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Stab-in-the-back myth

The stab-in-the-back myth (German: Dolchstoßlegende, pronounced [ˈdɔlçʃtoːsleˌɡɛndə] , lit.'dagger-stab legend')[a] was an antisemitic and anticommunist conspiracy theory that was widely believed and promulgated in Germany after 1918. It maintained that the Imperial German Army did not lose World War I on the battlefield, but was instead betrayed by certain citizens on the home front – especially Jews, revolutionary socialists who fomented strikes and labour unrest,[1] and republican politicians who had overthrown the House of Hohenzollern in the German Revolution of 1918–1919. Advocates of the myth denounced the German government leaders who had signed the Armistice of 11 November 1918 as the "November criminals" (November­verbrecher).

An illustration from a 1919 Austrian postcard showing a caricatured Jew stabbing a German Army soldier in the back with a dagger. The capitulation of the Central Powers was blamed on socialists, Bolsheviks, and the Weimar Republic, but in particular on Jews.
Hagen takes aim at Siegfried's back with a spear in an 1847 painting by Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld of a scene from the epic poem Nibelungenlied ("Song of the Nibelungs") – which was the basis for Richard Wagner's opera Götterdämmerung.

When Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party rose to power in 1933, they made the conspiracy theory an integral part of their official history of the 1920s, portraying the Weimar Republic as the work of the "November criminals" who had "stabbed the nation in the back" in order to seize power. Nazi propaganda depicted Weimar Germany as "a morass of corruption, degeneracy, national humiliation, ruthless persecution of the honest 'national opposition'—fourteen years of rule by Jews, Marxists, and 'cultural Bolsheviks', who had at last been swept away by the National Socialist movement under Hitler and the victory of the 'national revolution' of 1933".[2]

Historians inside and outside of Germany unanimously reject the myth, pointing out that the Imperial German Army was out of reserves, was being overwhelmed by the entrance of the United States into the war, and had already lost the war militarily by late 1918.[3][4]

Background edit

In the later part of World War I, the Supreme High Command (Oberste Heeresleitung, OHL) controlled not only the military but also a large part of the economy through the Auxiliary Services Act of December 1916, which under the Hindenburg Programme aimed at a total mobilisation of the economy for war production. In order to implement the Act, however, Generalfeldmarschall Paul von Hindenburg and his Chief-of-Staff, First Quartermaster General Erich Ludendorff had to make significant concessions to labour unions and the Reichstag.[5] Hindenburg and Ludendorff threatened to resign in July 1917 if the Emperor did not remove Chancellor Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg, who had lost his usefulness to them when he lost the confidence of the Reichstag after it passed the Reichstag Peace Resolution calling for a negotiated peace without annexations.[6] Bethmann Hollweg resigned and was replaced by Georg Michaelis, whose appointment was supported by the OHL. After only 100 days in office, however, he became the first chancellor to be ousted by the Reichstag.[7]

After years of fighting and having incurred millions of casualties, Britain and France were too war-weary to contemplate an invasion of Germany with its unknown consequences. However the Allies had been amply resupplied by the United States, which had fresh armies ready for combat.[8] On the Western Front, although the Hindenburg Line had been penetrated and German forces were in retreat, the Allied armies had not reached the western German frontier. Meanwhile on the Eastern Front, Germany had already won its war against Russia, concluded with the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk. In the West, Germany had successes with the Spring Offensive of 1918 but the attack had run out of momentum, the Allies had regrouped and in the Hundred Days Offensive retaken lost ground with no sign of stopping. Contributing to the Dolchstoßlegende, the overall failure of the German offensive was blamed on strikes in the arms industry at a critical moment, leaving soldiers without an adequate supply of materiel. The strikes were seen as having been instigated by treasonous elements, with the Jews taking most of the blame.[9]

The weakness of Germany's strategic position was exacerbated by the rapid collapse of the other Central Powers in late 1918, following Allied victories on the Macedonian and Italian fronts. Bulgaria was the first to sign an armistice on 29 September 1918, at Salonica.[10] On 30 October the Ottoman Empire capitulated at Mudros.[10] On 3 November Austria-Hungary sent a flag of truce to the Italian Army to ask for an armistice. The terms, arranged by telegraph with the Allied Authorities in Paris, were communicated to the Austro-Hungarian commander and accepted. The armistice with Austria-Hungary was signed in the Villa Giusti, near Padua, on 3 November. Austria and Hungary signed separate treaties following the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian empire.

After the last German offensive on the Western Front failed in 1918, Hindenburg and Ludendorff admitted that the war effort was doomed, and they pressed Kaiser Wilhelm II for an armistice to be negotiated, and for a rapid change to a civilian government in Germany. They began to take steps to deflect the blame for losing the war from themselves and the German Army to others.[11] Ludendorff said to his staff on 1 October:

I have ... asked His Majesty to include in the government those circles who are largely responsible for things having developed as they have. We will now see these gentlemen move into the ministries. Let them be the ones to sign the peace treaty that must now be negotiated. Let them eat the soup that they have cooked for us![12][b]

In this way, Ludendorff was setting up the republican politicians – many of them Socialists – who would be brought into the government, and would become the parties that negotiated the armistice with the Allies, as the scapegoats to take the blame for losing the war, instead of himself and Hindenburg.[11] Normally, during wartime an armistice is negotiated between the military commanders of the hostile forces, but Hindenburg and Ludendorff had instead handed this task to the new civilian government.[14] The attitude of the military was "[T]he parties of the left have to take on the odium of this peace. The storm of anger will then turn against them," after which the military could step in again to ensure that things would once again be run "in the old way".[15]

On 5 October, the German Chancellor, Prince Maximilian of Baden, contacted U.S. President Woodrow Wilson, indicating that Germany was willing to accept his Fourteen Points as a basis for discussions. Wilson's response insisted that Germany institute parliamentary democracy, give up the territory it had gained to that point in the war, and significantly disarm, including giving up the German High Seas Fleet.[16] On 26 October, Ludendorff was dismissed from his post by the Emperor and replaced by Lieutenant General Wilhelm Groener, who started to prepare the withdrawal and demobilisation of the army.[17]

On 11 November 1918, the representatives of the newly formed Weimar Republic – created after the Revolution of 1918–1919 forced the abdication of the Kaiser – signed the armistice that ended hostilities. The military commanders had arranged it so that they would not be blamed for suing for peace, but the republican politicians associated with the armistice would:[14] the signature on the armistice document was of Matthias Erzberger, who was later murdered for his alleged treason.

Given that the heavily censored German press had carried nothing but news of victories throughout the war, and that Germany itself was unoccupied while occupying a great deal of foreign territory, it was no wonder that the German public was mystified by the request for an armistice, especially as they did not know that their military leaders had asked for it,[14] nor did they know that the German Army had been in full retreat after their last offensive had failed.[11]

Thus the conditions were set for the "stab-in-the-back myth", in which Hindenburg and Ludendorff were held to be blameless, the German Army was seen as undefeated on the battlefield, and the republican politicians – especially the Socialists – were accused of betraying Germany. Further blame was laid at their feet after they signed the Treaty of Versailles in 1919, which led to territorial losses and serious financial pain for the shaky new republic, including a crippling schedule of reparation payments.

Conservatives, nationalists, and ex-military leaders began to speak critically about the peace and Weimar politicians, socialists, communists, and Jews. Even Catholics were viewed with suspicion by some due to supposed fealty to the Pope and their presumed lack of national loyalty and patriotism. It was claimed that these groups had not sufficiently supported the war and had played a role in selling out Germany to its enemies. These November Criminals, or those who seemed to benefit from the newly formed Weimar Republic, were seen to have "stabbed them in the back" on the home front, by either criticising German nationalism, instigating unrest and mounting strikes in the critical military industries, or by profiteering. These actions were believed to have deprived Germany of almost certain victory at the eleventh hour.

Origins of the myth edit

 
First Quartermaster General Erich Ludendorff
 
Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg
Ludendorff and Hindenburg, supreme commanders of the German Army, were primarily responsible for the creation and popularization of the myth that the army was not defeated on the battlefield, but was betrayed on the German home front.[18]

According to historian Richard Steigmann-Gall, the stab-in-the-back concept can be traced back to a sermon preached on 3 February 1918, by Protestant Court Chaplain Bruno Doehring, nine months before the war had even ended.[9] German scholar Boris Barth, in contrast to Steigmann-Gall, implies that Doehring did not actually use the term, but spoke only of 'betrayal'.[19] Barth traces the first documented use to a centrist political meeting in the Munich Löwenbräukeller on 2 November 1918, in which Ernst Müller-Meiningen, a member of the Progressive People's Party in the Reichstag, used the term to exhort his listeners to keep fighting:

As long as the front holds, we damned well have the duty to hold out in the homeland. We would have to be ashamed of ourselves in front of our children and grandchildren if we attacked the battle front from the rear and gave it a dagger-stab (wenn wir der Front in den Rücken fielen und ihr den Dolchstoß versetzten).

However, the widespread dissemination and acceptance of the "stab-in-the-back" myth came about through its use by Germany's highest military echelon. In Spring 1919, Max Bauer – an army colonel who had been the primary adviser to Ludendorff on politics and economics – published Could We Have Avoided, Won, or Broken Off the War?, in which he wrote that "[The war] was lost only and exclusively through the failure of the homeland."[18] The birth of the specific term "stab-in-the-back" itself can possibly be dated to the autumn of 1919, when Ludendorff was dining with the head of the British Military Mission in Berlin, British general Sir Neill Malcolm. Malcolm asked Ludendorff why he thought Germany lost the war. Ludendorff replied with his list of excuses, including that the home front failed the army.

 
Friedrich Ebert contributed to the myth when he told returning veterans that "No enemy has vanquished you."

Malcolm asked him: "Do you mean, General, that you were stabbed in the back?" Ludendorff's eyes lit up and he leapt upon the phrase like a dog on a bone. "Stabbed in the back?" he repeated. "Yes, that's it, exactly, we were stabbed in the back". And thus was born a legend which has never entirely perished.[20]

The phrase was to Ludendorff's liking, and he let it be known among the general staff that this was the "official" version, which led to it being spread throughout German society. It was picked up by right-wing political factions, and was even used by Kaiser Wilhelm II in the memoirs he wrote in the 1920s.[21] Right-wing groups used it as a form of attack against the early Weimar Republic government, led by the Social Democratic Party (SPD), which had come to power with the abdication of the Kaiser. However, even the SPD had a part in furthering the myth when Reichspräsident Friedrich Ebert, the party leader, told troops returning to Berlin on 10 November 1918 that "No enemy has vanquished you," (kein Feind hat euch überwunden!)[21] and "they returned undefeated from the battlefield" (sie sind vom Schlachtfeld unbesiegt zurückgekehrt). The latter quote was shortened to im Felde unbesiegt (undefeated on the battlefield) as a semi-official slogan of the Reichswehr. Ebert had meant these sayings as a tribute to the German soldier, but it only contributed to the prevailing feeling.

Further "proof" of the myth's validity was found in British general Frederick Barton Maurice's book The Last Four Months, published in 1919. German reviews of the book misrepresented it as proving that the German Army had been betrayed on the home front by being "dagger-stabbed from behind by the civilian populace" (von der Zivilbevölkerung von hinten erdolcht), an interpretation that Maurice disavowed in the German press, to no effect. According to William L. Shirer, Ludendorff used the reviews of the book to convince Hindenburg about the validity of the myth.[22]

On 18 November 1919, Ludendorff and Hindenburg appeared before the Committee of Inquiry into Guilt for World War I (Untersuchungsausschuss für Schuldfragen des Weltkrieges) of the newly elected Weimar National Assembly, which was investigating the causes of the war and Germany's defeat. The two generals appeared in civilian clothing, explaining publicly that to wear their uniforms would show too much respect to the commission. Hindenburg refused to answer questions from the chairman, and instead read a statement that had been written by Ludendorff. In his testimony he cited what Maurice was purported to have written, which provided his testimony's most memorable part.[18] Hindenburg declared at the end of his – or Ludendorff's – speech: "As an English general has very truly said, the German Army was 'stabbed in the back'".[22]

Furthering, the specifics of the stab-in-the-back myth are mentioned briefly by Kaiser Wilhelm II in his memoir:

I immediately summoned Field Marshal von Hindenburg and the Quartermaster General, General Groener. General Groener again announced that the army could fight no longer and wished rest above all else, and that, therefore, any sort of armistice must be unconditionally accepted; that the armistice must be concluded as soon as possible, since the army had supplies for only six to eight days more and was cut off from all further supplies by the rebels, who had occupied all the supply storehouses and Rhine bridges; that, for some unexplained reason, the armistice commission sent to France–consisting of Erzberger, Ambassador Count Oberndorff, and General von Winterfeldt–which had crossed the French lines two evenings before, had sent no report as to the nature of the conditions.[23]

Hindenburg, Chief of the German General Staff at the time of the Ludendorff Offensive, also mentioned this event in a statement explaining the Kaiser’s abdication:

The conclusion of the armistice was directly impending. At moment of the highest military tension revolution broke out in Germany, the insurgents seized the Rhine bridges, important arsenals, and traffic centres in the rear of the army, thereby endangering the supply of ammunition and provisions, while the supplies in the hands of the troops were only enough to last for a few days. The troops on the lines of communication and the reserves disbanded themselves, and unfavourable reports arrived concerning the reliability of the field army proper.[24]

It was particularly this testimony of Hindenburg that led to the widespread acceptance of the Dolchstoßlegende in post-World War I Germany.

Antisemitic aspects edit

 
Nazi theorist Alfred Rosenberg was one of many on the far-right who spread the stab-in-the-back myth.

The antisemitic instincts of the German Army were revealed well before the stab-in-the-back myth became the military's excuse for losing the war. In October 1916, in the middle of the war, the army ordered a Jewish census of the troops, with the intent to show that Jews were under-represented in the Heer (army), and that they were over-represented in non-fighting positions. Instead, the census showed just the opposite, that Jews were over-represented both in the army as a whole and in fighting positions at the front. The Imperial German Army then suppressed the results of the census.[4]

Charges of a Jewish conspiratorial element in Germany's defeat drew heavily upon figures such as Kurt Eisner, a Berlin-born German Jew who lived in Munich. He had written about the illegal nature of the war from 1916 onward, and he also had a large hand in the Munich revolution until he was assassinated in February 1919. The Weimar Republic under Friedrich Ebert violently suppressed workers' uprisings with the help of Gustav Noske and Reichswehr general Wilhelm Groener, and tolerated the paramilitary Freikorps forming all across Germany. In spite of such tolerance, the Republic's legitimacy was constantly attacked with claims such as the stab-in-the-back. Many of its representatives such as Matthias Erzberger and Walther Rathenau were assassinated, and the leaders were branded as "criminals" and Jews by the right-wing press dominated by Alfred Hugenberg.

Anti-Jewish sentiment was intensified by the Bavarian Soviet Republic (6 April – 3 May 1919), a communist government which briefly ruled the city of Munich before being crushed by the Freikorps. Many of the Bavarian Soviet Republic's leaders were Jewish, allowing antisemitic propagandists to connect Jews with communism, and thus treason.

 
1924 right-wing German political cartoon showing Philipp Scheidemann, the German Social Democratic politician who proclaimed the Weimar Republic and was its second chancellor, and Matthias Erzberger, an anti-war politician from the Centre Party, who ended World War I by signing the armistice with the Allied Powers, as stabbing the German Army in the back

In 1919, Deutschvölkischer Schutz und Trutzbund (German Nationalist Protection and Defiance Federation) leader Alfred Roth, writing under the pseudonym "Otto Arnim", published the book The Jew in the Army which he said was based on evidence gathered during his participation on the Judenzählung, a military census which had in fact shown that German Jews had served in the front lines proportionately to their numbers. Roth's work claimed that most Jews involved in the war were only taking part as profiteers and spies, while he also blamed Jewish officers for fostering a defeatist mentality which impacted negatively on their soldiers. As such, the book offered one of the earliest published versions of the stab-in-the-back legend.[25]

 
"12,000 Jewish soldiers died on the field of honor for the fatherland." A leaflet published in 1920 by German Jewish veterans in response to accusations of the lack of patriotism

A version of the stab-in-the-back myth was publicised in 1922 by the anti-Semitic Nazi theorist Alfred Rosenberg in his primary contribution to Nazi theory on Zionism, Der Staatsfeindliche Zionismus (Zionism, the Enemy of the State). Rosenberg accused German Zionists of working for a German defeat and supporting Britain and the implementation of the Balfour Declaration.[c]

Aftermath edit

The Dolchstoß was a central image in propaganda produced by the many right-wing and traditionally conservative political parties that sprang up in the early days of the Weimar Republic, including Adolf Hitler's Nazi Party. For Hitler himself, this explanatory model for World War I was of crucial personal importance.[28] He had learned of Germany's defeat while being treated for temporary blindness following a gas attack on the front.[28] In Mein Kampf, he described a vision at this time which drove him to enter politics. Throughout his career, he railed against the "November criminals" of 1918, who had stabbed the German Army in the back.

German historian Friedrich Meinecke attempted to trace the roots of the expression "stab-in-the-back" in a 11 June 1922 article in the Viennese newspaper Neue Freie Presse.[citation needed] In the 1924 national election, the Munich cultural journal Süddeutsche Monatshefte published a series of articles blaming the SPD and trade unions for Germany's defeat in World War I, which came out during the trial of Hitler and Ludendorff for high treason following the Beer Hall Putsch in 1923. The editor of an SPD newspaper sued the journal for defamation, giving rise to what is known as the Munich Dolchstoßprozess from 19 October to 20 November 1925. Many prominent figures testified in that trial, including members of the parliamentary committee investigating the reasons for the defeat, so some of its results were made public long before the publication of the committee report in 1928.

World War II edit

 
1944 poster from German-ruled Slovenia: the legend reads "A knife in the back at the fatal moment!". It depicts British Prime Minister Winston Churchill stabbing Europa in the back while Europa fights the Red Army; a stereotyped Jew watches on with glee.

The Allied policy of unconditional surrender was devised in 1943 in part to avoid a repetition of the stab-in-the-back myth. According to historian John Wheeler-Bennett, speaking from the British perspective,

It was necessary for the Nazi régime and/or the German Generals to surrender unconditionally in order to bring home to the German people that they had lost the War by themselves; so that their defeat should not be attributed to a "stab in the back".[29]

Wagnerian allusions edit

To some Germans, the idea of a "stab in the back" was evocative of Richard Wagner's 1876 opera Götterdämmerung, in which Hagen murders his enemy Siegfried – the hero of the story – with a spear in his back.[30][31] In Hindenburg's memoirs, he compared the collapse of the German Army to Siegfried's death.[32]

Psychology of belief edit

Historian Richard McMasters Hunt argues in a 1958 article that the myth was an irrational belief which commanded the force of irrefutable emotional convictions for millions of Germans. He suggests that behind these myths was a sense of communal shame, not for causing the war, but for losing it. Hunt argues that it was not the guilt of wickedness, but the shame of weakness that seized Germany's national psychology, and "served as a solvent of the Weimar democracy and also as an ideological cement of Hitler's dictatorship".[33]

Equivalents in other countries edit

United States edit

Parallel interpretations of national trauma after military defeat appear in other countries.[34] For example, it was applied to the United States' involvement in the Vietnam War[35][36] and in the mythology of the Lost Cause of the Confederacy.[37][38]

See also edit

References edit

Informational notes

  1. ^ Despite the similarity of the German word Legende and the English word "legend", "stab-in-the-back myth" is the preferred term in English.
  2. ^ Original: Ich habe aber S.M. gebeten, jetzt auch diejenigen Kreise an die Regierung zu bringen, denen wir es in der Hauptsache zu danken haben, daß wir so weit gekommen sind. Wir werden also diese Herren jetzt in die Ministerien einziehen sehen. Die sollen nun den Frieden schließen, der jetzt geschlossen werden muß. Sie sollen die Suppe jetzt essen, die sie uns eingebrockt haben![13]
  3. ^ This is described similarly by William Helmreich and Francis Nicosia. Helmreich noted that: "Der staatsfeindliche Zionismus, published in 1922, was Rosenberg's major contribution to the National Socialist position on Zionism. It represented in part an elaboration on ideas already expressed in articles in the Volkischer Beobachter and in other published works, notably Die Spur. The title provides the gist of a thesis that Rosenberg sought to convey to his readers: 'The Zionist organization in Germany is nothing more than an organization that pursues a legalized undermining of the German state.' He accused German Zionists of having betrayed Germany during the war by supporting Britain's Balfour Declaration and pro-Zionist policies and charged that they had actively worked for a German defeat and the Versailles settlement to obtain a Jewish National Home in Palestine. He went on to assert that the interests of Zionism were first and foremost those of world Jewry, and by implication the international Jewish conspiracy."[26] Nicosia: "Rosenberg argues that the Jews had planned the Great War in order to secure a state in Palestine. In other words, he suggested that they generated violence and war among the gentiles in order to secure their own, exclusively Jewish, interests. In fact, the title of one of those works, Der Staatsfeindliche Zionismus ("Zionism, the Enemy of the State"), published in 1922, conveys the gist of Rosenberg's approach to the question, an approach that Hitler had been taking in some of his speeches since 1920. Rosenberg writes: 'The Zionist Organization in Germany is nothing more than an Organization that perpetrates the legal subversion of the German state.' He further accuses the Zionists of betraying Germany during World War I by supporting Great Britain and its Balfour Declaration, working for a German defeat and the implementation of the Balfour Declaration, supporting the Versailles settlement, and embracing the Jewish National Home in postwar, British-controlled Palestine."[27]

Citations

  1. ^ Kershaw 2016, pp. 118–119.
  2. ^ Kolb, Eberhard (2005). The Weimar Republic. New York: Routledge. p. 140. ISBN 0415344425.
  3. ^ Watson, Alexander (2008). Enduring the Great War: Combat, Morale and Collapse in the German and British Armies, 1914–1918. Cambridge: Cambridge Military Histories. ch. 6. ISBN 9780521881012.
  4. ^ a b Evans 2003, p. 150.
  5. ^ Tipton 2003, p. 291–292.
  6. ^ Lerman, Katharine Anne (28 September 2016). Daniel, Ute; Gatrell, Peter; Janz, Oliver; Jones, Heather; Keene, Jennifer; Kramer, Alan; Nasson, Bill (eds.). "Bethmann Hollweg, Theobald von". 1914–1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War. Freie Universität Berlin. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  7. ^ Becker, Bert (22 December 2016). Daniel, Ute; Gatrell, Peter; Janz, Oliver; Jones, Heather; Keene, Jennifer; Kramer, Alan; Nasson, Bill (eds.). "Michaelis, Georg". 1914–1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War. Freie Universität Berlin. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  8. ^ Simonds, Frank Herbert (1919) History of the World War, Volume 2, New York: Doubleday. p.85
  9. ^ a b Steigmann-Gall, Richard (2003). The Holy Reich: Nazi Conceptions of Christianity, 1919–1945. New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 16. ISBN 0521823714.
  10. ^ a b "Indiana University Bloomington". Indiana University Bloomington.
  11. ^ a b c Kershaw 2016, p. 61.
  12. ^ "Erich Ludendorff Admits Defeat: Diary Entry by Albrecht von Thaer (October 1, 1918)". German History in Documents and Images. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
  13. ^ "Erich Ludendorff gesteht die Niederlage ein: aus den Tagebuchnotizen von Albrecht von Thaer (1. Oktober 1918)". de:Deutsche Geschichte in Dokumenten und Bildern (in German). Retrieved 25 August 2023.
  14. ^ a b c Hett 2018, pp. 21–22.
  15. ^ Kershaw 2016, p. 86.
  16. ^ Kershaw 2016, pp. 85–86.
  17. ^ . 11 July 2014. Archived from the original on 11 July 2014. Retrieved 20 December 2021.
  18. ^ a b c Hett 2018, pp. 29–33.
  19. ^ Barth, Boris (2003). Dolchstoßlegenden und politische Desintegration: Das Trauma der deutschen Niederlage im Ersten Weltkrieg 1914–1933 (in German). Düsseldorf: Droste. pp. 167 and 340f. ISBN 3770016157. Barth says Doehring was an army chaplain, not a court chaplain. The following references to Barth are on pages 148 (Müller-Meiningen), and 324 (NZZ article, with a discussion of the Ludendorff-Malcolm conversation).
  20. ^ Wheeler-Bennett, John W. (1938). "Ludendorff: The Soldier and the Politician". Virginia Quarterly Review. 14 (2): 187–202.
  21. ^ a b Evans 2003, p. 61.
  22. ^ a b Shirer, William L., The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, Simon and Schuster (1960) p.31fn
  23. ^ Wilhelm, Kaiser (1992). The Kaiser's Memoirs. Good Press. pp. 285–286.
  24. ^ Hindenburg, Paul (1993). Records of the Great Wars. Vol. VI. National Alumni: Charles F. Horne.
  25. ^ Levy, Richard S. (2005). Antisemitism: A Historical Encyclopedia of Prejudice and Persecution. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO. pp. 623–624. ISBN 1851094393.
  26. ^ Helmreich 1985, p. 24.
  27. ^ Nicosia 2008, p. 67.
  28. ^ a b Brendon, Piers (2000). The Dark Valley: A Panorama of the 1930s. Knopf. p. 8. ISBN 0-375-40881-9.
  29. ^ Wheeler-Bennett, John W. (1954). The Nemesis of Power: The German Army in Politics, 1918–1945. London: Macmillan. p. 559.
  30. ^ Roberts, J. M. (1999). Twentieth Century: The History of the World, 1901 to the Present. London: Allen Lane/The Penguin Press. p. 289 n.12. ISBN 0-713-99257-3.
  31. ^ Vascik, George S. and Sadler, Mark R. eds. (2016) The Stab-in-the-Back Myth and the Fall of the Weimar Republic: A History in Documents and Visual Sources Bloomsbury Academic. p.1 ISBN 9781474227797
  32. ^ deutschlandfunkkultur.de. "100 Jahre politischer Mord in Deutschland – Der Hindenburgmythos und die Dolchstoßlegende". Deutschlandfunk Kultur (in German). Retrieved 2 March 2022.
  33. ^ Hunt, Richard M. (1958). "Myths, Guilt, and Shame in Pre-Nazi Germany". Virginia Quarterly Review. 34 (3): 355–71. ProQuest 1291786296. In the last analysis, the deep emotion that gave rise to these myths in pre-Nazi Germany was essentially an overwhelming sense of communal shame. It was not at all a shame related to the responsibility for causing the war. Much more, it was a shame related to the responsibility for losing the war.
  34. ^ Macleod, Jenny, ed. (2008). Defeat and Memory: Cultural Histories of Military Defeat since 1815. London, England: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 9780230517400.
  35. ^ Kimball, Jeffrey P. (1988). "The Stab-in-the-back Legend and the Vietnam War". Armed Forces & Society. Newbury Park, California: SAGE Publications. 14 (3): 433–58. doi:10.1177/0095327X8801400306. S2CID 145066387.
  36. ^ Ages, Arnold (1973). "The American Diaspora: Is it Different?". The Diaspora Dimension. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands. pp. 169–172. doi:10.1007/978-94-010-2456-3_11. ISBN 978-94-010-2456-3 – via Springer Link.
  37. ^ McNutt, Ryan K. (2 September 2017). "'What's left of the flag': the Confederate and Jacobite 'lost cause' myths, and the construction of mythic identities through conflict commemoration". Journal of Conflict Archaeology. 12 (3): 142–162. doi:10.1080/15740773.2017.1480419. ISSN 1574-0773. S2CID 165855051.
  38. ^ Levi, Neil; Rothberg, Michael (7 July 2018). "Memory studies in a moment of danger: Fascism, postfascism, and the contemporary political imaginary". Memory Studies. 11 (3): 355–367. doi:10.1177/1750698018771868. ISSN 1750-6980. S2CID 150272869.

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Chickering, Rodger (2004). Imperial Germany and the Great War, 1914–1918. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521547806.
  • Diest, Wilhelm & Feuchtwanger, E. J. (1996). "The Military Collapse of the German Empire: The Reality Behind the Stab-in-the-Back Myth". War in History. 3 (2): 186–207. doi:10.1177/096834459600300203. S2CID 159610049.
  • Schivelbusch, Wolfgang (2001). The Culture of Defeat: On National Trauma, Mourning, and Recovery. New York: Picador. ISBN 0312423195.
  • Watson, Alexander (2008). "Stabbed at the Front: After 1918 the Myth Was Created That the German Army Only Lost the War Because It Had Been 'Stabbed in the Back' by Defeatists and Revolutionaries on the Home Front. Reviews the Clear Evidence That in Reality It Simply Lost the Will to Go on Fighting". History Today. 58 (11).

External links edit

  • Antisemitism on the Florida Holocaust Museum website
  • Die Judischen Gefallenen A Roll of Honor Commemorating the 12,000 German Jews Who Died for their Fatherland in World War I.
  • Book review by Harold Marcuse, with 15 "stab-in-the-back" illustrations, 1918–1942

stab, back, myth, stab, back, november, criminals, redirect, here, other, uses, stab, back, disambiguation, november, criminals, disambiguation, stab, back, myth, german, dolchstoßlegende, pronounced, ˈdɔlçʃtoːsleˌɡɛndə, dagger, stab, legend, antisemitic, anti. Stab in the back and November criminals redirect here For other uses see Stab in the back disambiguation and November Criminals disambiguation The stab in the back myth German Dolchstosslegende pronounced ˈdɔlcʃtoːsleˌɡɛnde lit dagger stab legend a was an antisemitic and anticommunist conspiracy theory that was widely believed and promulgated in Germany after 1918 It maintained that the Imperial German Army did not lose World War I on the battlefield but was instead betrayed by certain citizens on the home front especially Jews revolutionary socialists who fomented strikes and labour unrest 1 and republican politicians who had overthrown the House of Hohenzollern in the German Revolution of 1918 1919 Advocates of the myth denounced the German government leaders who had signed the Armistice of 11 November 1918 as the November criminals November verbrecher An illustration from a 1919 Austrian postcard showing a caricatured Jew stabbing a German Army soldier in the back with a dagger The capitulation of the Central Powers was blamed on socialists Bolsheviks and the Weimar Republic but in particular on Jews Hagen takes aim at Siegfried s back with a spear in an 1847 painting by Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld of a scene from the epic poem Nibelungenlied Song of the Nibelungs which was the basis for Richard Wagner s opera Gotterdammerung When Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party rose to power in 1933 they made the conspiracy theory an integral part of their official history of the 1920s portraying the Weimar Republic as the work of the November criminals who had stabbed the nation in the back in order to seize power Nazi propaganda depicted Weimar Germany as a morass of corruption degeneracy national humiliation ruthless persecution of the honest national opposition fourteen years of rule by Jews Marxists and cultural Bolsheviks who had at last been swept away by the National Socialist movement under Hitler and the victory of the national revolution of 1933 2 Historians inside and outside of Germany unanimously reject the myth pointing out that the Imperial German Army was out of reserves was being overwhelmed by the entrance of the United States into the war and had already lost the war militarily by late 1918 3 4 Contents 1 Background 2 Origins of the myth 3 Antisemitic aspects 4 Aftermath 4 1 World War II 5 Wagnerian allusions 6 Psychology of belief 7 Equivalents in other countries 7 1 United States 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksBackground editFurther information War guilt question and German entry into World War I In the later part of World War I the Supreme High Command Oberste Heeresleitung OHL controlled not only the military but also a large part of the economy through the Auxiliary Services Act of December 1916 which under the Hindenburg Programme aimed at a total mobilisation of the economy for war production In order to implement the Act however Generalfeldmarschall Paul von Hindenburg and his Chief of Staff First Quartermaster General Erich Ludendorff had to make significant concessions to labour unions and the Reichstag 5 Hindenburg and Ludendorff threatened to resign in July 1917 if the Emperor did not remove Chancellor Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg who had lost his usefulness to them when he lost the confidence of the Reichstag after it passed the Reichstag Peace Resolution calling for a negotiated peace without annexations 6 Bethmann Hollweg resigned and was replaced by Georg Michaelis whose appointment was supported by the OHL After only 100 days in office however he became the first chancellor to be ousted by the Reichstag 7 After years of fighting and having incurred millions of casualties Britain and France were too war weary to contemplate an invasion of Germany with its unknown consequences However the Allies had been amply resupplied by the United States which had fresh armies ready for combat 8 On the Western Front although the Hindenburg Line had been penetrated and German forces were in retreat the Allied armies had not reached the western German frontier Meanwhile on the Eastern Front Germany had already won its war against Russia concluded with the Treaty of Brest Litovsk In the West Germany had successes with the Spring Offensive of 1918 but the attack had run out of momentum the Allies had regrouped and in the Hundred Days Offensive retaken lost ground with no sign of stopping Contributing to the Dolchstosslegende the overall failure of the German offensive was blamed on strikes in the arms industry at a critical moment leaving soldiers without an adequate supply of materiel The strikes were seen as having been instigated by treasonous elements with the Jews taking most of the blame 9 The weakness of Germany s strategic position was exacerbated by the rapid collapse of the other Central Powers in late 1918 following Allied victories on the Macedonian and Italian fronts Bulgaria was the first to sign an armistice on 29 September 1918 at Salonica 10 On 30 October the Ottoman Empire capitulated at Mudros 10 On 3 November Austria Hungary sent a flag of truce to the Italian Army to ask for an armistice The terms arranged by telegraph with the Allied Authorities in Paris were communicated to the Austro Hungarian commander and accepted The armistice with Austria Hungary was signed in the Villa Giusti near Padua on 3 November Austria and Hungary signed separate treaties following the collapse of the Austro Hungarian empire After the last German offensive on the Western Front failed in 1918 Hindenburg and Ludendorff admitted that the war effort was doomed and they pressed Kaiser Wilhelm II for an armistice to be negotiated and for a rapid change to a civilian government in Germany They began to take steps to deflect the blame for losing the war from themselves and the German Army to others 11 Ludendorff said to his staff on 1 October I have asked His Majesty to include in the government those circles who are largely responsible for things having developed as they have We will now see these gentlemen move into the ministries Let them be the ones to sign the peace treaty that must now be negotiated Let them eat the soup that they have cooked for us 12 b In this way Ludendorff was setting up the republican politicians many of them Socialists who would be brought into the government and would become the parties that negotiated the armistice with the Allies as the scapegoats to take the blame for losing the war instead of himself and Hindenburg 11 Normally during wartime an armistice is negotiated between the military commanders of the hostile forces but Hindenburg and Ludendorff had instead handed this task to the new civilian government 14 The attitude of the military was T he parties of the left have to take on the odium of this peace The storm of anger will then turn against them after which the military could step in again to ensure that things would once again be run in the old way 15 On 5 October the German Chancellor Prince Maximilian of Baden contacted U S President Woodrow Wilson indicating that Germany was willing to accept his Fourteen Points as a basis for discussions Wilson s response insisted that Germany institute parliamentary democracy give up the territory it had gained to that point in the war and significantly disarm including giving up the German High Seas Fleet 16 On 26 October Ludendorff was dismissed from his post by the Emperor and replaced by Lieutenant General Wilhelm Groener who started to prepare the withdrawal and demobilisation of the army 17 On 11 November 1918 the representatives of the newly formed Weimar Republic created after the Revolution of 1918 1919 forced the abdication of the Kaiser signed the armistice that ended hostilities The military commanders had arranged it so that they would not be blamed for suing for peace but the republican politicians associated with the armistice would 14 the signature on the armistice document was of Matthias Erzberger who was later murdered for his alleged treason Given that the heavily censored German press had carried nothing but news of victories throughout the war and that Germany itself was unoccupied while occupying a great deal of foreign territory it was no wonder that the German public was mystified by the request for an armistice especially as they did not know that their military leaders had asked for it 14 nor did they know that the German Army had been in full retreat after their last offensive had failed 11 Thus the conditions were set for the stab in the back myth in which Hindenburg and Ludendorff were held to be blameless the German Army was seen as undefeated on the battlefield and the republican politicians especially the Socialists were accused of betraying Germany Further blame was laid at their feet after they signed the Treaty of Versailles in 1919 which led to territorial losses and serious financial pain for the shaky new republic including a crippling schedule of reparation payments Conservatives nationalists and ex military leaders began to speak critically about the peace and Weimar politicians socialists communists and Jews Even Catholics were viewed with suspicion by some due to supposed fealty to the Pope and their presumed lack of national loyalty and patriotism It was claimed that these groups had not sufficiently supported the war and had played a role in selling out Germany to its enemies These November Criminals or those who seemed to benefit from the newly formed Weimar Republic were seen to have stabbed them in the back on the home front by either criticising German nationalism instigating unrest and mounting strikes in the critical military industries or by profiteering These actions were believed to have deprived Germany of almost certain victory at the eleventh hour Origins of the myth edit nbsp First Quartermaster General Erich Ludendorff nbsp Field Marshal Paul von HindenburgLudendorff and Hindenburg supreme commanders of the German Army were primarily responsible for the creation and popularization of the myth that the army was not defeated on the battlefield but was betrayed on the German home front 18 According to historian Richard Steigmann Gall the stab in the back concept can be traced back to a sermon preached on 3 February 1918 by Protestant Court Chaplain Bruno Doehring nine months before the war had even ended 9 German scholar Boris Barth in contrast to Steigmann Gall implies that Doehring did not actually use the term but spoke only of betrayal 19 Barth traces the first documented use to a centrist political meeting in the Munich Lowenbraukeller on 2 November 1918 in which Ernst Muller Meiningen a member of the Progressive People s Party in the Reichstag used the term to exhort his listeners to keep fighting As long as the front holds we damned well have the duty to hold out in the homeland We would have to be ashamed of ourselves in front of our children and grandchildren if we attacked the battle front from the rear and gave it a dagger stab wenn wir der Front in den Rucken fielen und ihr den Dolchstoss versetzten However the widespread dissemination and acceptance of the stab in the back myth came about through its use by Germany s highest military echelon In Spring 1919 Max Bauer an army colonel who had been the primary adviser to Ludendorff on politics and economics published Could We Have Avoided Won or Broken Off the War in which he wrote that The war was lost only and exclusively through the failure of the homeland 18 The birth of the specific term stab in the back itself can possibly be dated to the autumn of 1919 when Ludendorff was dining with the head of the British Military Mission in Berlin British general Sir Neill Malcolm Malcolm asked Ludendorff why he thought Germany lost the war Ludendorff replied with his list of excuses including that the home front failed the army nbsp Friedrich Ebert contributed to the myth when he told returning veterans that No enemy has vanquished you Malcolm asked him Do you mean General that you were stabbed in the back Ludendorff s eyes lit up and he leapt upon the phrase like a dog on a bone Stabbed in the back he repeated Yes that s it exactly we were stabbed in the back And thus was born a legend which has never entirely perished 20 The phrase was to Ludendorff s liking and he let it be known among the general staff that this was the official version which led to it being spread throughout German society It was picked up by right wing political factions and was even used by Kaiser Wilhelm II in the memoirs he wrote in the 1920s 21 Right wing groups used it as a form of attack against the early Weimar Republic government led by the Social Democratic Party SPD which had come to power with the abdication of the Kaiser However even the SPD had a part in furthering the myth when Reichsprasident Friedrich Ebert the party leader told troops returning to Berlin on 10 November 1918 that No enemy has vanquished you kein Feind hat euch uberwunden 21 and they returned undefeated from the battlefield sie sind vom Schlachtfeld unbesiegt zuruckgekehrt The latter quote was shortened to im Felde unbesiegt undefeated on the battlefield as a semi official slogan of the Reichswehr Ebert had meant these sayings as a tribute to the German soldier but it only contributed to the prevailing feeling Further proof of the myth s validity was found in British general Frederick Barton Maurice s book The Last Four Months published in 1919 German reviews of the book misrepresented it as proving that the German Army had been betrayed on the home front by being dagger stabbed from behind by the civilian populace von der Zivilbevolkerung von hinten erdolcht an interpretation that Maurice disavowed in the German press to no effect According to William L Shirer Ludendorff used the reviews of the book to convince Hindenburg about the validity of the myth 22 On 18 November 1919 Ludendorff and Hindenburg appeared before the Committee of Inquiry into Guilt for World War I Untersuchungsausschuss fur Schuldfragen des Weltkrieges of the newly elected Weimar National Assembly which was investigating the causes of the war and Germany s defeat The two generals appeared in civilian clothing explaining publicly that to wear their uniforms would show too much respect to the commission Hindenburg refused to answer questions from the chairman and instead read a statement that had been written by Ludendorff In his testimony he cited what Maurice was purported to have written which provided his testimony s most memorable part 18 Hindenburg declared at the end of his or Ludendorff s speech As an English general has very truly said the German Army was stabbed in the back 22 Furthering the specifics of the stab in the back myth are mentioned briefly by Kaiser Wilhelm II in his memoir I immediately summoned Field Marshal von Hindenburg and the Quartermaster General General Groener General Groener again announced that the army could fight no longer and wished rest above all else and that therefore any sort of armistice must be unconditionally accepted that the armistice must be concluded as soon as possible since the army had supplies for only six to eight days more and was cut off from all further supplies by the rebels who had occupied all the supply storehouses and Rhine bridges that for some unexplained reason the armistice commission sent to France consisting of Erzberger Ambassador Count Oberndorff and General von Winterfeldt which had crossed the French lines two evenings before had sent no report as to the nature of the conditions 23 Hindenburg Chief of the German General Staff at the time of the Ludendorff Offensive also mentioned this event in a statement explaining the Kaiser s abdication The conclusion of the armistice was directly impending At moment of the highest military tension revolution broke out in Germany the insurgents seized the Rhine bridges important arsenals and traffic centres in the rear of the army thereby endangering the supply of ammunition and provisions while the supplies in the hands of the troops were only enough to last for a few days The troops on the lines of communication and the reserves disbanded themselves and unfavourable reports arrived concerning the reliability of the field army proper 24 It was particularly this testimony of Hindenburg that led to the widespread acceptance of the Dolchstosslegende in post World War I Germany Antisemitic aspects edit nbsp Nazi theorist Alfred Rosenberg was one of many on the far right who spread the stab in the back myth The antisemitic instincts of the German Army were revealed well before the stab in the back myth became the military s excuse for losing the war In October 1916 in the middle of the war the army ordered a Jewish census of the troops with the intent to show that Jews were under represented in the Heer army and that they were over represented in non fighting positions Instead the census showed just the opposite that Jews were over represented both in the army as a whole and in fighting positions at the front The Imperial German Army then suppressed the results of the census 4 Charges of a Jewish conspiratorial element in Germany s defeat drew heavily upon figures such as Kurt Eisner a Berlin born German Jew who lived in Munich He had written about the illegal nature of the war from 1916 onward and he also had a large hand in the Munich revolution until he was assassinated in February 1919 The Weimar Republic under Friedrich Ebert violently suppressed workers uprisings with the help of Gustav Noske and Reichswehr general Wilhelm Groener and tolerated the paramilitary Freikorps forming all across Germany In spite of such tolerance the Republic s legitimacy was constantly attacked with claims such as the stab in the back Many of its representatives such as Matthias Erzberger and Walther Rathenau were assassinated and the leaders were branded as criminals and Jews by the right wing press dominated by Alfred Hugenberg Anti Jewish sentiment was intensified by the Bavarian Soviet Republic 6 April 3 May 1919 a communist government which briefly ruled the city of Munich before being crushed by the Freikorps Many of the Bavarian Soviet Republic s leaders were Jewish allowing antisemitic propagandists to connect Jews with communism and thus treason nbsp 1924 right wing German political cartoon showing Philipp Scheidemann the German Social Democratic politician who proclaimed the Weimar Republic and was its second chancellor and Matthias Erzberger an anti war politician from the Centre Party who ended World War I by signing the armistice with the Allied Powers as stabbing the German Army in the backIn 1919 Deutschvolkischer Schutz und Trutzbund German Nationalist Protection and Defiance Federation leader Alfred Roth writing under the pseudonym Otto Arnim published the book The Jew in the Army which he said was based on evidence gathered during his participation on the Judenzahlung a military census which had in fact shown that German Jews had served in the front lines proportionately to their numbers Roth s work claimed that most Jews involved in the war were only taking part as profiteers and spies while he also blamed Jewish officers for fostering a defeatist mentality which impacted negatively on their soldiers As such the book offered one of the earliest published versions of the stab in the back legend 25 nbsp 12 000 Jewish soldiers died on the field of honor for the fatherland A leaflet published in 1920 by German Jewish veterans in response to accusations of the lack of patriotismA version of the stab in the back myth was publicised in 1922 by the anti Semitic Nazi theorist Alfred Rosenberg in his primary contribution to Nazi theory on Zionism Der Staatsfeindliche Zionismus Zionism the Enemy of the State Rosenberg accused German Zionists of working for a German defeat and supporting Britain and the implementation of the Balfour Declaration c Aftermath editThe Dolchstoss was a central image in propaganda produced by the many right wing and traditionally conservative political parties that sprang up in the early days of the Weimar Republic including Adolf Hitler s Nazi Party For Hitler himself this explanatory model for World War I was of crucial personal importance 28 He had learned of Germany s defeat while being treated for temporary blindness following a gas attack on the front 28 In Mein Kampf he described a vision at this time which drove him to enter politics Throughout his career he railed against the November criminals of 1918 who had stabbed the German Army in the back German historian Friedrich Meinecke attempted to trace the roots of the expression stab in the back in a 11 June 1922 article in the Viennese newspaper Neue Freie Presse citation needed In the 1924 national election the Munich cultural journal Suddeutsche Monatshefte published a series of articles blaming the SPD and trade unions for Germany s defeat in World War I which came out during the trial of Hitler and Ludendorff for high treason following the Beer Hall Putsch in 1923 The editor of an SPD newspaper sued the journal for defamation giving rise to what is known as the Munich Dolchstossprozess from 19 October to 20 November 1925 Many prominent figures testified in that trial including members of the parliamentary committee investigating the reasons for the defeat so some of its results were made public long before the publication of the committee report in 1928 World War II edit nbsp 1944 poster from German ruled Slovenia the legend reads A knife in the back at the fatal moment It depicts British Prime Minister Winston Churchill stabbing Europa in the back while Europa fights the Red Army a stereotyped Jew watches on with glee The Allied policy of unconditional surrender was devised in 1943 in part to avoid a repetition of the stab in the back myth According to historian John Wheeler Bennett speaking from the British perspective It was necessary for the Nazi regime and or the German Generals to surrender unconditionally in order to bring home to the German people that they had lost the War by themselves so that their defeat should not be attributed to a stab in the back 29 Wagnerian allusions editTo some Germans the idea of a stab in the back was evocative of Richard Wagner s 1876 opera Gotterdammerung in which Hagen murders his enemy Siegfried the hero of the story with a spear in his back 30 31 In Hindenburg s memoirs he compared the collapse of the German Army to Siegfried s death 32 Psychology of belief editHistorian Richard McMasters Hunt argues in a 1958 article that the myth was an irrational belief which commanded the force of irrefutable emotional convictions for millions of Germans He suggests that behind these myths was a sense of communal shame not for causing the war but for losing it Hunt argues that it was not the guilt of wickedness but the shame of weakness that seized Germany s national psychology and served as a solvent of the Weimar democracy and also as an ideological cement of Hitler s dictatorship 33 Equivalents in other countries editUnited States edit See also Vietnam stab in the back myth Parallel interpretations of national trauma after military defeat appear in other countries 34 For example it was applied to the United States involvement in the Vietnam War 35 36 and in the mythology of the Lost Cause of the Confederacy 37 38 See also editAustria victim theory Causes of World War II Centre for the Study of the Causes of the War Defeatism Genocide justification German Revolution of 1918 19 Holocaust inversion Jewish war conspiracy theory More German than the Germans a contrasting trope about German Jewry Secondary antisemitismReferences editInformational notes Despite the similarity of the German word Legende and the English word legend stab in the back myth is the preferred term in English Original Ich habe aber S M gebeten jetzt auch diejenigen Kreise an die Regierung zu bringen denen wir es in der Hauptsache zu danken haben dass wir so weit gekommen sind Wir werden also diese Herren jetzt in die Ministerien einziehen sehen Die sollen nun den Frieden schliessen der jetzt geschlossen werden muss Sie sollen die Suppe jetzt essen die sie uns eingebrockt haben 13 This is described similarly by William Helmreich and Francis Nicosia Helmreich noted that Der staatsfeindliche Zionismus published in 1922 was Rosenberg s major contribution to the National Socialist position on Zionism It represented in part an elaboration on ideas already expressed in articles in the Volkischer Beobachter and in other published works notably Die Spur The title provides the gist of a thesis that Rosenberg sought to convey to his readers The Zionist organization in Germany is nothing more than an organization that pursues a legalized undermining of the German state He accused German Zionists of having betrayed Germany during the war by supporting Britain s Balfour Declaration and pro Zionist policies and charged that they had actively worked for a German defeat and the Versailles settlement to obtain a Jewish National Home in Palestine He went on to assert that the interests of Zionism were first and foremost those of world Jewry and by implication the international Jewish conspiracy 26 Nicosia Rosenberg argues that the Jews had planned the Great War in order to secure a state in Palestine In other words he suggested that they generated violence and war among the gentiles in order to secure their own exclusively Jewish interests In fact the title of one of those works Der Staatsfeindliche Zionismus Zionism the Enemy of the State published in 1922 conveys the gist of Rosenberg s approach to the question an approach that Hitler had been taking in some of his speeches since 1920 Rosenberg writes The Zionist Organization in Germany is nothing more than an Organization that perpetrates the legal subversion of the German state He further accuses the Zionists of betraying Germany during World War I by supporting Great Britain and its Balfour Declaration working for a German defeat and the implementation of the Balfour Declaration supporting the Versailles settlement and embracing the Jewish National Home in postwar British controlled Palestine 27 Citations Kershaw 2016 pp 118 119 Kolb Eberhard 2005 The Weimar Republic New York Routledge p 140 ISBN 0415344425 Watson Alexander 2008 Enduring the Great War Combat Morale and Collapse in the German and British Armies 1914 1918 Cambridge Cambridge Military Histories ch 6 ISBN 9780521881012 a b Evans 2003 p 150 Tipton 2003 p 291 292 Lerman Katharine Anne 28 September 2016 Daniel Ute Gatrell Peter Janz Oliver Jones Heather Keene Jennifer Kramer Alan Nasson Bill eds Bethmann Hollweg Theobald von 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Freie Universitat Berlin Retrieved 13 January 2024 Becker Bert 22 December 2016 Daniel Ute Gatrell Peter Janz Oliver Jones Heather Keene Jennifer Kramer Alan Nasson Bill eds Michaelis Georg 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Freie Universitat Berlin Retrieved 13 January 2024 Simonds Frank Herbert 1919 History of the World War Volume 2 New York Doubleday p 85 a b Steigmann Gall Richard 2003 The Holy Reich Nazi Conceptions of Christianity 1919 1945 New York Cambridge University Press p 16 ISBN 0521823714 a b Indiana University Bloomington Indiana University Bloomington a b c Kershaw 2016 p 61 Erich Ludendorff Admits Defeat Diary Entry by Albrecht von Thaer October 1 1918 German History in Documents and Images Retrieved 25 August 2023 Erich Ludendorff gesteht die Niederlage ein aus den Tagebuchnotizen von Albrecht von Thaer 1 Oktober 1918 de Deutsche Geschichte in Dokumenten und Bildern in German Retrieved 25 August 2023 a b c Hett 2018 pp 21 22 Kershaw 2016 p 86 Kershaw 2016 pp 85 86 Biographie Wilhelm Groener 1867 1939 11 July 2014 Archived from the original on 11 July 2014 Retrieved 20 December 2021 a b c Hett 2018 pp 29 33 Barth Boris 2003 Dolchstosslegenden und politische Desintegration Das Trauma der deutschen Niederlage im Ersten Weltkrieg 1914 1933 in German Dusseldorf Droste pp 167 and 340f ISBN 3770016157 Barth says Doehring was an army chaplain not a court chaplain The following references to Barth are on pages 148 Muller Meiningen and 324 NZZ article with a discussion of the Ludendorff Malcolm conversation Wheeler Bennett John W 1938 Ludendorff The Soldier and the Politician Virginia Quarterly Review 14 2 187 202 a b Evans 2003 p 61 a b Shirer William L The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich Simon and Schuster 1960 p 31fn Wilhelm Kaiser 1992 The Kaiser s Memoirs Good Press pp 285 286 Hindenburg Paul 1993 Records of the Great Wars Vol VI National Alumni Charles F Horne Levy Richard S 2005 Antisemitism A Historical Encyclopedia of Prejudice and Persecution Santa Barbara ABC CLIO pp 623 624 ISBN 1851094393 Helmreich 1985 p 24 Nicosia 2008 p 67 a b Brendon Piers 2000 The Dark Valley A Panorama of the 1930s Knopf p 8 ISBN 0 375 40881 9 Wheeler Bennett John W 1954 The Nemesis of Power The German Army in Politics 1918 1945 London Macmillan p 559 Roberts J M 1999 Twentieth Century The History of the World 1901 to the Present London Allen Lane The Penguin Press p 289 n 12 ISBN 0 713 99257 3 Vascik George S and Sadler Mark R eds 2016 The Stab in the Back Myth and the Fall of the Weimar Republic A History in Documents and Visual Sources Bloomsbury Academic p 1 ISBN 9781474227797 deutschlandfunkkultur de 100 Jahre politischer Mord in Deutschland Der Hindenburgmythos und die Dolchstosslegende Deutschlandfunk Kultur in German Retrieved 2 March 2022 Hunt Richard M 1958 Myths Guilt and Shame in Pre Nazi Germany Virginia Quarterly Review 34 3 355 71 ProQuest 1291786296 In the last analysis the deep emotion that gave rise to these myths in pre Nazi Germany was essentially an overwhelming sense of communal shame It was not at all a shame related to the responsibility for causing the war Much more it was a shame related to the responsibility for losing the war Macleod Jenny ed 2008 Defeat and Memory Cultural Histories of Military Defeat since 1815 London England Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 9780230517400 Kimball Jeffrey P 1988 The Stab in the back Legend and the Vietnam War Armed Forces amp Society Newbury Park California SAGE Publications 14 3 433 58 doi 10 1177 0095327X8801400306 S2CID 145066387 Ages Arnold 1973 The American Diaspora Is it Different The Diaspora Dimension Dordrecht Springer Netherlands pp 169 172 doi 10 1007 978 94 010 2456 3 11 ISBN 978 94 010 2456 3 via Springer Link McNutt Ryan K 2 September 2017 What s left of the flag the Confederate and Jacobite lost cause myths and the construction of mythic identities through conflict commemoration Journal of Conflict Archaeology 12 3 142 162 doi 10 1080 15740773 2017 1480419 ISSN 1574 0773 S2CID 165855051 Levi Neil Rothberg Michael 7 July 2018 Memory studies in a moment of danger Fascism postfascism and the contemporary political imaginary Memory Studies 11 3 355 367 doi 10 1177 1750698018771868 ISSN 1750 6980 S2CID 150272869 Bibliography Evans Richard J 2003 The Coming of the Third Reich New York Penguin ISBN 0 14 303469 3 Helmreich William 1985 The Third Reich and the Palestine Question University of Texas Press ISBN 978 1 351 47272 2 Hett Benjamin Carter 2018 The Death of Democracy New York St Martin s ISBN 978 1 250 21086 9 Kershaw Ian 2016 To Hell and Back Europe 1914 1949 New York Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 310992 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint ref duplicates default link Nicosia Francis R 2008 Zionism and Anti Semitism in Nazi Germany Cambridge Cambridge Universityĕ Press ISBN 978 0 521 88392 4 Tipton Frank B 2003 A History of Modern Germany Since 1815 London University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 24049 0 Further reading Chickering Rodger 2004 Imperial Germany and the Great War 1914 1918 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521547806 Diest Wilhelm amp Feuchtwanger E J 1996 The Military Collapse of the German Empire The Reality Behind the Stab in the Back Myth War in History 3 2 186 207 doi 10 1177 096834459600300203 S2CID 159610049 Schivelbusch Wolfgang 2001 The Culture of Defeat On National Trauma Mourning and Recovery New York Picador ISBN 0312423195 Watson Alexander 2008 Stabbed at the Front After 1918 the Myth Was Created That the German Army Only Lost the War Because It Had Been Stabbed in the Back by Defeatists and Revolutionaries on the Home Front Reviews the Clear Evidence That in Reality It Simply Lost the Will to Go on Fighting History Today 58 11 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Stab in the back legend nbsp Look up stab in the back myth in Wiktionary the free dictionary Antisemitism on the Florida Holocaust Museum website Die Judischen Gefallenen A Roll of Honor Commemorating the 12 000 German Jews Who Died for their Fatherland in World War I Book review by Harold Marcuse with 15 stab in the back illustrations 1918 1942 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stab in the back myth amp oldid 1204721859, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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