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Gustav Stresemann

Gustav Ernst Stresemann (German pronunciation: [ˈɡʊstaf ˈʃtʁeːzəˌman] (listen); 10 May 1878 – 3 October 1929) was a German statesman who served as chancellor in 1923 (for 102 days) and as foreign minister from 1923 to 1929, during the Weimar Republic.

Gustav Stresemann
Portrait of Stresemann. (with visible Schmiss)
Chancellor of Germany
(Weimar Republic)
In office
13 August 1923 – 30 November 1923
PresidentFriedrich Ebert
DeputyRobert Schmidt
Preceded byWilhelm Cuno
Succeeded byWilhelm Marx
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
13 August 1923 – 3 October 1929
ChancellorHimself
Wilhelm Marx
Hans Luther
Hermann Müller
Preceded byHans von Rosenberg
Succeeded byJulius Curtius
Member of the Reichstag
(Weimar Republic)
In office
24 June 1920 – 3 October 1929
ConstituencyNational list (1924-1929)
Potsdam II (1920-1924)
(German Empire)
In office
19 February 1907 – 9 November 1918
ConstituencyHannover 2 (1912-1918)
Sachsen 21 (1907-1912)
Personal details
Born(1878-05-10)10 May 1878
Berlin, German Empire
Died3 October 1929(1929-10-03) (aged 51)
Berlin, Weimar Republic
Political partyNational Liberal Party (1907–1918)
German Democratic Party (1918)
German People's Party (1918–1929)
SpouseKäte Kleefeld
ChildrenWolfgang
Hans-Joachim
AwardsNobel Peace Prize (1926)
Signature

His most notable achievement was the reconciliation between Germany and France, for which he and French Prime Minister Aristide Briand received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1926. During a period of political instability and fragile, short-lived governments, he was the most influential cabinet member in most of the Weimar Republic's existence. During his political career, he represented three successive liberal parties; he was the dominant figure of the German People's Party during the Weimar Republic.

Early years

Stresemann was born on 10 May 1878 in 66 Köpenicker Straße in Southeast Berlin, the youngest of seven children. His father worked as a beer bottler and distributor, and also ran a small bar out of the family home, as well as renting rooms for extra money. The family was lower middle class, but relatively well-off for the neighbourhood, and had sufficient funds to provide Gustav with a high-quality education.[1] Stresemann was an excellent student, particularly excelling in German literature and poetry. At the age of 16, he joined the Andreas Gymnasium to study. His parents brought him up to have an interest in books — he was especially passionate about history, with his teacher, Mr. Wolff, commenting that he had an "almost sickly taste in history." He took an interest in Napoleon and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, whom he later wrote about in his work 1924: Goethe und Napoleon: ein Vortrag.[2] His mother, Mathilde, died in 1895. From December 1895, he wrote "Berlin letters" for the Dresdener Volks-Zeitung, often talking about politics and targeting Prussian conservatives. In an essay written when he left school, he noted that he would have enjoyed becoming a teacher, but he would only have been qualified to teach languages or the natural sciences, which were not his primary areas of interest.[3] Due to this, he enrolled in university.

In April 1897, Stresemann enrolled at the University of Berlin, where he was convinced by a businessman to study political economy instead of literature.[4] During his university years, Stresemann also became active in the Burschenschaften movement of student fraternities, and became editor, in April 1898, of the Allgemeine Deutsche Universitäts-Zeitung, a newspaper run by Konrad Kuster, a leader in the liberal portion of the Burschenschaften. His editorials for the paper were often political, and dismissed most of the contemporary political parties as broken in one way or another.[5] In these early writings, he set out views that combined liberalism with strident nationalism, a combination that would dominate his views for the rest of his life.[6] In 1898, Stresemann left the University of Berlin, transferring to the University of Leipzig so that he could pursue a doctorate. He studied history and international Law, and took literature courses. Influenced by Dr. Martin Kriele, he also took courses in economics. In March 1899, he stopped being an editor for the Allgemeine Deutsche Universitäts-Zeitung. He completed his studies in January 1901, submitting a thesis on the bottled beer industry in Berlin, which received a relatively high grade, but was a subject of mockery from colleagues.[7][8][9] Stresemann's doctoral supervisor was the economist Karl Bücher.[10]

In 1902, Stresemann founded the Saxon Manufacturers' Association. In 1903 he married Käte Kleefeld (1883–1970), daughter of a wealthy Jewish Berlin businessman, and the sister of Kurt von Kleefeld, the last person in Germany to be ennobled (in 1918). At that time he was also a member of Friedrich Naumann's National-Social Association. In 1906 he was elected to the Dresden town council. Though he had initially worked in trade associations, Stresemann soon became a leader of the National Liberal Party in Saxony. In 1907, he was elected to the Reichstag, where he soon became a close associate of party chairman Ernst Bassermann. However, his support of expanded social welfare programs did not sit well with some of the party's more conservative members, and he lost his post in the party's executive committee in 1912. Later that year he lost both his Reichstag and town council seats. He returned to business and founded the German-American Economic Association. In 1914 he returned to the Reichstag. He was exempted from war service due to poor health. With Bassermann kept away from the Reichstag by either illness or military service, Stresemann soon became the National Liberals' de facto leader. After Bassermann's death in 1917, Stresemann succeeded him as the party leader.

World War I

The evolution of his political ideas appears somewhat erratic. Initially, in the German Empire, Stresemann was associated with the left wing of the National Liberals. He initially believed in the maintenance of a balance of power between the British Empire, the United States, and Germany, whom he believed would be the world's economic superpowers in the future. Yet he also supported the Anglo-German naval arms race, believing that the expansion of the Imperial German Navy was necessary to protect German international trade.[11]

During World War I, he gradually moved to the right, expressing his support of the Hohenzollern monarchy and Germany's expansionist goals. He believed that Germany would need to annex the Low Countries, Eastern Europe, parts of north-east France, and the French protectorate in Morocco in order to economically compete with the United States in the future. He was a vocal proponent of unrestricted submarine warfare.[11] However, he still favoured an expansion of the social welfare programme, and also supported an end to the restrictive Prussian three-class franchise.[citation needed] In 1916, he visited Constantinople and learned about the Ottoman Empire's Armenian genocide, writing in his diary: "Armenian reduction 1–112 million." Stresemann recommended the recall of the German ambassador, Paul Wolff Metternich, accusing him of being too sympathetic to Armenians.[12]

The collapse of the German Empire after its defeat in World War I and the German Revolution of 1918–1919 drove Stresemann into a mental and physical breakdown, which shocked him into totally abandoning his earlier militarism and annexationism.[11] When the Allied powers' peace terms became known, including a crushing burden of paying reparations for the war, Constantin Fehrenbach denounced them and claimed "the will to break the chains of slavery would be implanted" into a generation of Germans. Stresemann said of this speech: "He was inspired in that hour by God to say what was felt by the German people. His words, spoken under Fichte's portrait, the final words of which merged into Deutschland, Deutschland über alles, made it an unforgettably solemn hour. There was in that sense a kind of uplifting grandeur. The impression left on all was tremendous".[13]

After the war, Stresemann briefly joined the German Democratic Party, formed from a merger of the Progressives with the left wing of the National Liberals. However, he was quickly expelled for his association with the right wing. He then gathered the main body of the old National Liberal Party—including most of its centre and right factions—into the German People's Party (German: Deutsche Volkspartei, DVP), with himself as chairman. Most of its support came from middle class and upper class Protestants. The DVP platform promoted Christian family values, secular education, lower tariffs, opposition to welfare spending and agrarian subsidies and hostility to "Marxism" (that is, the Communists, and also the Social Democrats).

The DVP was initially seen, along with the German National People's Party, as part of the "national opposition" to the Weimar Republic, particularly for its grudging acceptance of democracy and its ambivalent attitude towards the Freikorps and the Kapp Putsch in 1920. Beginning in 1919, Stresemann emphasized that Germany should try to regain its great-power status by leveraging the continued global economic influence and creditworthiness of its multinational corporations, pursuing peaceful economic expansion, and establishing friendly relations with the United States.[11] By late 1920, Stresemann gradually moved to cooperation with the parties of the left and centre — possibly in reaction to political murders like that of Walther Rathenau. However, he remained a monarchist at heart.

Weimar Republic

Chancellor 1923

On 13 August 1923, Stresemann was appointed chancellor and foreign minister of a grand coalition government in the so-called year of crises (1923). In social policy, a new system of binding arbitration was introduced in October 1923 in which an outside arbitrator had the final say in industrial disputes.[14]

On the 26 September 1923, Stresemann announced the end to the passive resistance against the Occupation of the Ruhr by the French and Belgians, in tandem with an Article 48 (of the Weimar Constitution) state of emergency proclamation by President Friedrich Ebert that lasted until February 1924.[15][16] In October 1923, the Stresemann government used Article 48 to replace the illegally-elected SPD-Communist coalition government of Saxony on 29 October, and that of Thuringia on 6 November, by commissioners. By this time, Stresemann was convinced that accepting the republic and reaching an understanding with the Allies on the reparations issue was the only way for Germany to gain the breathing room it needed to rebuild its battered economy.[16] He also wished to recover the Allied-occupied Rhineland, as he wrote to Wilhelm, the former German Crown Prince on 23 July 1923: "The most important objective of German politics is the liberation of German territory from French and Belgian occupation. First, we must remove the strangler from our throat".[17]

Hyperinflation in the Weimar Republic reached its peak in November 1923.[18] Since Germany was no longer able to pay the striking workers, more and more money was printed, which finally led to hyperinflation. Stresemann introduced a new currency, the Rentenmark, to end hyperinflation. He also persuaded the French to pull back from the Ruhr in return for a promise that reparations payments would resume. That was part of his larger strategy of "fulfillment." Although he, like nearly every other German politician, cursed the Treaty of Versailles as a Diktat, he had come to believe that Germany would never win relief from its terms unless it made a good-faith effort to fulfill them. To his mind, this would convince the Allies that the reparations bill was truly beyond Germany's capacity. The effort paid off; the Allies began to take a look at reforming the reparations scheme.[19]

In early November 1923, partly because of the reaction to the overthrowing of the SPD/KPD governments in Saxony and Thuringia, the Social Democrats withdrew from his reshuffled government and, after a motion of confidence, he was voted down on 23 November 1923, after which Stresemann and his cabinet resigned.

Foreign minister 1923–1929

Stresemann remained as foreign minister in the government of his successor, Wilhelm Marx from the Centre Party. He remained foreign minister for the rest of his life in eight successive governments ranging from the centre-right to the centre-left. As foreign minister, Stresemann had numerous achievements. His first notable achievement was the Dawes Plan of 1924, which reduced Germany's overall reparations commitment and reorganized the Reichsbank. He appointed Hjalmar Schacht as the new President of the Reichsbank, who implemented the Dawes Plan and ended Weimar hyperinflation despite his reservations over Germany's growing foreign debt under Stresemann's economic policies.[11] The successful negotiation of the Dawes Plan provided hope for Streseman's foreign policy strategy emphasizing Germany's remaining economic soft power, since the creator of the plan Owen D. Young was the chairman of General Electric and a major trading partner with the German firm AEG.[11]

After Sir Austen Chamberlain became British Foreign Secretary, Stresemann wanted a British guarantee to France and Belgium, as the Anglo-American guarantee had fallen due to the United States' refusal to ratify the Treaty of Versailles. Stresemann later wrote: "Chamberlain had never been our friend. His first act was to attempt to restore the old Entente through a three-power alliance of England, France and Belgium, directed against Germany. German diplomacy faced a catastrophic situation".[20]

Stresemann conceived the idea that Germany would guarantee her western borders and pledge never to invade Belgium and France again, along with a guarantee from Britain that they would come to Germany's aid if attacked by France. Germany was in no position at the time to attack, as Stresemann wrote to the Crown Prince: "The renunciation of a military conflict with France has only a theoretical significance, in so far as there is no possibility of a war with France".[21] Stresemann negotiated the Locarno Treaties with Britain, France, Italy, and Belgium. On the third day of negotiations, Stresemann explained Germany's demands to the French Foreign Secretary, Aristide Briand. As Stresemann recorded, Briand "almost fell off his sofa, when he heard my explanations". Stresemann said that Germany alone should not make sacrifices for peace; European countries should cede colonies to Germany; the disarmament control commission should leave Germany; the Anglo-French occupation of the Rhineland should be ended; and Britain and France should disarm as Germany had done.[22] The Treaties were signed in October 1925 at Locarno. Germany officially recognized the post-World War I western border for the first time,[23] was guaranteed peace with France, and was promised admission to the League of Nations and evacuation of the last Allied occupation troops from the Rhineland.

Stresemann was not willing to conclude a similar treaty with the Second Polish Republic: "There will be no Locarno of the east" he said in 1925. However, in 1925 he did sign arbitration agreements with both Poland and the First Czechoslovak Republic to ensure that any future conflict would be settled by impartial arbitration, rather than by the use of force. By 1929 his policy was “detente with Poland,” and strengthening good economic relationships. [24][25][26]

After this reconciliation with the Versailles powers, Stresemann moved to improve relations with the Soviet Union. He said to Nikolay Krestinsky in June 1925, as recorded in his diary: "I had said I would not come to conclude a treaty with Russia so long as our political situation in the other direction was not cleared up, as I wanted to answer the question whether we had a treaty with Russia in the negative".[27] The Treaty of Berlin signed in April 1926 reaffirmed and strengthened the Treaty of Rapallo signed in 1922. In September 1926, Germany was admitted to the League of Nations as permanent member of the Security Council. This was a sign that Germany was quickly becoming a normal state, and assured the Soviet Union of Germany's sincerity in the Treaty of Berlin.

Stresemann was co-winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1926 for these achievements. Gustav Stresemann's success owed much to his friendly personal character and his willingness to be pragmatic. He was close personal friends with many influential foreigners. The most noted was Briand, with whom he shared the Peace Prize.[28]

Stresemann wrote to the Crown Prince: "All the questions which to-day preoccupy the German people can be transformed into as many vexations for the Entente by a skilful orator before the League of Nations". As Germany now had a veto on League resolutions, she could gain concessions from other countries on modifications on the Polish border or Anschluss with Austria, as other countries needed her vote. Germany could now act as "the spokesman of the whole German cultural community" and thereby provoke the German minorities in Czechoslovakia and Poland.[29]

Germany signed the Kellogg-Briand Pact in August 1928. It renounced the use of violence to resolve international conflicts. Although Stresemann did not propose the pact, Germany's adherence convinced many people that Weimar Germany was a Germany that could be reasoned with. This new insight was instrumental in the Young Plan of February 1929, which led to more reductions in German reparations payment.

Stresemann was not, however, in any sense pro-French. His main preoccupation was how to free Germany from the burden of reparations payments to France, imposed by the Treaty of Versailles. His strategy for this was to forge close economic ties with the United States. The U.S. was Germany's main source of money and raw materials, and one of Germany's largest export markets for manufactured goods. Germany's economic recovery was thus in the interests of the U.S., and gave the U.S. an incentive to help Germany resolve the reparations burden. The Dawes and Young plans were the result of this strategy. New York bankers loaned large sums to Germany, which used the dollars to pay reparations to France and Britain, which in turn paid their war loans they owed to Washington. Stresemann also hoped to use the United States' new financial involvement in the German economy to incentivize the nation's financial and political institutions to support reform of reparations. This paid off in 1928 when Federal Reserve Chairman Benjamin Strong shepherded forward the Young Plan.[11] Stresemann had a close relationship with Herbert Hoover, who was Secretary of Commerce in 1921-28 and President from 1929. This strategy worked remarkably well until it was derailed by the Great Depression after Stresemann's death.[30]

 
Stresemann in September 1929 shortly before his death with his wife Käth and son Wolfgang

During his period in the foreign ministry, Stresemann came more and more to accept the Republic, which he had at first rejected. By the mid-1920s, having contributed much to a (temporary) consolidation of the feeble democratic order, Stresemann was regarded as a Vernunftrepublikaner (republican by reason), someone who accepted the republic as the least of all evils but was in his heart still loyal to the monarchy. The conservative opposition criticized him for his supporting the republic and fulfilling too willingly the demands of the Western powers. Along with Matthias Erzberger and others, he was attacked as a Erfüllungspolitiker ("fulfillment politician"). Indeed, some of the more conservative members of his own People's Party never really trusted him.

In 1925, when he first proposed an agreement with France, he made it clear that in doing so he intended to "gain a free hand to secure a peaceful change of the borders in the East and [...] concentrate on a later incorporation of German territories in the East".[31] In the same year, while Poland was in a state of political and economic crisis, Stresemann began a trade war against the country. Stresemann hoped for an escalation of the Polish crisis, which would enable Germany to regain territories ceded to Poland after World War I, and he wanted Germany to gain a larger market for its products there. So Stresemann refused to engage in any international cooperation that would have "prematurely" restabilized the Polish economy. In response to a British proposal, Stresemann wrote to the German ambassador in London: "[A] final and lasting recapitalization of Poland must be delayed until the country is ripe for a settlement of the border according to our wishes and until our own position is sufficiently strong". According to Stresemann's letter, there should be no settlement "until [Poland's] economic and financial distress has reached an extreme stage and reduced the entire Polish body politic to a state of powerlessness".[32] Stresemann hoped to annex Polish territories in Greater Poland, take over whole eastern Upper Silesia and parts of Central Silesia and the entire so called Polish Corridor. Besides waging economic war on Poland, Streseman funded extensive propaganda efforts and plotted to collaborate with the Soviet Union against Polish statehood.[33]

According to historian Gordon Craig:

No German statesman since Bismarck's time had demonstrated, as brilliantly as he was to do, the ability to sense danger and to avoid it by seizing and retaining the initiative, the gift of maintaining perspective and a sense of relative values in the midst of a changing diplomatic situation, and the talent for being more stubborn than his partners in negotiation and for refusing to allow their importunities to force him to accept second-best solutions.[34]

Health decline and death

 
Stresemann's funeral
 
Stresemann's tomb at the Luisenstädtischer Friedhof Cemetery, Berlin
 
Gustav Stresemann Memorial in Mainz, October 1931

In 1928, Stresemann's poor health worsened after the mainstream national conservative parties lost seats to the SDP in the 1928 German federal election. He successfully negotiated a Grand Coalition government led by Chancellor Hermann Müller in which he remained Foreign Secretary, but was weakened in doing so.[35]

Stresemann's Atlanticist foreign policy also began to show fractures after the Young Plan failed to reduce reparations annuities as far as hoped and refused to establish a linkage between Allied war debts to the United States and German reparations payments. He seemed to win a victory when his friend Hoover won the 1928 United States presidential election, but his administration enacted a protectionist trade policy to assist U.S. agriculture and signed the Smoot–Hawley Tariff Act. The new trade barriers lessened U.S. credit to Germany.[35]

Discontent with the Young Plan led to the growth of far-right movements rejecting liberal democracy such as the Nazi Party, with Stresemann weakening himself further by keeping the right wing of the DVP under control. Stresemann responded to worsening trans-Atlantic relations by pursuing negotiations for closer relations with the United Kingdom and France, and in 1929 spoke positively of the idea of European integration to form a united political and economic counterweight against the United States. However, he died before he could make any further diplomatic progress towards this idea.[35]

Stresemann died of a series of strokes on 3 October 1929 at the age of 51, just hours after convincing the Reichstag to accept the Young Plan.[35] His gravesite is situated in the Luisenstadt Cemetery at Südstern in Berlin Kreuzberg, and includes work by the German sculptor Hugo Lederer.

Stresemann and his wife Käte had two sons, Wolfgang, who later became intendant of the Berliner Philharmoniker, and Joachim Stresemann.

Stresemann was a freemason initiated in the masonic lodge Frederick the Great (in German, Friedrich der Große) in Berlin in 1923. His masonic membership was generally known to his contemporaries and he was criticized by German nationalists as a "lodge politician".[36]

Fashion

Stresemann popularized the style of substituting a short dark lounge-suit jacket for a morning coat but otherwise wearing morning dress for men's day wear. The look became so identified with Stresemann that such outfits are often called "Stresemanns."

See also

References

  1. ^ Wright 2002, p. 10.
  2. ^ Stresemann, Gustav. Goethe und Napoleon: ein Vortrag; with Anhang Weimarer Tagebuch, Berlin, 1924
  3. ^ Wright 2002, p. 8.
  4. ^ Wright 2002, p. 15.
  5. ^ Wright 2002, pp. 17–8.
  6. ^ Wright 2002, p. 20.
  7. ^ Wright 2002, p. 23.
  8. ^ Hirsch, Felix. Gustav Stresemann. 1878/1978, Berlin, Berlin Verlag, 1978
  9. ^ Gustav Stresemann: Die Entwicklung Berliner Flaschenbiergeschäfts. Eine wirtschaftliche Studie. ["The development of the bottled beer trade in Berlin. An economic study "]. Dissertation University of Leipzig 1901
  10. ^ Pohl 2015, p. 73.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Tooze (2006), pp. 4–7
  12. ^ Anderson, Margaret Lavinia (2011). "Who Still Talked about the Extermination of the Armenians?". In Suny, Ronald Grigor; Göçek, Fatma Müge; Naimark, Norman M. (eds.). A Question of Genocide: Armenians and Turks at the End of the Ottoman Empire. Oxford University Press. p. 209. ISBN 978-0-19-979276-4.
  13. ^ Wheeler-Bennett 1964, p. 48, n. 2.
  14. ^ AQA History: The Development of Germany, 1871-1925 by Sally Waller
  15. ^ Mulligan 2005, p. 173.
  16. ^ a b Shirer 1990, p. 64.
  17. ^ Schwarzschild 1943, p. 186.
  18. ^ Fischer 2010, p. 67.
  19. ^ Evans 2003, p. 108-109.
  20. ^ Schwarzschild 1943, p. 156.
  21. ^ Schwarzschild 1943, p. 157.
  22. ^ Schwarzschild 1943, p. 161.
  23. ^ That is, for the first time of its own accord. Germany had, of course, quite officially recognized them in the Versailles treaty, but had not been in a position to refuse to sign.
  24. ^ Wright (2004) pp 336–337, 410, 472-474.
  25. ^ Jonathan Wright, "Stresemann and Locarno" Contemporary European History, 4#2 (1995), pp. 109–131. online
  26. ^ Zygmunt J. Gasiorowski, "Stresemann and Poland after Locarno," Journal of Central European Affairs (1958) 18#3 pp 292-317.
  27. ^ Wheeler-Bennett 1964, p. 142.
  28. ^ Annelise Thimme. "Stresemann and Locarno", 74
  29. ^ Schwarzschild 1943, p. 168.
  30. ^ Tooze 2006, p. 6.
  31. ^ Stresemann in an article for the Hamburger Fremdenblatt, 10 April 1922, quoted after Martin Broszat, 200 Jahre deutsche Polenpolitik, Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, 1972, p.220.
  32. ^ Stresemann in a letter to the German ambassador in London, quoted after Broszat (see above), p. 224.
  33. ^ THE WEIMAR REPUBLIC AND THE GERMAN-POLISH BORDERS Journal Article THE WEIMAR REPUBLIC AND THE GERMAN-POLISH BORDERS CHRISTOPH M. KIMMICH The Polish Review, Vol. 14, No. 4 (Autumn, 1969), pp. 37-45
  34. ^ Gordon Craig, Germany, 1866–1945 (1978) pp 513–514.
  35. ^ a b c d Tooze (2006), pp. 11–17
  36. ^ de Hoyos & Morris 2004, p. 93.

Bibliography

  • Feuchtwanger, Edgar. "Hitler, Stresemann and the Discontinuity of German Foreign Policy." History Review (1999) 35:14+ .
  • Feuchtwanger, Edgar. "From Weimar to Hitler: Germany, 1918-33 (2nd ed. 1995)
  • Fischer, Wolfgang C. (2010). German Hyperinflation 1922/23: A Law and Economics Approach. ISBN 978-3-89936-931-1.
  • de Hoyos, Arturo; Morris, S. Brent, eds. (2004). Freemasonry in Context: History, Ritual, Controversy. Lexington Books. ISBN 978-0739107812.
  • Grathwol, Robert P. (1980). Stresemann and the DNVP: Reconciliation or Revenge in German Foreign Policy. Regent Press of Kansas | Out of Print. ISBN 9780700601998.
  • Jacobson, Jon. Locarno diplomacy: Germany and the west, 1925–1929 (Princeton UP, 1972) excerpt.
  • Machalka, Wolfgang, and Marshall Lee, eds. Gustav Stresemann (1982), essays by scholars
  • Mulligan, William (2005). The creation of the modern German Army: General Walther Reinhardt and the Weimar Republic, 1914-1930. Monographs in German History. Vol. 12. ISBN 978-157181908-6.
  • Nekrich, Aleksandr Moiseevich. Pariahs, partners, predators: German-Soviet relations, 1922-1941 (Columbia University Press, 1997).
  • Schwarzschild, Leopold (1943). Guterman, Norbert (ed.). World in Trance. London: H. Hamilton. OCLC 609414177.
  • Shirer, William L. (1990). The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany. ISBN 978-0-671-72868-7.
  • Slavėnas, Julius P. (1972). "Stresemann and Lithuania in the Nineteen Twenties". Lithuanian Quarterly Journal of Arts and Sciences. 18 (4 – Winter 1972).
  • Steiner, Zara. The Lights that Failed: European International History 1919—1933 (Oxford, 2005); 960 pp.
  • Thimme, Annelise. "Stresemann and Locarno" in Hans Wilhelm Gatzke, ed., European diplomacy between two wars, 1919-1939 (1972) pp 73-93 online
  • Tooze, Adam (2007) [2006]. The Wages of Destruction: The Making & Breaking of the Nazi Economy. London: Penguin. ISBN 978-0-14-100348-1.
  • Turner, Henry Ashby (1963). Stresemann and the Politics of the Weimar Republic. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. online, focuses on domestic politics.
  • Wheeler-Bennett, John (1964). The Nemesis of Power; The German Army in Politics, 1918-1945 (2nd ed.). London: Macmillan. OCLC 711310.
  • Wright, Jonathan (1997). "Gustav Stresemann: Liberal or Realist?". In Otte, Thomas G; Pagedas, Constantine A (eds.). Personalities, War and Diplomacy: Essays in International History. London: Frank Cass. ISBN 978-0-7146-4818-7.
  • Wright, Jonathan (2002). Gustav Stresemann: Weimar's Greatest Statesman. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-821949-1.
  • Wright, Jonathan. "Gustav Stresemann: Weimar's Greatest Statesman." History Today (Nov 2002), 52#11 pp 53–59.
  • Wright, Jonathan. "Stresemann and Weimar" History Today (Oct 1989) 39#10, pp 35–41;

Historiography

  • Enssle, Manfred J. "Stresemann's Diplomacy Fifty Years after Locarno: Some Recent Perspectives." Historical Journal 20.4 (1977): 937-948 online.
  • Gatzke, Hans W. "Gustav Stresemann: A Bibliographical Article." Journal of Modern History 36#1 (1964): 1-13. in JSTOR
  • Grathwol, Robert. "Stresemann revisited." European Studies Review 7.3 (1977): 341-352.
  • Grathwol, Robert. “Gustav Stresemann: Reflections on His Foreign Policy.” Journal of Modern History, 45#1 (1973), pp. 52–70. online

Primary sources

  • Stresemann, Gustav. Essays and speeches on various subjects (1968) online
  • Sutton, Eric ed. Gustav Stresemann his diaries, letters and papers (1935) online

In German

  • Becker, Hartmuth: Gustav Stresemann: Reden und Schriften. Politik – Geschichte – Literatur, 1897–1926. Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 2008, ISBN 978-3-428-12139-7.
  • Birkelund, John P.: Gustav Stresemann. Patriot und Staatsmann. Eine Biographie. Europa-Verlag, Hamburg 2003, ISBN 3-203-75511-4.
  • Braun, Bernd: Die Reichskanzler der Weimarer Republik. Zwölf Lebensläufe in Bildern. Düsseldorf 2011, ISBN 978-3-7700-5308-7, p. 270–303.
  • Kolb, Eberhard (2003). Gustav Stresemann. Munich: CH Beck. ISBN 978-3-406-48015-7.
  • Kolb, Eberhard: Stresemann, Gustav. In: Neue Deutsche Biographie (NDB). Band 25, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 2013, ISBN 978-3-428-11206-7, S. 545–547 (Digitalisat 2016-03-05 at the Wayback Machine (PDF; 3,7 MB)).
  • Pohl, Karl Heinrich (2015). Gustav Stresemann. Biografie eines Grenzgängers. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. ISBN 3-525-30082-4.

External links

  Media related to Gustav Stresemann at Wikimedia Commons

Political offices
Preceded by Minister of Foreign Affairs
1923-1929
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chancellor of Germany
14 August - 23 November 1923
Succeeded by

gustav, stresemann, gustav, ernst, stresemann, german, pronunciation, ˈɡʊstaf, ˈʃtʁeːzəˌman, listen, 1878, october, 1929, german, statesman, served, chancellor, 1923, days, foreign, minister, from, 1923, 1929, during, weimar, republic, portrait, stresemann, wi. Gustav Ernst Stresemann German pronunciation ˈɡʊstaf ˈʃtʁeːzeˌman listen 10 May 1878 3 October 1929 was a German statesman who served as chancellor in 1923 for 102 days and as foreign minister from 1923 to 1929 during the Weimar Republic Gustav StresemannPortrait of Stresemann with visible Schmiss Chancellor of Germany Weimar Republic In office 13 August 1923 30 November 1923PresidentFriedrich EbertDeputyRobert SchmidtPreceded byWilhelm CunoSucceeded byWilhelm MarxMinister of Foreign AffairsIn office 13 August 1923 3 October 1929ChancellorHimselfWilhelm MarxHans LutherHermann MullerPreceded byHans von RosenbergSucceeded byJulius CurtiusMember of the Reichstag Weimar Republic In office 24 June 1920 3 October 1929ConstituencyNational list 1924 1929 Potsdam II 1920 1924 German Empire In office 19 February 1907 9 November 1918ConstituencyHannover 2 1912 1918 Sachsen 21 1907 1912 Personal detailsBorn 1878 05 10 10 May 1878Berlin German EmpireDied3 October 1929 1929 10 03 aged 51 Berlin Weimar RepublicPolitical partyNational Liberal Party 1907 1918 German Democratic Party 1918 German People s Party 1918 1929 SpouseKate KleefeldChildrenWolfgang Hans JoachimAwardsNobel Peace Prize 1926 SignatureHis most notable achievement was the reconciliation between Germany and France for which he and French Prime Minister Aristide Briand received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1926 During a period of political instability and fragile short lived governments he was the most influential cabinet member in most of the Weimar Republic s existence During his political career he represented three successive liberal parties he was the dominant figure of the German People s Party during the Weimar Republic Contents 1 Early years 2 World War I 3 Weimar Republic 3 1 Chancellor 1923 3 2 Foreign minister 1923 1929 4 Health decline and death 5 Fashion 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 8 1 Historiography 8 2 Primary sources 8 3 In German 9 External linksEarly years EditStresemann was born on 10 May 1878 in 66 Kopenicker Strasse in Southeast Berlin the youngest of seven children His father worked as a beer bottler and distributor and also ran a small bar out of the family home as well as renting rooms for extra money The family was lower middle class but relatively well off for the neighbourhood and had sufficient funds to provide Gustav with a high quality education 1 Stresemann was an excellent student particularly excelling in German literature and poetry At the age of 16 he joined the Andreas Gymnasium to study His parents brought him up to have an interest in books he was especially passionate about history with his teacher Mr Wolff commenting that he had an almost sickly taste in history He took an interest in Napoleon and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe whom he later wrote about in his work 1924 Goethe und Napoleon ein Vortrag 2 His mother Mathilde died in 1895 From December 1895 he wrote Berlin letters for the Dresdener Volks Zeitung often talking about politics and targeting Prussian conservatives In an essay written when he left school he noted that he would have enjoyed becoming a teacher but he would only have been qualified to teach languages or the natural sciences which were not his primary areas of interest 3 Due to this he enrolled in university In April 1897 Stresemann enrolled at the University of Berlin where he was convinced by a businessman to study political economy instead of literature 4 During his university years Stresemann also became active in the Burschenschaften movement of student fraternities and became editor in April 1898 of the Allgemeine Deutsche Universitats Zeitung a newspaper run by Konrad Kuster a leader in the liberal portion of the Burschenschaften His editorials for the paper were often political and dismissed most of the contemporary political parties as broken in one way or another 5 In these early writings he set out views that combined liberalism with strident nationalism a combination that would dominate his views for the rest of his life 6 In 1898 Stresemann left the University of Berlin transferring to the University of Leipzig so that he could pursue a doctorate He studied history and international Law and took literature courses Influenced by Dr Martin Kriele he also took courses in economics In March 1899 he stopped being an editor for the Allgemeine Deutsche Universitats Zeitung He completed his studies in January 1901 submitting a thesis on the bottled beer industry in Berlin which received a relatively high grade but was a subject of mockery from colleagues 7 8 9 Stresemann s doctoral supervisor was the economist Karl Bucher 10 In 1902 Stresemann founded the Saxon Manufacturers Association In 1903 he married Kate Kleefeld 1883 1970 daughter of a wealthy Jewish Berlin businessman and the sister of Kurt von Kleefeld the last person in Germany to be ennobled in 1918 At that time he was also a member of Friedrich Naumann s National Social Association In 1906 he was elected to the Dresden town council Though he had initially worked in trade associations Stresemann soon became a leader of the National Liberal Party in Saxony In 1907 he was elected to the Reichstag where he soon became a close associate of party chairman Ernst Bassermann However his support of expanded social welfare programs did not sit well with some of the party s more conservative members and he lost his post in the party s executive committee in 1912 Later that year he lost both his Reichstag and town council seats He returned to business and founded the German American Economic Association In 1914 he returned to the Reichstag He was exempted from war service due to poor health With Bassermann kept away from the Reichstag by either illness or military service Stresemann soon became the National Liberals de facto leader After Bassermann s death in 1917 Stresemann succeeded him as the party leader World War I EditThe evolution of his political ideas appears somewhat erratic Initially in the German Empire Stresemann was associated with the left wing of the National Liberals He initially believed in the maintenance of a balance of power between the British Empire the United States and Germany whom he believed would be the world s economic superpowers in the future Yet he also supported the Anglo German naval arms race believing that the expansion of the Imperial German Navy was necessary to protect German international trade 11 During World War I he gradually moved to the right expressing his support of the Hohenzollern monarchy and Germany s expansionist goals He believed that Germany would need to annex the Low Countries Eastern Europe parts of north east France and the French protectorate in Morocco in order to economically compete with the United States in the future He was a vocal proponent of unrestricted submarine warfare 11 However he still favoured an expansion of the social welfare programme and also supported an end to the restrictive Prussian three class franchise citation needed In 1916 he visited Constantinople and learned about the Ottoman Empire s Armenian genocide writing in his diary Armenian reduction 1 11 2 million Stresemann recommended the recall of the German ambassador Paul Wolff Metternich accusing him of being too sympathetic to Armenians 12 The collapse of the German Empire after its defeat in World War I and the German Revolution of 1918 1919 drove Stresemann into a mental and physical breakdown which shocked him into totally abandoning his earlier militarism and annexationism 11 When the Allied powers peace terms became known including a crushing burden of paying reparations for the war Constantin Fehrenbach denounced them and claimed the will to break the chains of slavery would be implanted into a generation of Germans Stresemann said of this speech He was inspired in that hour by God to say what was felt by the German people His words spoken under Fichte s portrait the final words of which merged into Deutschland Deutschland uber alles made it an unforgettably solemn hour There was in that sense a kind of uplifting grandeur The impression left on all was tremendous 13 After the war Stresemann briefly joined the German Democratic Party formed from a merger of the Progressives with the left wing of the National Liberals However he was quickly expelled for his association with the right wing He then gathered the main body of the old National Liberal Party including most of its centre and right factions into the German People s Party German Deutsche Volkspartei DVP with himself as chairman Most of its support came from middle class and upper class Protestants The DVP platform promoted Christian family values secular education lower tariffs opposition to welfare spending and agrarian subsidies and hostility to Marxism that is the Communists and also the Social Democrats The DVP was initially seen along with the German National People s Party as part of the national opposition to the Weimar Republic particularly for its grudging acceptance of democracy and its ambivalent attitude towards the Freikorps and the Kapp Putsch in 1920 Beginning in 1919 Stresemann emphasized that Germany should try to regain its great power status by leveraging the continued global economic influence and creditworthiness of its multinational corporations pursuing peaceful economic expansion and establishing friendly relations with the United States 11 By late 1920 Stresemann gradually moved to cooperation with the parties of the left and centre possibly in reaction to political murders like that of Walther Rathenau However he remained a monarchist at heart Weimar Republic EditChancellor 1923 Edit On 13 August 1923 Stresemann was appointed chancellor and foreign minister of a grand coalition government in the so called year of crises 1923 In social policy a new system of binding arbitration was introduced in October 1923 in which an outside arbitrator had the final say in industrial disputes 14 On the 26 September 1923 Stresemann announced the end to the passive resistance against the Occupation of the Ruhr by the French and Belgians in tandem with an Article 48 of the Weimar Constitution state of emergency proclamation by President Friedrich Ebert that lasted until February 1924 15 16 In October 1923 the Stresemann government used Article 48 to replace the illegally elected SPD Communist coalition government of Saxony on 29 October and that of Thuringia on 6 November by commissioners By this time Stresemann was convinced that accepting the republic and reaching an understanding with the Allies on the reparations issue was the only way for Germany to gain the breathing room it needed to rebuild its battered economy 16 He also wished to recover the Allied occupied Rhineland as he wrote to Wilhelm the former German Crown Prince on 23 July 1923 The most important objective of German politics is the liberation of German territory from French and Belgian occupation First we must remove the strangler from our throat 17 Hyperinflation in the Weimar Republic reached its peak in November 1923 18 Since Germany was no longer able to pay the striking workers more and more money was printed which finally led to hyperinflation Stresemann introduced a new currency the Rentenmark to end hyperinflation He also persuaded the French to pull back from the Ruhr in return for a promise that reparations payments would resume That was part of his larger strategy of fulfillment Although he like nearly every other German politician cursed the Treaty of Versailles as a Diktat he had come to believe that Germany would never win relief from its terms unless it made a good faith effort to fulfill them To his mind this would convince the Allies that the reparations bill was truly beyond Germany s capacity The effort paid off the Allies began to take a look at reforming the reparations scheme 19 In early November 1923 partly because of the reaction to the overthrowing of the SPD KPD governments in Saxony and Thuringia the Social Democrats withdrew from his reshuffled government and after a motion of confidence he was voted down on 23 November 1923 after which Stresemann and his cabinet resigned Foreign minister 1923 1929 Edit Stresemann remained as foreign minister in the government of his successor Wilhelm Marx from the Centre Party He remained foreign minister for the rest of his life in eight successive governments ranging from the centre right to the centre left As foreign minister Stresemann had numerous achievements His first notable achievement was the Dawes Plan of 1924 which reduced Germany s overall reparations commitment and reorganized the Reichsbank He appointed Hjalmar Schacht as the new President of the Reichsbank who implemented the Dawes Plan and ended Weimar hyperinflation despite his reservations over Germany s growing foreign debt under Stresemann s economic policies 11 The successful negotiation of the Dawes Plan provided hope for Streseman s foreign policy strategy emphasizing Germany s remaining economic soft power since the creator of the plan Owen D Young was the chairman of General Electric and a major trading partner with the German firm AEG 11 After Sir Austen Chamberlain became British Foreign Secretary Stresemann wanted a British guarantee to France and Belgium as the Anglo American guarantee had fallen due to the United States refusal to ratify the Treaty of Versailles Stresemann later wrote Chamberlain had never been our friend His first act was to attempt to restore the old Entente through a three power alliance of England France and Belgium directed against Germany German diplomacy faced a catastrophic situation 20 Stresemann conceived the idea that Germany would guarantee her western borders and pledge never to invade Belgium and France again along with a guarantee from Britain that they would come to Germany s aid if attacked by France Germany was in no position at the time to attack as Stresemann wrote to the Crown Prince The renunciation of a military conflict with France has only a theoretical significance in so far as there is no possibility of a war with France 21 Stresemann negotiated the Locarno Treaties with Britain France Italy and Belgium On the third day of negotiations Stresemann explained Germany s demands to the French Foreign Secretary Aristide Briand As Stresemann recorded Briand almost fell off his sofa when he heard my explanations Stresemann said that Germany alone should not make sacrifices for peace European countries should cede colonies to Germany the disarmament control commission should leave Germany the Anglo French occupation of the Rhineland should be ended and Britain and France should disarm as Germany had done 22 The Treaties were signed in October 1925 at Locarno Germany officially recognized the post World War I western border for the first time 23 was guaranteed peace with France and was promised admission to the League of Nations and evacuation of the last Allied occupation troops from the Rhineland Stresemann was not willing to conclude a similar treaty with the Second Polish Republic There will be no Locarno of the east he said in 1925 However in 1925 he did sign arbitration agreements with both Poland and the First Czechoslovak Republic to ensure that any future conflict would be settled by impartial arbitration rather than by the use of force By 1929 his policy was detente with Poland and strengthening good economic relationships 24 25 26 After this reconciliation with the Versailles powers Stresemann moved to improve relations with the Soviet Union He said to Nikolay Krestinsky in June 1925 as recorded in his diary I had said I would not come to conclude a treaty with Russia so long as our political situation in the other direction was not cleared up as I wanted to answer the question whether we had a treaty with Russia in the negative 27 The Treaty of Berlin signed in April 1926 reaffirmed and strengthened the Treaty of Rapallo signed in 1922 In September 1926 Germany was admitted to the League of Nations as permanent member of the Security Council This was a sign that Germany was quickly becoming a normal state and assured the Soviet Union of Germany s sincerity in the Treaty of Berlin Stresemann was co winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1926 for these achievements Gustav Stresemann s success owed much to his friendly personal character and his willingness to be pragmatic He was close personal friends with many influential foreigners The most noted was Briand with whom he shared the Peace Prize 28 Stresemann wrote to the Crown Prince All the questions which to day preoccupy the German people can be transformed into as many vexations for the Entente by a skilful orator before the League of Nations As Germany now had a veto on League resolutions she could gain concessions from other countries on modifications on the Polish border or Anschluss with Austria as other countries needed her vote Germany could now act as the spokesman of the whole German cultural community and thereby provoke the German minorities in Czechoslovakia and Poland 29 Germany signed the Kellogg Briand Pact in August 1928 It renounced the use of violence to resolve international conflicts Although Stresemann did not propose the pact Germany s adherence convinced many people that Weimar Germany was a Germany that could be reasoned with This new insight was instrumental in the Young Plan of February 1929 which led to more reductions in German reparations payment Stresemann was not however in any sense pro French His main preoccupation was how to free Germany from the burden of reparations payments to France imposed by the Treaty of Versailles His strategy for this was to forge close economic ties with the United States The U S was Germany s main source of money and raw materials and one of Germany s largest export markets for manufactured goods Germany s economic recovery was thus in the interests of the U S and gave the U S an incentive to help Germany resolve the reparations burden The Dawes and Young plans were the result of this strategy New York bankers loaned large sums to Germany which used the dollars to pay reparations to France and Britain which in turn paid their war loans they owed to Washington Stresemann also hoped to use the United States new financial involvement in the German economy to incentivize the nation s financial and political institutions to support reform of reparations This paid off in 1928 when Federal Reserve Chairman Benjamin Strong shepherded forward the Young Plan 11 Stresemann had a close relationship with Herbert Hoover who was Secretary of Commerce in 1921 28 and President from 1929 This strategy worked remarkably well until it was derailed by the Great Depression after Stresemann s death 30 Stresemann in September 1929 shortly before his death with his wife Kath and son Wolfgang During his period in the foreign ministry Stresemann came more and more to accept the Republic which he had at first rejected By the mid 1920s having contributed much to a temporary consolidation of the feeble democratic order Stresemann was regarded as a Vernunftrepublikaner republican by reason someone who accepted the republic as the least of all evils but was in his heart still loyal to the monarchy The conservative opposition criticized him for his supporting the republic and fulfilling too willingly the demands of the Western powers Along with Matthias Erzberger and others he was attacked as a Erfullungspolitiker fulfillment politician Indeed some of the more conservative members of his own People s Party never really trusted him In 1925 when he first proposed an agreement with France he made it clear that in doing so he intended to gain a free hand to secure a peaceful change of the borders in the East and concentrate on a later incorporation of German territories in the East 31 In the same year while Poland was in a state of political and economic crisis Stresemann began a trade war against the country Stresemann hoped for an escalation of the Polish crisis which would enable Germany to regain territories ceded to Poland after World War I and he wanted Germany to gain a larger market for its products there So Stresemann refused to engage in any international cooperation that would have prematurely restabilized the Polish economy In response to a British proposal Stresemann wrote to the German ambassador in London A final and lasting recapitalization of Poland must be delayed until the country is ripe for a settlement of the border according to our wishes and until our own position is sufficiently strong According to Stresemann s letter there should be no settlement until Poland s economic and financial distress has reached an extreme stage and reduced the entire Polish body politic to a state of powerlessness 32 Stresemann hoped to annex Polish territories in Greater Poland take over whole eastern Upper Silesia and parts of Central Silesia and the entire so called Polish Corridor Besides waging economic war on Poland Streseman funded extensive propaganda efforts and plotted to collaborate with the Soviet Union against Polish statehood 33 According to historian Gordon Craig No German statesman since Bismarck s time had demonstrated as brilliantly as he was to do the ability to sense danger and to avoid it by seizing and retaining the initiative the gift of maintaining perspective and a sense of relative values in the midst of a changing diplomatic situation and the talent for being more stubborn than his partners in negotiation and for refusing to allow their importunities to force him to accept second best solutions 34 Health decline and death Edit Stresemann s funeral Stresemann s tomb at the Luisenstadtischer Friedhof Cemetery Berlin Gustav Stresemann Memorial in Mainz October 1931 In 1928 Stresemann s poor health worsened after the mainstream national conservative parties lost seats to the SDP in the 1928 German federal election He successfully negotiated a Grand Coalition government led by Chancellor Hermann Muller in which he remained Foreign Secretary but was weakened in doing so 35 Stresemann s Atlanticist foreign policy also began to show fractures after the Young Plan failed to reduce reparations annuities as far as hoped and refused to establish a linkage between Allied war debts to the United States and German reparations payments He seemed to win a victory when his friend Hoover won the 1928 United States presidential election but his administration enacted a protectionist trade policy to assist U S agriculture and signed the Smoot Hawley Tariff Act The new trade barriers lessened U S credit to Germany 35 Discontent with the Young Plan led to the growth of far right movements rejecting liberal democracy such as the Nazi Party with Stresemann weakening himself further by keeping the right wing of the DVP under control Stresemann responded to worsening trans Atlantic relations by pursuing negotiations for closer relations with the United Kingdom and France and in 1929 spoke positively of the idea of European integration to form a united political and economic counterweight against the United States However he died before he could make any further diplomatic progress towards this idea 35 Stresemann died of a series of strokes on 3 October 1929 at the age of 51 just hours after convincing the Reichstag to accept the Young Plan 35 His gravesite is situated in the Luisenstadt Cemetery at Sudstern in Berlin Kreuzberg and includes work by the German sculptor Hugo Lederer Stresemann and his wife Kate had two sons Wolfgang who later became intendant of the Berliner Philharmoniker and Joachim Stresemann Stresemann was a freemason initiated in the masonic lodge Frederick the Great in German Friedrich der Grosse in Berlin in 1923 His masonic membership was generally known to his contemporaries and he was criticized by German nationalists as a lodge politician 36 Fashion EditStresemann popularized the style of substituting a short dark lounge suit jacket for a morning coat but otherwise wearing morning dress for men s day wear The look became so identified with Stresemann that such outfits are often called Stresemanns See also EditGustav Stresemann Institute List of people from BerlinReferences Edit Wright 2002 p 10 Stresemann Gustav Goethe und Napoleon ein Vortrag with Anhang Weimarer Tagebuch Berlin 1924 Wright 2002 p 8 Wright 2002 p 15 Wright 2002 pp 17 8 Wright 2002 p 20 Wright 2002 p 23 Hirsch Felix Gustav Stresemann 1878 1978 Berlin Berlin Verlag 1978 Gustav Stresemann Die Entwicklung Berliner Flaschenbiergeschafts Eine wirtschaftliche Studie The development of the bottled beer trade in Berlin An economic study Dissertation University of Leipzig 1901 Pohl 2015 p 73 a b c d e f g Tooze 2006 pp 4 7 Anderson Margaret Lavinia 2011 Who Still Talked about the Extermination of the Armenians In Suny Ronald Grigor Gocek Fatma Muge Naimark Norman M eds A Question of Genocide Armenians and Turks at the End of the Ottoman Empire Oxford University Press p 209 ISBN 978 0 19 979276 4 Wheeler Bennett 1964 p 48 n 2 AQA History The Development of Germany 1871 1925 by Sally Waller Mulligan 2005 p 173 a b Shirer 1990 p 64 Schwarzschild 1943 p 186 Fischer 2010 p 67 Evans 2003 p 108 109 Schwarzschild 1943 p 156 Schwarzschild 1943 p 157 Schwarzschild 1943 p 161 That is for the first time of its own accord Germany had of course quite officially recognized them in the Versailles treaty but had not been in a position to refuse to sign Wright 2004 pp 336 337 410 472 474 Jonathan Wright Stresemann and Locarno Contemporary European History 4 2 1995 pp 109 131 online Zygmunt J Gasiorowski Stresemann and Poland after Locarno Journal of Central European Affairs 1958 18 3 pp 292 317 Wheeler Bennett 1964 p 142 Annelise Thimme Stresemann and Locarno 74 Schwarzschild 1943 p 168 Tooze 2006 p 6 Stresemann in an article for the Hamburger Fremdenblatt 10 April 1922 quoted after Martin Broszat 200 Jahre deutsche Polenpolitik Frankfurt am Main Suhrkamp 1972 p 220 Stresemann in a letter to the German ambassador in London quoted after Broszat see above p 224 THE WEIMAR REPUBLIC AND THE GERMAN POLISH BORDERS Journal Article THE WEIMAR REPUBLIC AND THE GERMAN POLISH BORDERS CHRISTOPH M KIMMICH The Polish Review Vol 14 No 4 Autumn 1969 pp 37 45 Gordon Craig Germany 1866 1945 1978 pp 513 514 a b c d Tooze 2006 pp 11 17 de Hoyos amp Morris 2004 p 93 Bibliography EditCornebise Alfred E Gustav Stresemann and the Ruhr Occupation the Making of a Statesman European Studies Review 2 1 1972 43 67 Enssle Manfred J 1980 Stresemann s Territorial Revisionism Germany Belgium and the Eupen Malmedy Question 1919 1929 Steiner ISBN 978 3 515 02959 9 Evans Richard J 2003 The Coming of the Third Reich New York City Penguin Press ISBN 978 0141009759 Feuchtwanger Edgar Hitler Stresemann and the Discontinuity of German Foreign Policy History Review 1999 35 14 online Feuchtwanger Edgar From Weimar to Hitler Germany 1918 33 2nd ed 1995 Fischer Wolfgang C 2010 German Hyperinflation 1922 23 A Law and Economics Approach ISBN 978 3 89936 931 1 de Hoyos Arturo Morris S Brent eds 2004 Freemasonry in Context History Ritual Controversy Lexington Books ISBN 978 0739107812 Grathwol Robert P 1980 Stresemann and the DNVP Reconciliation or Revenge in German Foreign Policy Regent Press of Kansas Out of Print ISBN 9780700601998 Jacobson Jon Locarno diplomacy Germany and the west 1925 1929 Princeton UP 1972 excerpt Machalka Wolfgang and Marshall Lee eds Gustav Stresemann 1982 essays by scholars Mulligan William 2005 The creation of the modern German Army General Walther Reinhardt and the Weimar Republic 1914 1930 Monographs in German History Vol 12 ISBN 978 157181908 6 Nekrich Aleksandr Moiseevich Pariahs partners predators German Soviet relations 1922 1941 Columbia University Press 1997 Schwarzschild Leopold 1943 Guterman Norbert ed World in Trance London H Hamilton OCLC 609414177 Shirer William L 1990 The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich A History of Nazi Germany ISBN 978 0 671 72868 7 Slavenas Julius P 1972 Stresemann and Lithuania in the Nineteen Twenties Lithuanian Quarterly Journal of Arts and Sciences 18 4 Winter 1972 Steiner Zara The Lights that Failed European International History 1919 1933 Oxford 2005 960 pp Thimme Annelise Stresemann and Locarno in Hans Wilhelm Gatzke ed European diplomacy between two wars 1919 1939 1972 pp 73 93 online Tooze Adam 2007 2006 The Wages of Destruction The Making amp Breaking of the Nazi Economy London Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 100348 1 Turner Henry Ashby 1963 Stresemann and the Politics of the Weimar Republic Princeton NJ Princeton University Press online focuses on domestic politics Wheeler Bennett John 1964 The Nemesis of Power The German Army in Politics 1918 1945 2nd ed London Macmillan OCLC 711310 Wright Jonathan 1997 Gustav Stresemann Liberal or Realist In Otte Thomas G Pagedas Constantine A eds Personalities War and Diplomacy Essays in International History London Frank Cass ISBN 978 0 7146 4818 7 Wright Jonathan 2002 Gustav Stresemann Weimar s Greatest Statesman Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 821949 1 Wright Jonathan Gustav Stresemann Weimar s Greatest Statesman History Today Nov 2002 52 11 pp 53 59 Wright Jonathan Stresemann and Weimar History Today Oct 1989 39 10 pp 35 41 Historiography Edit Enssle Manfred J Stresemann s Diplomacy Fifty Years after Locarno Some Recent Perspectives Historical Journal 20 4 1977 937 948 online Gatzke Hans W Gustav Stresemann A Bibliographical Article Journal of Modern History 36 1 1964 1 13 in JSTOR Grathwol Robert Stresemann revisited European Studies Review 7 3 1977 341 352 Grathwol Robert Gustav Stresemann Reflections on His Foreign Policy Journal of Modern History 45 1 1973 pp 52 70 onlinePrimary sources Edit Stresemann Gustav Essays and speeches on various subjects 1968 online Sutton Eric ed Gustav Stresemann his diaries letters and papers 1935 onlineIn German Edit Becker Hartmuth Gustav Stresemann Reden und Schriften Politik Geschichte Literatur 1897 1926 Duncker amp Humblot Berlin 2008 ISBN 978 3 428 12139 7 Birkelund John P Gustav Stresemann Patriot und Staatsmann Eine Biographie Europa Verlag Hamburg 2003 ISBN 3 203 75511 4 Braun Bernd Die Reichskanzler der Weimarer Republik Zwolf Lebenslaufe in Bildern Dusseldorf 2011 ISBN 978 3 7700 5308 7 p 270 303 Kolb Eberhard 2003 Gustav Stresemann Munich CH Beck ISBN 978 3 406 48015 7 Kolb Eberhard Stresemann Gustav In Neue Deutsche Biographie NDB Band 25 Duncker amp Humblot Berlin 2013 ISBN 978 3 428 11206 7 S 545 547 Digitalisat Archived 2016 03 05 at the Wayback Machine PDF 3 7 MB Pohl Karl Heinrich 2015 Gustav Stresemann Biografie eines Grenzgangers Gottingen Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht ISBN 3 525 30082 4 External links Edit Media related to Gustav Stresemann at Wikimedia Commons Works by Gustav Stresemann at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Gustav Stresemann at Internet Archive Gustav Stresemann on Nobelprize org Newspaper clippings about Gustav Stresemann in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Portals Germany Biography PoliticsGustav Stresemann at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Political officesPreceded byHans von Rosenberg Minister of Foreign Affairs1923 1929 Succeeded byJulius CurtiusPreceded byWilhelm Cuno Chancellor of Germany14 August 23 November 1923 Succeeded byWilhelm Marx Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gustav Stresemann amp oldid 1151524150, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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