerland Right up until his death in 1969 Papen gave speeches and wrote articles in the newspapers defending himself against the charge that he had played a crucial role in having Hitler appointed chancellor and that he had served a criminal regime these led to vitriolic exchanges with West German historians journalists and political scientists 166 Franz von Papen died in Obersasbach West Germany on 2 May 1969 at the age of 89 167 Publications EditAppell an das deutsche Gewissen Reden zur nationalen Revolution Stalling Oldenburg 1933 OCLC 490719263 Memoirs German title Der Wahrheit eine Gasse Translated by Brian Connell Andre Deutsch London 1952 OCLC 86049352 Europa was nun Betrachtungen zur Politik der Westmachte Gottinger Verlags Anstalt Gottingen 1954 OCLC 4027794 Vom Scheitern einer Demokratie 1930 1933 Hase und Koehler Mainz 1968 OCLC 1970844 In popular culture EditFranz von Papen has been portrayed by these actors in these film television and theatrical productions 168 Paul Everton de de in the 1918 US film The Eagle s Eye Curt Furburg in the 1943 US film Background to Danger Walter Kingsford in the 1944 US film The Hitler Gang John Wengraf in the 1952 US film 5 Fingers Peter von Zerneck in the 1973 US TV production Portrait A Man Whose Name Was John Dennis St John in the 2000 Canadian US TV production Nuremberg Erland Josephson in the 2003 Italian UK TV production The Good Pope Pope John XXIII Robert Russell in the 2003 Canadian US TV production Hitler The Rise of Evil Georgi Novakov in the 2006 UK television docudrama Nuremberg Nazis on TrialSee also Edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Germany portal nbsp Politics portalList of Nazi Party leaders and officialsReferences EditCitations Edit German Foreign Policy 1918 1945 A Guide to Current Research and Resources By Christoph M Kimmich page 27 a b Rolfs 1995 p 4 a b c d Turner 1996 p 39 Rolfs 1995 p 2 a b Rolfs 1995 p 5 Bisher 2016 pp 33 34 71 Bisher 2016 p 172 a b Rolfs 1995 p 8 Bisher 2016 p 26 a b c Rolfs 1995 p 11 a b Bisher 2016 p 33 McMaster 1918 pp 258 261 Bisher 2016 pp 33 34 Bisher 2016 p 34 Bisher 2016 p 43 Pomar Norman Allen Thomas 1997 The Spy Book New York Random House p 584 Shirer 1990 p 164 a b Current Biography 1941 pp 651 653 Bisher 2016 p 71 a b Jones 2005 p 194 Rolfs 1995 p 25 Rolfs 1995 pp 25 26 a b c d Rolfs 1995 p 26 Ihrig Stefan 2016 Justifying Genocide Germany and the Armenians from Bismark to Hitler Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press p 352 a b Rolfs 1995 p 27 Rolfs 1995 p 28 Rolfs 1995 p 29 Rolfs 1995 p 31 Rolfs 1995 p 34 Rolfs 1995 p 35 Rolfs 1995 p 39 a b c Jones 2005 p 197 Wheeler Bennett 1967 p 247 Longerich 2019 pp 244 245 Turner 1996 p 40 a b c Turner 1996 p 8 Jones 2005 pp 194 195 a b c d Longerich 2019 p 247 a b c Turner 1996 p 41 a b Jones 2005 p 205 a b c Jones 2005 p 206 Longerich 2019 p 245 a b Kershaw 1998 p 367 Germany Hitler Into Chancellor Time 6 February 1933 Retrieved 4 February 2022 Longerich 2019 pp 245 246 a b Longerich 2019 p 248 a b c d Wheeler Bennett 1967 p 250 Nicolls Anthony Weimar and the Rise of Hitler London Macmillan 2000 page 156 Longerich 2019 p 259 Turner 1996 pp 17 18 Longerich 2019 p 250 Turner 1996 p 18 Dorplaen 1964 p 343 Dorplaen 1964 pp 343 344 a b Longerich 2019 p 252 Schulze 2001 pp 241 243 a b Longerich 2019 p 254 a b Kershaw 1998 p 381 a b c Longerich 2019 p 257 Beck Hermann 2013 The Fateful Alliance German Conservatives and Nazis in 1933 Oxford Berghahn Books p 81 Kershaw 1998 p 372 Longerich 2019 p 255 Dorplaen 1964 p 362 Longerich 2019 p 258 Shirer 1990 p 172 Dorplaen 1964 p 363 a b Evans 2003 pp 297 298 Kolb 1988 p 121 Dorplaen 1964 p 368 Bird Keith 2006 Erich Raeder Admiral of the Third Reich Annapolis Naval Institute Press p 90 a b c Kolb 1988 p 122 Longerich 2019 p 261 a b Longerich 2019 p 264 Kershaw 1998 pp 395 396 417 Turner 1996 p 97 Turner 1996 p 96 Longerich 2019 p 268 Turner 1996 p 51 Turner 1996 p 112 Turner 1996 p 117 Longerich 2019 p 270 Blum George P 1998 The Rise of Fascism In Europe Westport CT Greenwood Press pp 110 111 ISBN 0 313 29934 X Turner 1996 p 145 Turner 1996 pp 145 146 Ullrich Volker 1 February 2017 Adolf Hitler Wait Calmly Zeit Online Reich Chancellor Adolf Hitler with his Cabinet January 30 1933 Germany History in Documents and Images Eine Mischung von Korruption Hintertreppe und Gunstlingswirtschaft April 2020 Longerich 2019 p 273 Longerich 2019 pp 273 275 Kershaw 1998 p 411 Kershaw 1998 p 439 Kershaw 1998 p 457 Bessel Richard September 1977 The Potempa Murder Central European History 10 3 252 doi 10 1017 S0008938900018471 S2CID 146143269 a b c Jones 2005 p 192 Jones 2005 p 193 Jones 2005 pp 191 192 Jones 2005 p 189 Weinberg 1970 p 90 Jones 2005 p 190 Weinberg 1970 p 114 Weinberg 1970 p 115 Weinberg 1970 p 80 Hans Frank Ed Jahrbuch der Akademie fur Deutsches Recht 1st Edition 1933 1934 Schweitzer Verlag Munchen Berlin Leipzig p 256 a b c Rolfs 1995 p 291 Weinberg 1970 p 55 Wheeler Bennett 1967 pp 314 315 a b c Wheeler Bennett 1967 p 314 a b Kershaw 1998 p 509 Kershaw 1998 pp 509 510 Kershaw 1998 p 744 Evans 2005 p 29 a b c Kershaw 1998 p 510 Evans 2005 p 30 Read 2004 pp 369 370 Germany Crux of Crisis Time 16 July 1934 Weinberg 1970 p 106 Rolfs 1995 p 318 Kallis Aristotle Fascist Ideology London Routledge 2000 page 81 Weinberg 1970 p 233 Weinberg 1970 p 174 Churchill W 1948 The Gathering Storm p 132 Weinberg 1970 p 236 Rolfs 1995 pp 330 331 Wheeler Bennett 1967 p 376 Weinberg 1970 p 270 Rolfs 1995 p 331 Weinberg 1980 p 279 Weinberg 1980 p 281 Hildebrand 1986 p 29 Watt 1989 pp 279 280 a b Watt 1989 p 280 Weinberg 1980 p 591 Watt 1989 pp 280 281 Watt 1989 pp 281 282 Watt 1989 p 305 Watt 1989 p 310 a b c Rolfs 1995 p 390 Rolfs 1995 pp 392 393 Rolfs 1995 p 392 Weinberg 2005 p 78 Rolfs 1995 p 404 Rolfs 1995 pp 397 398 Hale 2000 p 87 Rolfs 1995 pp 398 399 Rolfs 1995 p 400 Guttstadt 2013 p 141 Guttstadt 2013 p 41 42 Pavel Sudoplatov Special Tasks The Memoirs of an Unwanted Witness A Soviet Spymaster Little Brown and Company Boston 1994 ISBN 0 316 77352 2 Rolfs 1995 p 406 a b Bauer 1996 p 134 Bauer 1996 p 125 Wires Richard The Cicero Spy Affair German Access to British Secrets in World War II Westport Greenwood Publishing 1999 page 49 Rolfs 1995 p 407 Rolfs 1995 p 408 Hale 2000 p 100 Hale 2000 p 91 Franz von Papen Memoirs p 532 a b Rolfs 1995 p 428 Rolfs 1995 p 427 Hagerman 1993 p 276 Hagerman 1993 p 277 Grzebyk 2013 p 147 Rolfs 1995 p 445 Turner 1996 p 238 Franz von Papen Memoirs pp 586 587 Rolfs 1995 p 441 Wistrich Robert S 2002 Papen Franz von p 189 ISBN 9780415260381 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a work ignored help Franz von Papen Character IMDb com Retrieved 20 May 2008 Sources Edit Bauer Yehuda 1996 Jews for Sale Nazi Jewish Negotiations 1933 1945 New Haven Yale University Press Bisher Jamie 2016 The Intelligence War in Latin America 1914 1922 Jefferson McFarland Braatz Werner Ernst 1953 Franz von Papen and the Movement of Anschluss with Austria 1934 1938 An Episode in German Diplomacy Madison Wisconsin University of Wisconsin Press Dorplaen Andreas 1964 Hindenburg and the Weimar Republic Princeton Princeton University Press Evans Richard J 2003 The Coming of the Third Reich New York City Penguin Press ISBN 978 0141009759 Evans Richard 2005 The Third Reich in Power New York Penguin ISBN 978 0 14303 790 3 Grzebyk Patrycja 2013 Criminal Responsibility for the Crime of Aggression New York Routledge Guttstadt Corry 2013 Turkey the Jews and the Holocaust Cambridge Cambridge University Press Hagerman Bart 1993 War Stories The Men of The Airborne 1st ed Paducah KY Turner Pub Co ISBN 1563110970 Hale William 2000 Turkish Foreign Policy 1774 2000 London Psychology Press Hildebrand Klaus 1986 The Third Reich London amp New York Routledge Jones Larry Eugene 2005 Franz von Papen the German Center Party and the Failure of Catholic Conservatism in the Weimar Republic Central European History 38 2 191 217 doi 10 1163 156916105775563670 S2CID 145606603 Kershaw Ian 1998 Hitler 1889 1936 Hubris New York Norton ISBN 9780393320350 Kolb Eberhard 1988 The Weimar Republic London Unwin Hyman Longerich Peter 2019 2015 Hitler A Life Hitler Biographie Oxford Oxford University Press McMaster John B 1918 The United States in the World War Vol 2 New York London D Appleton amp Co Papen Franz von 1952 Memoirs London Andre Deutsch Read Anthony 2004 The Devil s Disciples Hitler s Inner Circle New York Norton ISBN 978 039304 800 1 Rolfs Richard 1995 The Sorcerer s Apprentice The Life Of Franz von Papen Lanham University Press of America ISBN 0 7618 0163 4 Schulze Hagen 2001 Germany A New History Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press Shirer William 1990 The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich New York MJF Books ISBN 978 1 56731 163 1 Sudoplatov Pavel Special Tasks The Memoirs of an Unwanted Witness A Soviet Spymaster Boston Little Brown and Company 1994 Turner Henry Ashby 1996 Hitler s Thirty Days to Power January 1933 Reading Massachusetts Addison Wesley ISBN 9780201407143 Watt D C 1989 How War Came The Immediate Origins of the Second World War 1938 1939 New York Pantheon Books Weinberg Gerhard 1970 The Foreign Policy of Hitler s Germany Diplomatic Revolution in Europe Chicago IL University of Chicago Press Weinberg Gerhard 1980 The Foreign Policy of Hitler s Germany Starting World War II Chicago University of Chicago Press Weinberg Gerhard 2005 A World In Arms Cambridge England Cambridge University Press Wheeler Bennett John W 1967 Nemesis of Power The German Army in Politics 1918 1945 London England Macmillan Wistrich Robert S 1995 Who s Who in Nazi Germany London and New York Routledge Further reading EditBracher Karl Dietrich Die Auflosung der Weimarer Republik eine Studie zum Problem des Machtverfalls in der Demokratie Villingen Schwarzwald Ring Verlag 1971 Bracher Karl Dietrich The German Dictatorship The Origins Structure and Effects of National Socialism New York Praeger Publishers 1970 Evans Richard J The Third Reich in Power New York Penguin 2006 Fest Joachim C and Bullock Michael trans Franz von Papen and the Conservative Collaboration in The Face of the Third Reich New York Penguin 1979 orig published in German in 1963 pp 229 246 ISBN 978 0201407143 Jones Larry Eugene From Democracy to Dictatorship The Fall of Weimar and the Triumph of Nazism 1930 1933 in The Oxford Handbook of the Weimar Republic 2022 pp 95 108 excerpt Weinberg Gerhard 2005 Hitler s Foreign Policy 1933 1939 The Road to World War II New York Enigma Books Weinberg Gerhard 1996 Germany Hitler and World War II Essays in Modern German and World History New York amp Cambridge Cambridge University Press External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Franz von Papen nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Franz von Papen Biographical timeline Vice Chancellor Franz von Papen speaks in Trier about the Saarland referendum 1934 Papen at the Republic Day celebrations in Turkey 1941 Newspaper clippings about Franz von Papen in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Information about Franz von Papen in the Reichstag databasePolitical officesPreceded byHeinrich Bruning Chancellor of Germany1932 Succeeded byKurt von SchleicherPreceded byOtto Braunas Minister President Reichskommissar of Prussia1932Preceded byHermann Dietrich Vice Chancellor of Germany1933 1934 VacantTitle next held byFranz BlucherPreceded byKurt von Schleicher Reichskommissar of Prussia1933 Succeeded byHermann Goringas Minister PresidentDiplomatic postsPreceded byKurt Rieth Ambassador of Germany to Austria1934 1938 VacantTitle next held byCarl Hermann Mueller GraafPreceded byFriedrich von Keller Ambassador of Germany to Turkey1939 1944 VacantTitle next held byWilhelm Haas Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Franz von Papen amp oldid 1178610922, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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