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Weimar National Assembly

The Weimar National Assembly (German: Weimarer Nationalversammlung), officially the German National Constitutional Assembly (Verfassunggebende Deutsche Nationalversammlung), was the popularly elected constitutional convention and de facto parliament of Germany from 6 February 1919 to 21 May 1920. As part of its duties as the interim government, it debated and reluctantly approved the Treaty of Versailles that codified the peace terms between Germany and the victorious Allies of World War I. The Assembly drew up and approved the Weimar Constitution that was in force from 1919 to 1933 (and technically until the end of Nazi rule in 1945). With its work completed, the National Assembly was dissolved on 21 May 1920. Following the election of 6 June 1920, the new Reichstag met for the first time on 24 June 1920, taking the place of the Assembly.

National Assembly

Deutsche Nationalversammlung
Constituent assembly of Germany
Type
Type
History
Established1919
Disbanded1920
Preceded byImperial Reichstag
Succeeded byWeimar Reichstag
Seats423
Elections
Direct competitive elections
Last election
19 January 1919
Meeting place
Deutsches Nationaltheater, Weimar

Because the National Assembly convened in Weimar rather than in politically restive Berlin, the period in German history became known as the Weimar Republic.

Background

At the end of World War I, following the outbreak of the German Revolution of 1918–1919, state power lay with the Council of the People's Deputies. It was formed on 10 November by revolutionary workers' and soldiers' councils in Berlin and headed by Friedrich Ebert of the Social Democratic Party (SPD). He had been appointed German chancellor on 9 November by Maximilian von Baden, the last chancellor under the German Empire. Both von Baden and the Social Democrats called for the speedy election of a National Assembly to establish a new government for Germany. The Council decided on 30 November to hold the election on 19 January 1919. On 19 December the Reich Congress of Workers' and Soldiers' Councils also approved the decree by a clear majority.

Because of the Spartacist uprising, a general strike and the accompanying armed struggles that roiled the Reich capital from 5 to 12 January 1919, it was agreed that the National Assembly should not initially meet in Berlin. Four possible locations – Bayreuth, Nuremberg, Jena and Weimar – were considered. Friedrich Ebert favored Weimar because he wanted the victorious Allies to be reminded of Weimar Classicism, which included the writers Goethe and Schiller, while they were deliberating the terms of the peace treaty.[1]  On 14 January 1919 the choice fell to Weimar.[2]

Elections

The elections for the National Assembly were the first held in Germany after the introduction of women's suffrage[3] and the lowering of the legal voting age from 25 to 20 years. Together the changes raised the number of eligible voters by around 20 million.[4] The turnout was 83%,[3] a slightly lower percentage than in the last Reichstag elections in 1912, but a much greater absolute turnout due to the expanded suffrage.[4] Among women the turnout was 90%.[5] The Communist Party of Germany (KPD), founded in December 1918, boycotted the elections.

The election for the National Assembly resulted in the SPD receiving the most votes at 38%, followed by the Catholic Centre Party (which in this election ran as the Christian People's Party) with 20%, the liberal German Democratic Party (DDP) 19%, the national-conservative German National People's Party (DNVP) 10% and the more leftist and antiwar breakaway from the SPD, the Independent Social Democratic Party (USPD), 8%. Numerous small parties made up the remainder.[6] Out of a total of 416 delegates 36 were women, although this increased to 41 during the term of the Assembly.[7] If the latter number is taken, at 10% women, the Weimar National Assembly was one of the most female parliaments of its time.[8][9]

 
Results of election to the National Assembly by district

On 10 February the Assembly passed the "Law on Provisional Reich Power" (Gesetz über die vorläufige Reichsgewalt)[10] to go into effect the following day. It regulated the government's powers during the transitional phase from the German Empire to the Weimar Republic. The National Assembly was to adopt a constitution and "urgently needed" Reich laws, thus allowing it to act as an interim parliament. A States' Committee served in the place of the later Reichsrat to represent the interests of the German states. The "business of the Reich" was to be conducted by a Reich president. His function was somewhat like that of the former emperor but with the restrictions that had been made to the constitution in October 1918, notably that war and peace were to be decided by Reich law, not by the head of state. The ministers appointed by the Reich president required the confidence of the National Assembly.

Assembly as provisional parliament

The National Assembly convened at the German National Theater in Weimar on 6 February 1919. It elected the SPD politician Eduard David as its president, but because of an inter-party agreement he stepped down after just four days.[11] On 14 February 1919 the National Assembly elected Constantin Fehrenbach, a Centre Party deputy and former vice president, as his successor.

On 11 February the National Assembly elected the previous head of government, Friedrich Ebert (SPD), as provisional Reich president. He asked Philipp Scheidemann of the SPD to form a government. The three party coalition of the SPD, the Centre Party and the DDP that he brought together in the Scheidemann cabinet came to be known as the Weimar Coalition.

Discussion of the Treaty of Versailles

On 12 May 1919 the National Assembly met in Berlin for the first time. There it heard and then debated a statement by Minister President Philipp Scheidemann on the peace terms of the Versailles Treaty. In his speech Scheidemann, to great applause from all parties, called the Entente Powers' terms a "dictated" or "enforced" peace (Gewaltfrieden) intended to strangle the German people. The territorial, economic and political demands would deprive Germany of the air to breathe. The conditions were unacceptable, he said, and were in stark contrast to the assurances given by U.S. President Woodrow Wilson. The Reich government could not agree to the conditions and would make counterproposals based on Wilson's 14-point program. Prussian Minister President Paul Hirsch assured the Reich government of full support on behalf of the constituent states of the German Reich and also sharply criticized the Entente's conditions. Speakers from all parties, from the USPD to the DNVP, also declared the Entente's demands unacceptable. The chairman of the liberal German People's Party (DVP) and later Reich Foreign Minister Gustav Stresemann described the peace terms of the victorious powers as "an outpouring of political sadism". Only Hugo Haase, chairman of the USPD, combined his rejection of the Entente's demands with sharp attacks on the Reich government, accusing it of having caused the current situation in the first place through its policy of enforcing a truce between political parties (Burgfriedenspolitik) during the war.

The Scheidemann cabinet resigned on 20 June 1919 because of the Entente's rejection of its counterproposals and the resulting disagreement over the question of signing the Treaty of Versailles. The new Minister President, Gustav Bauer (SPD), who headed a government of the SPD and the Centre, promoted the signing of the treaty but continued to criticize individual provisions, especially those concerning the extradition of Germans to the Entente and the imposition of war guilt on Germany alone. He combined his call for approval with the comment that it would be impossible for the German Reich to fulfill all the economic conditions of the treaty and regretted that it had not been possible to extract further concessions from the Entente.

Initial vote in favor

Speakers from the SPD and the Centre, Paul Löbe and Adolf Gröber, also condemned the treaty. They objected in particular to the statement in the Entente draft treaty that Germany was solely to blame for the war. On behalf of their parliamentary groups, however, they spoke in favor of acceptance, since the only alternative was the resumption of hostilities, which would lead to even worse consequences. Eugen Schiffer, the former Reich Finance Minister, spoke on behalf of the majority of German Democratic Party deputies against accepting the treaty. He reminded the two governing parties of Philipp Scheidemann's 12 May warning that the hand that signed the treaty would wither.[12] He did not see that the situation had changed since then. The DNVP and DVP were also strongly opposed to the treaty. The USPD was the only opposition party to endorse its acceptance. Hugo Haase called the issue at stake a terrible dilemma for the National Assembly. Although he too sharply criticized the treaty, he pointed out, as had the representatives of the governing parties, the consequences if the treaty were rejected.

In a 22 June roll call, 237 deputies voted in favor of signing the peace treaty, 138 against, and five abstained. Of the major parties, the SPD, Centre and USPD approved, while the DDP, DNVP and DVP rejected the treaty, on both sides by large majorities of the delegates.

The Reich government informed the Entente the same day that it would sign the treaty but with reservations as to the provisions on war guilt and the extradition of Germans to the victorious countries. French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau replied that evening on behalf of the Allied Powers that the treaty could only be accepted or rejected in its entirety.

Second vote following allied ultimatum

At the meeting of the National Assembly on 23 June, Minister President Bauer informed the plenum of the Entente's position and stated that the government no longer had a choice; it had to sign the treaty:

Let us sign, that is the proposal I have to make to you on behalf of the entire cabinet. The reasons that compel us to make the proposal are the same as yesterday, only now we are separated by a period of barely four hours before the resumption of hostilities. We could not justify a new war even if we had weapons. We are defenseless, but without defense does not mean without honor (wehrlos ist aber nicht ehrlos). Certainly, our enemies want to take away our honor, there is no doubt about that, but that this attempt at cutting away our honor will one day fall back on the originators, that it is not our honor that will perish in this world tragedy, that is my belief until my last breath.[13]

Eugen Schiffer (DDP) and Rudolf Heinze (DVP), whose parties had rejected the treaty the day before, explicitly stated in their speeches that the supporters of the treaty would act exclusively out of "patriotic sentiment and conviction" (Schiffer), even if they had different opinions about the right path forward. The DNVP speaker Georg Schultz, however, did not make his opinion on the issue clear.

Ratification of the treaty through the "Law on the Conclusion of Peace between Germany and the Allied and Associated Powers" (Gesetz über den Friedensschluß zwischen Deutschland und den alliierten und den assoziierten Mächten)[14] finally took place on 9 July 1919 with results similar to the 22 June vote. The only exception was that the majority of the deputies of the Bavarian Peasants' League, who had abstained from the first vote, now approved the ratification law.

Constitutional deliberations

On 15 November 1918 Friedrich Ebert had appointed Hugo Preuß to the Reich Office of the Interior and charged him with drafting a Reich constitution. Preuß, a teacher of constitutional law and one of the founders of the German Democratic Party, based his draft of the Weimar Constitution in large part on the Frankfurt Constitution of 1849 which was written after the German revolutions of 1848–1849 and intended for a unified Germany that did not come to pass at the time. He was influenced as well by Robert Redslob's theory of parliamentarianism, which called for a balance between the executive and legislative branches under either a monarch or the people as sovereign.[15] After the National Assembly was seated, Preuß became a member of the constitutional committee, which was chaired by the Assembly's vice president, Conrad Haußmann of the DDP. Preuß later became known as the father of the Weimar Constitution.

During July of 1919, the Assembly moved quickly through the draft constitution with most debates concluded within a single session. On 31 July the Assembly passed the revised committee proposal for the constitution by a vote of 262 to 75, with USPD, DNVP and DVP against.

Key topics of debate were as follows:

Date Topic Decision
2 July National name 'Deutsches Reich'
National structure Retain federal states
Flag and colors Black-red-gold
4 July Reich president Adopted a semi-presidential system with power divided between president, cabinet and parliament. The president was to rule in conjunction with the Reichstag. Emergency powers to be used only in exceptional circumstances.
7 July Reich administration Germany unified as an economic territory; legislative responsibility for tax law to be with the Reich. Unified postal and railroad systems
10 July Justice Established a system of administrative courts and a high or constitutional court. Restricted military jurisdiction to wartime. Independence of courts incorporated into the constitution.
11 July Fundamental rights Constitution to include expanded list of fundamental rights as in draft version.
15 July Equality of the sexes Adopted what became Article 109: "(1) All Germans are equal before the law. Men and women shall fundamentally have the same civic rights and duties. (2) Public and legal privileges or disadvantages of birth or status shall be abolished."
16 July Death penalty Rejected draft constitution's proposal to abolish the death penalty.
Censorship Guaranteed freedom of expression in speech, print, or “pictorially”. Censorship forbidden except in “cinematographs”, “indecent and obscene literature”, and for “protection of youth”.
Illegitimacy Illegitimate children to have the same rights as legitimate.
17 July Right to assemble Guaranteed right to assemble peaceably without any special permission needed.
Church and state Guaranteed freedom of religion and separation of church and state.
18 July Education Universal public education ensured to age 18.
21 July Economic Life Right to property, patent protection, and unionization guaranteed.

Miscellaneous

On 13 January 1920, while the National Assembly was negotiating the Works Councils Act, which created an obligation for companies with twenty or more employees to have works councils, a demonstration against the law took place in front of the Reichstag building. The left-wing opposition parties USPD and Communist Party, among others, had called for the demonstration because they felt the councils would lack sufficient worker representation. About 100,000 people gathered for the demonstration. Prussian security police fired into the crowd leaving 42 people dead and over 100 wounded. The Reichstag Bloodbath was the deadliest demonstration in German history.[16]

Beginning on 30 September 1919, the National Assembly met in the renovated Reichstag building in Berlin. During the Kapp Putsch it briefly moved to Stuttgart and met there on 18 March 1920.

The National Assembly dissolved on 21 May 1920. After the Reichstag election on 6 June 1920, the Republic's first Reichstag took the place of the National Assembly.

Summary of important events and decisions

  • 6 February 1919 – Friedrich Ebert, as chairman of the Council of the People's Deputies, opened the first session of the National Assembly.
  • 10 February 1919 – Against the votes of the USPD, the Assembly passed the "Law on Provisional Reich Power" (Gesetz über die vorläufige Reichsgewalt). It designated the Assembly itself as the legislative power and set up the position of Reich president, who was to be in charge of "the Reich's government affairs". A States' Committee was to be created to represent Germany's constituent states.
  • 11 February 1919 – Friedrich Ebert was elected provisional Reich president. He asked Philipp Scheidemann to form a government.
  • 13 February 1919 –Scheidemann formed a government based on the Weimar Coalition.
  • 14 February 1919 – Konstantin Fehrenbach (Centre Party) was elected president of the National Assembly.
  • 27 February 1919 – The Assembly passed a law setting up a provisional military in accordance with the terms of the Armistice. By 1921 the armed forces were to be transformed into a professional army without conscripts. The number of land troops was to be cut from 800,000 to 100,000.
  • 4 March 1919 – The Assembly passed a law clarifying the position of imperial laws and those passed by the Council of the People's Deputies.
  • 12 May 1919 – The National Assembly met for a protest rally against the Treaty of Versailles. Philipp Scheidemann called it "unacceptable".
  • 20/21 June 1919 – The Scheidemann government resigned. The next day Gustav Bauer (SPD) formed a new government.
  • 22 June 1919 – With the approval of the Assembly, the new government declared itself ready to accept the Treaty of Versailles if the admission of Germany's sole responsibility for the war were dropped.
  • 3 July 1919 – The Assembly accepted the new national colors.
  • 7 July 1919 – Finance minister Matthias Erzberger (Centre Party) presented his fiscal reforms including the introduction of the first German income tax and fiscal burden sharing.
  • 9 July 1919 – The Assembly ratified the Treaty of Versailles and the regulatory statutes about the military occupation of the Rhineland.
  • 31 July 1919 – The Assembly passed the Weimar Constitution with 262 delegates voting for and 75 (USPD, DNVP and DVP) against.
  • 11 August 1919 – Reich President Ebert signed the constitution. It came into force on 14 August 1919. Final meeting of the Assembly in Weimar.
  • 30 September 1919 – First meeting of the Assembly at Berlin, after law and order were deemed to have been restored in the capital.
  • 17 December 1919 – The Assembly passed a law that called for a one-off wealth tax to pay for the national debt.
  • 18 January 1920 – The Assembly passed the law on workers' councils.
  • 13 March 1920 – The Assembly left Berlin as a result of the Kapp Putsch. It returned from Stuttgart seven days later.
  • 25/26 March 1920 – The government of Chancellor Gustav Bauer resigned. The next day President Ebert asked Hermann Müller (SPD) to form a new government.
  • 8 May 1920 – A law came into force establishing a security zone around parliamentary buildings in which demonstrations were not allowed.
  • 12 May 1920 – A law that was the basis for movie censorship came into force.
  • 20 May 1920 – Supported by the SPD, the majority of the Assembly called on the government to end the state of emergency in all of Germany. The government refused.[3][17][18][19]
  • 21 May 1920 – The National Assembly dissolved. After the Reichstag election on 6 June 1920, the Republic's first Reichstag took the place of the National Assembly.

Presidents of the Weimar National Assembly

Name Party Entered Office Left Office
Eduard David SPD 7 February 1919 13 February 1919
Conrad Haußmann (acting) 13 February 1919 14 February 1919
Konstantin Fehrenbach Centre Party 14 February 1919 21 June 1920

Members

See also

References

  1. ^ Sturm, Reinhard (23 December 2011). "Weimarer Republik: Vom Kaiserreich zur Republik 1918/19" [Weimar Republic: From Empire to Republic 1918/19]. Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung (in German). Retrieved 17 June 2013.
  2. ^ Holste, Heiko (January 2009). "Die Nationalversammlung gehört hierher!" [The National Assembly belongs here!]. Frankfurther Allgemeine Zeitung, Bilder und Zeiten Nr. 8, 10 (in German).
  3. ^ a b c "Chronologie 1919 (in German)". Deutsches Historisches Museum. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
  4. ^ a b "Die Wahlen zur Nationalversammlung" [The Election of the National Assembly]. Deutsches Historisches Museum (in German). Retrieved 10 December 2007.
  5. ^ Sturm, Reinhard (23 December 2011). "Weimarer Republik: Vom Kaiserreich zur Republik 1918/19" [Weimar Republic: From Empire to Republic 1918/19]. Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung (in German). Retrieved 17 June 2013.
  6. ^ Winkler, Heinrich August (1993). Weimar 1918–1933. Die Geschichte der ersten deutschen Demokratie [Weimar 1918–1933. The History of the First German Democracy] (in German). Munich: C.H. Beck. p. 69. ISBN 3-406-37646-0.
  7. ^ Kohn, Walter S.G. (1980). Women in National Legislatures: A Comparative Study of Six Countries. Westport, CT: Praeger. p. 141. ISBN 9780030475917.
  8. ^ Schüler, Anja (8 September 2008). "Bubikopf und kurze Röcke" [Bobbed hair and short skirts]. Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung (in German).
  9. ^ Jindra, Steffen (2 March 2021). "Weimar und die 37 Frauen" [Weimar and the 37 Women]. ARD (in German).
  10. ^ "Gesetz über die vorläufige Reichsgewalt1". documentArchiv.de (in German).
  11. ^ Miller, Susanne; Matthias, Erich, eds. (1966). Das Kriegstagebuch des Reichstagsabgeordneten Eduard David 1914 bis 1918 [The War Diary of Eduard David, Member of the Reichstag 1914 to 1918] (in German). Düsseldorf: Droste. pp. XXXIII. ISBN 9783770050376.
  12. ^ Müller, Wolfgang (8 November 2022). "Versailler Vertrag: Fragen und Antworten" [Versailles Treaty: Questions and Answers]. NDR (in German).
  13. ^ "Vor 100 Jahren: Nationalversammlung ratifiziert Versailler Vertrag" [100 Years Ago: The National Assembly Ratifies the Versailles Treaty]. Deutscher Bundestag. 4 July 2019.
  14. ^ "Gesetz über den Friedensschluß zwischen Deutschland und den alliierten und den assoziierten Mächten". documentArchiv.de (in German).
  15. ^ Mommsen, Wolfgang J. (1974). Max Weber und die deutsche Politik 1890–1920 [Max Weber and German Politics 1890–1920] (in German) (2nd ed.). Tübingen: Mohr. pp. 372–375. ISBN 9783165358612.
  16. ^ Weipert, Axel (2012). "Vor den Toren der Macht. Die Demonstration am 13. Januar 1920 vor dem Reichstag" [At the gates of power. The Demonstration in Front of the Reichstag on 13 January 1920] (PDF). Jahrbuch für Forschungen zur Geschichte der Arbeiterbewegung. (in German). 11 (2): 16–32.
  17. ^ "Chronik 1920" [Chronicle 1920]. Deutsches Historisches Museum (in German). 23 July 2013.
  18. ^ Braun, Bernd; Epkenhans, Michael; Mühlhausen, Walter (September 1998). "Friedrich Ebert (1871–1925). Vom Arbeiterführer zum Reichspräsidenten" [Friedrich Ebert (1871–1925). From labor leader to Reich President]. Friedrich Ebert Stiftung (in German). Retrieved 23 July 2013.
  19. ^ "Kabinett Scheidemann, Einleitung II" [Scheidemann Cabinet, Introduction II]. Bundesarchiv (in German). Retrieved 23 July 2013.

weimar, national, assembly, german, weimarer, nationalversammlung, officially, german, national, constitutional, assembly, verfassunggebende, deutsche, nationalversammlung, popularly, elected, constitutional, convention, facto, parliament, germany, from, febru. The Weimar National Assembly German Weimarer Nationalversammlung officially the German National Constitutional Assembly Verfassunggebende Deutsche Nationalversammlung was the popularly elected constitutional convention and de facto parliament of Germany from 6 February 1919 to 21 May 1920 As part of its duties as the interim government it debated and reluctantly approved the Treaty of Versailles that codified the peace terms between Germany and the victorious Allies of World War I The Assembly drew up and approved the Weimar Constitution that was in force from 1919 to 1933 and technically until the end of Nazi rule in 1945 With its work completed the National Assembly was dissolved on 21 May 1920 Following the election of 6 June 1920 the new Reichstag met for the first time on 24 June 1920 taking the place of the Assembly National Assembly Deutsche NationalversammlungConstituent assembly of GermanyTypeTypeConstituent assemblyHistoryEstablished1919Disbanded1920Preceded byImperial ReichstagSucceeded byWeimar ReichstagSeats423ElectionsVoting systemDirect competitive electionsLast election19 January 1919Meeting placeDeutsches Nationaltheater WeimarBecause the National Assembly convened in Weimar rather than in politically restive Berlin the period in German history became known as the Weimar Republic Contents 1 Background 2 Elections 3 Assembly as provisional parliament 4 Discussion of the Treaty of Versailles 4 1 Initial vote in favor 4 2 Second vote following allied ultimatum 5 Constitutional deliberations 6 Miscellaneous 7 Summary of important events and decisions 8 Presidents of the Weimar National Assembly 9 Members 10 See also 11 ReferencesBackground Edit Friedrich Ebert At the end of World War I following the outbreak of the German Revolution of 1918 1919 state power lay with the Council of the People s Deputies It was formed on 10 November by revolutionary workers and soldiers councils in Berlin and headed by Friedrich Ebert of the Social Democratic Party SPD He had been appointed German chancellor on 9 November by Maximilian von Baden the last chancellor under the German Empire Both von Baden and the Social Democrats called for the speedy election of a National Assembly to establish a new government for Germany The Council decided on 30 November to hold the election on 19 January 1919 On 19 December the Reich Congress of Workers and Soldiers Councils also approved the decree by a clear majority Because of the Spartacist uprising a general strike and the accompanying armed struggles that roiled the Reich capital from 5 to 12 January 1919 it was agreed that the National Assembly should not initially meet in Berlin Four possible locations Bayreuth Nuremberg Jena and Weimar were considered Friedrich Ebert favored Weimar because he wanted the victorious Allies to be reminded of Weimar Classicism which included the writers Goethe and Schiller while they were deliberating the terms of the peace treaty 1 On 14 January 1919 the choice fell to Weimar 2 Elections EditMain article 1919 German federal electionThe elections for the National Assembly were the first held in Germany after the introduction of women s suffrage 3 and the lowering of the legal voting age from 25 to 20 years Together the changes raised the number of eligible voters by around 20 million 4 The turnout was 83 3 a slightly lower percentage than in the last Reichstag elections in 1912 but a much greater absolute turnout due to the expanded suffrage 4 Among women the turnout was 90 5 The Communist Party of Germany KPD founded in December 1918 boycotted the elections The election for the National Assembly resulted in the SPD receiving the most votes at 38 followed by the Catholic Centre Party which in this election ran as the Christian People s Party with 20 the liberal German Democratic Party DDP 19 the national conservative German National People s Party DNVP 10 and the more leftist and antiwar breakaway from the SPD the Independent Social Democratic Party USPD 8 Numerous small parties made up the remainder 6 Out of a total of 416 delegates 36 were women although this increased to 41 during the term of the Assembly 7 If the latter number is taken at 10 women the Weimar National Assembly was one of the most female parliaments of its time 8 9 Results of election to the National Assembly by district On 10 February the Assembly passed the Law on Provisional Reich Power Gesetz uber die vorlaufige Reichsgewalt 10 to go into effect the following day It regulated the government s powers during the transitional phase from the German Empire to the Weimar Republic The National Assembly was to adopt a constitution and urgently needed Reich laws thus allowing it to act as an interim parliament A States Committee served in the place of the later Reichsrat to represent the interests of the German states The business of the Reich was to be conducted by a Reich president His function was somewhat like that of the former emperor but with the restrictions that had been made to the constitution in October 1918 notably that war and peace were to be decided by Reich law not by the head of state The ministers appointed by the Reich president required the confidence of the National Assembly Assembly as provisional parliament EditThe National Assembly convened at the German National Theater in Weimar on 6 February 1919 It elected the SPD politician Eduard David as its president but because of an inter party agreement he stepped down after just four days 11 On 14 February 1919 the National Assembly elected Constantin Fehrenbach a Centre Party deputy and former vice president as his successor On 11 February the National Assembly elected the previous head of government Friedrich Ebert SPD as provisional Reich president He asked Philipp Scheidemann of the SPD to form a government The three party coalition of the SPD the Centre Party and the DDP that he brought together in the Scheidemann cabinet came to be known as the Weimar Coalition Discussion of the Treaty of Versailles Edit Philipp Scheidemann On 12 May 1919 the National Assembly met in Berlin for the first time There it heard and then debated a statement by Minister President Philipp Scheidemann on the peace terms of the Versailles Treaty In his speech Scheidemann to great applause from all parties called the Entente Powers terms a dictated or enforced peace Gewaltfrieden intended to strangle the German people The territorial economic and political demands would deprive Germany of the air to breathe The conditions were unacceptable he said and were in stark contrast to the assurances given by U S President Woodrow Wilson The Reich government could not agree to the conditions and would make counterproposals based on Wilson s 14 point program Prussian Minister President Paul Hirsch assured the Reich government of full support on behalf of the constituent states of the German Reich and also sharply criticized the Entente s conditions Speakers from all parties from the USPD to the DNVP also declared the Entente s demands unacceptable The chairman of the liberal German People s Party DVP and later Reich Foreign Minister Gustav Stresemann described the peace terms of the victorious powers as an outpouring of political sadism Only Hugo Haase chairman of the USPD combined his rejection of the Entente s demands with sharp attacks on the Reich government accusing it of having caused the current situation in the first place through its policy of enforcing a truce between political parties Burgfriedenspolitik during the war The Scheidemann cabinet resigned on 20 June 1919 because of the Entente s rejection of its counterproposals and the resulting disagreement over the question of signing the Treaty of Versailles The new Minister President Gustav Bauer SPD who headed a government of the SPD and the Centre promoted the signing of the treaty but continued to criticize individual provisions especially those concerning the extradition of Germans to the Entente and the imposition of war guilt on Germany alone He combined his call for approval with the comment that it would be impossible for the German Reich to fulfill all the economic conditions of the treaty and regretted that it had not been possible to extract further concessions from the Entente Initial vote in favor Edit Speakers from the SPD and the Centre Paul Lobe and Adolf Grober also condemned the treaty They objected in particular to the statement in the Entente draft treaty that Germany was solely to blame for the war On behalf of their parliamentary groups however they spoke in favor of acceptance since the only alternative was the resumption of hostilities which would lead to even worse consequences Eugen Schiffer the former Reich Finance Minister spoke on behalf of the majority of German Democratic Party deputies against accepting the treaty He reminded the two governing parties of Philipp Scheidemann s 12 May warning that the hand that signed the treaty would wither 12 He did not see that the situation had changed since then The DNVP and DVP were also strongly opposed to the treaty The USPD was the only opposition party to endorse its acceptance Hugo Haase called the issue at stake a terrible dilemma for the National Assembly Although he too sharply criticized the treaty he pointed out as had the representatives of the governing parties the consequences if the treaty were rejected In a 22 June roll call 237 deputies voted in favor of signing the peace treaty 138 against and five abstained Of the major parties the SPD Centre and USPD approved while the DDP DNVP and DVP rejected the treaty on both sides by large majorities of the delegates The Reich government informed the Entente the same day that it would sign the treaty but with reservations as to the provisions on war guilt and the extradition of Germans to the victorious countries French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau replied that evening on behalf of the Allied Powers that the treaty could only be accepted or rejected in its entirety Second vote following allied ultimatum EditAt the meeting of the National Assembly on 23 June Minister President Bauer informed the plenum of the Entente s position and stated that the government no longer had a choice it had to sign the treaty Let us sign that is the proposal I have to make to you on behalf of the entire cabinet The reasons that compel us to make the proposal are the same as yesterday only now we are separated by a period of barely four hours before the resumption of hostilities We could not justify a new war even if we had weapons We are defenseless but without defense does not mean without honor wehrlos ist aber nicht ehrlos Certainly our enemies want to take away our honor there is no doubt about that but that this attempt at cutting away our honor will one day fall back on the originators that it is not our honor that will perish in this world tragedy that is my belief until my last breath 13 Eugen Schiffer DDP and Rudolf Heinze DVP whose parties had rejected the treaty the day before explicitly stated in their speeches that the supporters of the treaty would act exclusively out of patriotic sentiment and conviction Schiffer even if they had different opinions about the right path forward The DNVP speaker Georg Schultz however did not make his opinion on the issue clear Ratification of the treaty through the Law on the Conclusion of Peace between Germany and the Allied and Associated Powers Gesetz uber den Friedensschluss zwischen Deutschland und den alliierten und den assoziierten Machten 14 finally took place on 9 July 1919 with results similar to the 22 June vote The only exception was that the majority of the deputies of the Bavarian Peasants League who had abstained from the first vote now approved the ratification law Hugo PreussConstitutional deliberations EditMain article Weimar ConstitutionOn 15 November 1918 Friedrich Ebert had appointed Hugo Preuss to the Reich Office of the Interior and charged him with drafting a Reich constitution Preuss a teacher of constitutional law and one of the founders of the German Democratic Party based his draft of the Weimar Constitution in large part on the Frankfurt Constitution of 1849 which was written after the German revolutions of 1848 1849 and intended for a unified Germany that did not come to pass at the time He was influenced as well by Robert Redslob s theory of parliamentarianism which called for a balance between the executive and legislative branches under either a monarch or the people as sovereign 15 After the National Assembly was seated Preuss became a member of the constitutional committee which was chaired by the Assembly s vice president Conrad Haussmann of the DDP Preuss later became known as the father of the Weimar Constitution During July of 1919 the Assembly moved quickly through the draft constitution with most debates concluded within a single session On 31 July the Assembly passed the revised committee proposal for the constitution by a vote of 262 to 75 with USPD DNVP and DVP against Key topics of debate were as follows Date Topic Decision2 July National name Deutsches Reich National structure Retain federal statesFlag and colors Black red gold4 July Reich president Adopted a semi presidential system with power divided between president cabinet and parliament The president was to rule in conjunction with the Reichstag Emergency powers to be used only in exceptional circumstances 7 July Reich administration Germany unified as an economic territory legislative responsibility for tax law to be with the Reich Unified postal and railroad systems10 July Justice Established a system of administrative courts and a high or constitutional court Restricted military jurisdiction to wartime Independence of courts incorporated into the constitution 11 July Fundamental rights Constitution to include expanded list of fundamental rights as in draft version 15 July Equality of the sexes Adopted what became Article 109 1 All Germans are equal before the law Men and women shall fundamentally have the same civic rights and duties 2 Public and legal privileges or disadvantages of birth or status shall be abolished 16 July Death penalty Rejected draft constitution s proposal to abolish the death penalty Censorship Guaranteed freedom of expression in speech print or pictorially Censorship forbidden except in cinematographs indecent and obscene literature and for protection of youth Illegitimacy Illegitimate children to have the same rights as legitimate 17 July Right to assemble Guaranteed right to assemble peaceably without any special permission needed Church and state Guaranteed freedom of religion and separation of church and state 18 July Education Universal public education ensured to age 18 21 July Economic Life Right to property patent protection and unionization guaranteed Miscellaneous EditOn 13 January 1920 while the National Assembly was negotiating the Works Councils Act which created an obligation for companies with twenty or more employees to have works councils a demonstration against the law took place in front of the Reichstag building The left wing opposition parties USPD and Communist Party among others had called for the demonstration because they felt the councils would lack sufficient worker representation About 100 000 people gathered for the demonstration Prussian security police fired into the crowd leaving 42 people dead and over 100 wounded The Reichstag Bloodbath was the deadliest demonstration in German history 16 Beginning on 30 September 1919 the National Assembly met in the renovated Reichstag building in Berlin During the Kapp Putsch it briefly moved to Stuttgart and met there on 18 March 1920 The National Assembly dissolved on 21 May 1920 After the Reichstag election on 6 June 1920 the Republic s first Reichstag took the place of the National Assembly Summary of important events and decisions Edit6 February 1919 Friedrich Ebert as chairman of the Council of the People s Deputies opened the first session of the National Assembly 10 February 1919 Against the votes of the USPD the Assembly passed the Law on Provisional Reich Power Gesetz uber die vorlaufige Reichsgewalt It designated the Assembly itself as the legislative power and set up the position of Reich president who was to be in charge of the Reich s government affairs A States Committee was to be created to represent Germany s constituent states 11 February 1919 Friedrich Ebert was elected provisional Reich president He asked Philipp Scheidemann to form a government 13 February 1919 Scheidemann formed a government based on the Weimar Coalition 14 February 1919 Konstantin Fehrenbach Centre Party was elected president of the National Assembly 27 February 1919 The Assembly passed a law setting up a provisional military in accordance with the terms of the Armistice By 1921 the armed forces were to be transformed into a professional army without conscripts The number of land troops was to be cut from 800 000 to 100 000 4 March 1919 The Assembly passed a law clarifying the position of imperial laws and those passed by the Council of the People s Deputies 12 May 1919 The National Assembly met for a protest rally against the Treaty of Versailles Philipp Scheidemann called it unacceptable 20 21 June 1919 The Scheidemann government resigned The next day Gustav Bauer SPD formed a new government 22 June 1919 With the approval of the Assembly the new government declared itself ready to accept the Treaty of Versailles if the admission of Germany s sole responsibility for the war were dropped 3 July 1919 The Assembly accepted the new national colors 7 July 1919 Finance minister Matthias Erzberger Centre Party presented his fiscal reforms including the introduction of the first German income tax and fiscal burden sharing 9 July 1919 The Assembly ratified the Treaty of Versailles and the regulatory statutes about the military occupation of the Rhineland 31 July 1919 The Assembly passed the Weimar Constitution with 262 delegates voting for and 75 USPD DNVP and DVP against 11 August 1919 Reich President Ebert signed the constitution It came into force on 14 August 1919 Final meeting of the Assembly in Weimar 30 September 1919 First meeting of the Assembly at Berlin after law and order were deemed to have been restored in the capital 17 December 1919 The Assembly passed a law that called for a one off wealth tax to pay for the national debt 18 January 1920 The Assembly passed the law on workers councils 13 March 1920 The Assembly left Berlin as a result of the Kapp Putsch It returned from Stuttgart seven days later 25 26 March 1920 The government of Chancellor Gustav Bauer resigned The next day President Ebert asked Hermann Muller SPD to form a new government 8 May 1920 A law came into force establishing a security zone around parliamentary buildings in which demonstrations were not allowed 12 May 1920 A law that was the basis for movie censorship came into force 20 May 1920 Supported by the SPD the majority of the Assembly called on the government to end the state of emergency in all of Germany The government refused 3 17 18 19 21 May 1920 The National Assembly dissolved After the Reichstag election on 6 June 1920 the Republic s first Reichstag took the place of the National Assembly Presidents of the Weimar National Assembly EditName Party Entered Office Left OfficeEduard David SPD 7 February 1919 13 February 1919Conrad Haussmann acting 13 February 1919 14 February 1919Konstantin Fehrenbach Centre Party 14 February 1919 21 June 1920Members EditMember Party Constituency NotesBruno Ablass German Democratic Party 11 Liegnitz Karl Aderhold Independent Social Democratic Party Entered on 1 March 1919 as a replacement for August MergesLore Agnes Independent Social Democratic Party 25 Dusseldorf Ost Joseph Allekotte Centre Party 21 Coblenz Trier Ludwig Alpers German Hanoverian Party 37 Bremen Hamburg Stade Josef Andre Centre Party 31 32 Wurttemberg Albert Arnstadt German National People s Party 36 Thuringia Julius Assmann German People s Party 8 Posen Jacob Astor Centre Party 21 Coblenz Trier Erhard Auer Social Democratic Party 24 Oberbayern Schwaben Benedikt Bachmeier Bavarian Peasants League Entered on 24 February 1919 as a replacement for Wilhelm MannerPaul Bader Social Democratic Party 12 Magdeburg Max Baerecke German National People s Party 2 Westpreussen Moritz Baerwald German Democratic Party 8 Posen Died on 26 December 1919Gertrud Baumer German Democratic Party 36 Thuringia Max Bahr German Democratic Party 6 Frankfurt Oder Franz Bartschat German Democratic Party 1 Ostpreussen August Baudert Social Democratic Party 36 Thuringia Gustav Bauer Social Democratic Party 9 Breslau Marie Baum German Democratic Party 14 Schleswig Holstein Eduard Baumer Bavarian People s Party Entered on 26 February 1920 as a replacement for Eugen TaucherJohannes Becker Centre Party 20 Westfalen Sud Johann Becker German People s Party 34 Hessen Darmstadt Josef Becker Centre Party 19 Hessen Nassau Roman Becker Social Democratic Party 10 Oppeln Margarete Behm German National People s Party 7 Pommern Marie Behncke Social Democratic Party Entered on 7 August 1919 as a replacement for August JordanFranz Behrens German National People s Party 1 Ostpreussen Hermann Beims Social Democratic Party 12 Magdeburg Johannes Bell Centre Party 23 Dusseldorf West Ferdinand Bender Social Democratic Party 12 Magdeburg Theodor Bergmann Centre Party 23 Dusseldorf West Karl Bethke Social Democratic Party Entered on 12 May 1919 as a replacement for Wilhelm BuckAugust Beuermann German People s Party 8 Posen Konrad Beyerle Centre Party 29 Franken Joined Bavarian People s Party on 6 January 1920Anton Bias Social Democratic Party 10 Oppeln Franz Biener German National People s Party 30 Chemnitz Zwickau Albert Billian Social Democratic Party Entered on 13 January 1920 as a replacement for Heinrich KurbisJakob Binder Social Democratic PartyJoseph Bitta Centre Party 10 Oppeln Lorenz Blank Centre PartyAnna Blos Social Democratic PartyJohannes Blum Centre Party 26 Dusseldorf West Andreas Blunck German Democratic Party 14 Schleswig Holstein Wilhelm Bock Independent Social Democratic Party 13 Thuringia Karl Bohme German Democratic Party 11 Magdeburg Wilhelm Bohmert German Democratic PartyFriedrich Borschmann Social Democratic PartyMinna Bollmann Social Democratic PartyEugen Bolz Centre Party 34 Wurttemberg Otto Brass Independent Social Democratic Party 25 Dusseldorf Ost Otto Braun Social Democratic Party 26 Dusseldorf West Adolf Braun Social Democratic Party 29 Franken Heinrich Brauns Centre Party ReichswahlvorschlagOtto von Brentano di Tremezzo Centre Party 22 Hessen Darmstadt August Brey Social Democratic Party 18 Sud Hannover Braunschweig Alfred Brodauf German Democratic Party 33 Chemnitz Zwickau Elisabeth Bronner German Democratic Party 1 Ostpreussen Arno Bruchardt Independent Social Democratic Party ReichswahlvorschlagHermann Bruckhoff German Democratic PartyPaul Bruhl Independent Social Democratic Party 4 Potsdam I Friedrich Bruhne Social Democratic PartyWilhelm Bruhn German National People s Party 5 Frankfurt Oder Wilhelm Buck Social Democratic Party 31 Dresden Bautzen Resigned on 11 April 1919Ewald Budde Social Democratic PartyMichael Burgau Social Democratic PartyEduard Burlage Centre Party 16 Weser Ems Oskar Cohn Independent Social Democratic PartyHermann Colshorn German Hanoverian Party 18 Sud Hannover Braunschweig Elected on a joint list with the Centre PartyEduard David Social Democratic Party 22 Hessen Darmstadt Georg Davidsohn Social Democratic PartyKurt Deglerk German National People s Party 8 Breslau Karl Deichmann Social Democratic PartyClemens von Delbruck German National People s Party Reichswahlvorschlag Died on 18 December 1921Carl Delius German Democratic Party 12 Merseburg Bernhard Dernburg German Democratic Party 3 Potsdam II Hermann Dietrich German Democratic Party 35 Baden Resigned on 12 April 1919Hermann Dietrich German National People s Party ReichswahlvorschlagKarl Dietrich Social Democratic PartyCarl Diez Centre Party 35 Baden Theodor Dirr Bavarian Peasants LeagueWilhelm Dittmann Independent Social Democratic Party 11 Magdeburg Alexander Graf zu Dohna Schlodien German People s Party 1 Ostpreussen Hedwig Dransfeld Centre Party ReichswahlvorschlagErnst Droner Social Democratic PartyAdelbert Duringer German National People s Party 35 Baden Wilhelm Dusche German People s Party 18 Sud Hannover Braunschweig Bernhard Duwell Independent Social Democratic Party 12 Merseburg Friedrich Ebert Social Democratic Party Resigned on 11 February 1919Hermann Eger Centre Party Entered on 19 November 1919 as a replacement for Adolf GroberFranz Ehrhardt Centre Party 10 Oppeln Emil Eichhorn Independent Social Democratic Party 2 Berlin Wilhelmine Eichler Social Democratic Party 13 Thuringia Georg Eisenberger Bavarian Peasants League 27 Oberbayern Schwaben Elise Ekke German Democratic PartyPaul Ende German Democratic Party Entered on 22 June 1919 as a replacement for Oscar GuntherFritz Endres Social Democratic PartyEmil Engelhard German Democratic Party Resigned on 3 October 1919Anton Erkelenz German Democratic Party 25 Dusseldorf Ost Eugen Ernst Social Democratic PartyJoseph Ersing Centre Party 35 Baden Matthias Erzberger Centre Party 34 Wurttemberg Bernhard Falk German Democratic PartyWilhelm Farwick Centre PartyConstantin Fehrenbach Centre Party 35 Baden Jan Fegter German Democratic Party Entered on 20 November 1919 as a replacement for Theodor TantzenFranz Feldmann Social Democratic Party 8 Breslau Otto Fischbeck German Democratic PartyGustav Fischer Social Democratic Party 18 Sud Hannover Braunschweig Richard Fischer Social Democratic Party 2 Berlin Paul Fleischer Centre Party 1 Ostpreussen Wilhelm Frank Centre Party Entered on 9 March 1920 as a replacement for Richard MullerRichard Franke German Democratic PartyWilhelm Frerker Centre PartyKarl Frohme Social Democratic Party 14 Schleswig Holstein Karl Gandorfer Bavarian Peasants LeagueKarl Gebhart German People s Party 30 Pfalz Oskar Geck Social Democratic Party 35 Baden Julius Gehl Social Democratic PartyLiborius Gerstenberger Bavarian People s Party 29 Franken Curt Geyer Independent Social Democratic Party ReichswahlvorschlagFriedrich Geyer Independent Social Democratic Party 32 Leipzig Karl Giebel Social Democratic Party 5 Frankfurt Oder Anna von Gierke German National People s PartyJohannes Giesberts Centre Party 25 Dusseldorf Ost Anton Gilsing Centre PartyEmil Girbig Social Democratic Party 9 Liegnitz Wilhelm Gleichauf German Democratic PartyHeinrich Golzer Social Democratic PartyGeorg Gothein German Democratic Party 8 Breslau Georg Gradnauer Social Democratic Party Reichswahlvorschlag Resigned on 10 April 1919Albrecht von Graefe German National People s Party 7 Mecklenburg Adolf Grober Centre Party Died on 19 November 1919Martin Gruber Social Democratic Party 27 Oberbayern Schwaben Helene Grunberg Independent Social Democratic Party Entered on 21 November 1919 as a replacement for Josef SimonWilhelm Grunewald German Democratic PartyAugust Grunau Centre PartyOscar Gunther German Democratic Party Resigned on 1 June 1919Magnus Haack Social Democratic Party Resigned on 19 August 1919Ludwig Haas German Democratic Party 35 Baden Hugo Haase Independent Social Democratic Party Died on 7 November 1919August Josef Hagemann Centre Party 16 Weser Ems August Hampe Brunswick State Electoral AssociationHeinrich Hansmann Social Democratic Party 20 Westfalen Sud Gustav Hartmann German Democratic PartyRudolf Hartmann German National People s Party 10 Oppeln Ludwig Hasenzahl Social Democratic PartyFrieda Hauke Social Democratic Party 10 Oppeln Conrad Haussmann German Democratic Party 34 Wurttemberg Benedikt Hebel Bavarian People s Party Resigned on 24 February 1920Werner Heidsieck German Democratic Party Entered on 17 January 1920 as a replacement for Moritz BaerwaldWilhelm Heile German Democratic Party 18 Sud Hannover Braunschweig Georg Heim Centre Party 28 Niederbayern Oberpfalz Joined Bavarian People s Party on 9 January 1920Hugo Heimann Social Democratic Party 2 Berlin Wolfgang Heine Social Democratic PartyRudolf Heinze German People s Party 31 Dresden Bautzen August Hellmann Social Democratic Party 15 Hamburg Alfred Henke Independent Social Democratic Party 16 Weser Ems Konrad Henrich German Democratic PartyKarl Hense Social Democratic PartyRichard Herbst Independent Social Democratic Party Entered on 20 November 1919 as a replacement for Hugo HaaseKarl Hermannn German Democratic Party 34 Wurttemberg Carl Herold Centre Party 19 Westfalen Nord Alfred Herrmann German Democratic PartyHans Herschel Centre Party 10 Oppeln Fritz Hesse German Democratic PartyMichael Hierl Social Democratic PartyKarl Hildenbrand Social Democratic Party 34 Wurttemberg Franz Hitze Centre Party ReichswahlvorschlagGustav Hoch Social Democratic Party 21 Hessen Nassau Else Hofs Social Democratic PartyOtto Horsing Social Democratic PartyJohannes Hoffmann Social Democratic Party 30 Pfalz Arthur Hofmann Social Democratic Party 13 Thuringia Hermann Hofmann Centre Party 30 Pfalz Peter Holl Social Democratic PartyFranz Holzapfel Social Democratic Party Entered on 30 September 1919 as a replacement for Magnus HaackOtto Hue Social Democratic Party 20 Westfalen Sud Anna Hubler Independent Social Democratic PartyPaul Hug Social Democratic Party Resigned on 22 May 1919Alfred Hugenberg German National People s Party 19 Westfalen Nord Otto Hugo German People s Party 19 Westfalen Nord Heinrich Imbusch Centre Party 20 Westfalen Sud Martin Irl Centre Party Joined Bavarian People s Party on 9 January 1920Heinrich Jacker Social Democratic Party 25 Dusseldorf Ost Willy Jandrey German National People s Party 6 Pommern Alfred Janschek Social Democratic Party 19 Westfalen Nord Viktor Jantzen Social Democratic PartyHeinrich Jasper Social Democratic PartyJosef Jaud Bavarian People s Party 27 Oberbayern Schwaben Philipp Johannsen Schleswig Holstein Farmers and Farmworkers Democracy 14 Schleswig Holstein Entered on 1 August 1919 as a replacement for Detlef ThomsenJoseph Joos Centre Party 23 Koln Aachen August Jordan Social Democratic Party Entered on 22 May 1919 as a replacement for Paul Hug resigned on 5 July 1919Marie Juchacz Social Democratic Party 4 Potsdam I Max Jungnickel Social Democratic PartyLudwig Kaas Centre Party 24 Coblenz Trier Wilhelm Kahl German People s Party 2 Berlin Wilhelmine Kahler Social Democratic Party 1 Ostpreussen Hermann Kappler Social Democratic Party 13 Thuringia Hermann Kahmann Social Democratic Party 31 Dresden Bautzen Franz Kaufmann Centre PartySimon Katzenstein Social Democratic PartyWilhelm Keil Social Democratic Party 34 Wurttemberg Adolf Kempkes German People s Party 25 Dusseldorf Ost Gottlieb Kenngott Social Democratic PartyAndreas Kerschbaum German Democratic Party 29 Franken Katharina Kloss German Democratic PartyFriedrich Knollmann German National People s Party Died on 16 April 1920Christian Koch German Democratic PartyJohann Koch Centre Party ReichswahlvorschlagWilhelm Koch German National People s Party 25 Dusseldorf Ost William Karl Koch German Democratic PartyErich Koch Weser German Democratic Party 16 Weser Ems Franz Heinrich Koltzsch German National People s PartyWilhelm Koenen Independent Social Democratic Party 12 Merseburg Max Konig Social Democratic Party 20 Westfalen Sud Alwin Korsten Social Democratic Party 6 Pommern Bartholomaus Kossmann Centre PartyTheodor Kotzur Social Democratic Party 1 Ostpreussen Hermann Kratzig Social Democratic Party 31 Dresden Bautzen Heinrich von Kraut German National People s PartyKarl Kreft German National People s PartyFranz Kreutz Centre PartyWilhelm Kroger Social Democratic Party 7 Mecklenburg Entered on 25 July 1919 as a replacement for Franz StarossonPeter Kronen Social Democratic PartyFranz Kruger Social Democratic PartyHans Kruger Social Democratic PartyJosef Kubetzko Centre Party 10 Oppeln Resigned on 12 July 1919Wilhelm Kulz German Democratic Party Entered on 20 January 1920 as a replacement for Emil NitzschkeHeinrich Kurbis Social Democratic Party Resigned on 2 December 1919Bernhard Kuhnt Independent Social Democratic Party 33 Chemnitz Zwickau Fritz Kunert Independent Social Democratic Party 12 Merseburg Alexander Kuntze Social Democratic Party 6 Pommern Bruno Kurowski Centre PartyHedwig Kurt Social Democratic Party Entered on 10 April 1919 as a replacement for Georg GradnauerOtto Landsberg Social Democratic PartyChristian Ritter von Langheinrich German Democratic Party Resigned on 21 April 1919Heinrich Langwost German Hanoverian Party 18 Sud Hannover Braunschweig Elected on a joint list with the Centre PartyWilhelm Lattmann German National People s Party Entered on 24 October 1919 as a replacement for Karl VeidtGustav Laukant Independent Social Democratic PartyWilhelm Laverrenz German National People s Party 2 Berlin Peter Legendre Centre PartyCarl Legien Social Democratic Party 14 Schleswig Holstein Died on 26 December 1920Johann Leicht Centre Party 29 Franken Joined Bavarian People s Party in January 1922Gottfried Leiser German Democratic Party Entered on 24 October 1919 as a replacement for Emil EngelhardFelix Lensing Centre PartyFriedrich Lesche Social Democratic Party 17 Ost Hannover Hans Liebig Social Democratic PartyJulius Lippmann German Democratic PartyPaul Lockenvitz German Democratic PartyPaul Lobe Social Democratic Party 8 Breslau Gertrud Lodahl Social Democratic Party Entered on 12 February 1919 as a replacement for Paul StosselHeinrich Loffler Social Democratic Party 10 Oppeln Josef Lubbring Social Democratic Party 1 Ostpreussen Marie Elisabeth Luders German Democratic Party Reichswahlvorschlag Entered on 24 August 1919 as a replacement for Friedrich NaumannFrida Luhrs Social Democratic PartyAugust Luttich Social Democratic PartyFriedrich Max Ludewig German Democratic PartyHermann Luppe German Democratic PartyErnestine Lutze Social Democratic PartyWilhelm Manner Bavarian Peasants League Resigned in February 1919Gustav Malkewitz German National People s Party 6 Pommern Oskar Maretzky German People s Party 4 Potsdam I Wilhelm Marx Centre Party 25 Dusseldorf Ost Georg Mauerer Social Democratic Party Entered on 2 February 1919 as a replacement for Alwin SaengerJoseph Mausbach Centre PartyWilhelm Maxen Centre Party 18 Sud Hannover Braunschweig Wilhelm Mayer Centre Party 27 Oberbayern Schwaben Joined Bavarian People s Party on 9 January 1920 resigned on 17 February 1920Johannes Meerfeld Social Democratic Party 23 Koln Aachen Richard Meier Social Democratic Party 33 Chemnitz Zwickau Christian Meisner German Democratic Party Entered in Mai 1919 as a replacement for Christian Ritter von LangheinrichClara Mende German People s Party ReichswahlvorschlagWilhelm Merck Bavarian People s Party Reichswahlvorschlag Entered in February 1920 as a replacement for Benedikt HebelAugust Merges Independent Social Democratic Party Resigned on 28 February 1919Peter Michelsen Social Democratic Party 14 Schleswig Holstein Fritz Mittelmann German People s Party 6 Pommern Hermann Molkenbuhr Social Democratic Party 33 Chemnitz Zwickau Albrecht Morath German People s Party ReichswahlvorschlagJulius Moses Independent Social Democratic Party 2 Berlin Otto Most German People s Party 26 Dusseldorf West Hermann Muller Social Democratic Party 29 Franken Hermann Muller Social Democratic PartyRichard Muller Centre Party Resigned on 31 January 1920Reinhard Mumm German National People s Party 20 Westfalen Sud Josef Nacken Centre Party 23 Koln Aachen Anna Nemitz Independent Social Democratic Party 9 Liegnitz Joined Social Democratic Party in September 1922Friedrich Naumann German Democratic Party Died on 24 August 1919Agnes Neuhaus Centre Party 20 Westfalen Sud Adolf Neumann Hofer German Democratic PartyMatthias Neyses Centre Party 24 Coblenz Trier Emil Nitzschke German Democratic Party Resigned on 20 January 1920Ferdinand Noske German National People s PartyGustav Noske Social Democratic PartyOtto Nuschke German Democratic PartyErnst Oberfohren German National People s Party 14 Schleswig Holstein Karl Obermeyer Social Democratic Party 25 Dusseldorf Ost Richard Oertel German People s Party 24 Coblenz Trier Wilhelm Ohler German National People s PartyKarl Okonsky Social Democratic Party 10 Oppeln Entered in July 1919 as a replacement for Josef KubetzkoKarl Ollmert Centre PartyNikolaus Osterroth Social Democratic PartyWaldemar Otte Centre PartyHermann Pachnicke German Democratic Party 4 Potsdam I Johann Panzer Social Democratic PartyRichard Partzsch Social Democratic Party Entered on 3 January 1920 as a replacement for August WinnigFriedrich von Payer German Democratic PartyCarl Wilhelm Petersen German Democratic Party 15 Hamburg Wilhelm Pfannkuch Social Democratic PartyMaximilian Pfeiffer Centre Party 2 Berlin Antonie Pfulf Social Democratic Party 27 Oberbayern Schwaben Albrecht Philipp German National People s Party 32 Leipzig Otto Pick German Democratic PartyKarl Pinkau Social Democratic Party 32 Leipzig Alexander Pohlmann German Democratic Party 10 Oppeln Franz Pokorny Social Democratic PartyArthur von Posadowsky Wehner German National People s PartyAlois Puschmann Centre Party 8 Breslau Max Quarck Social Democratic PartyLudwig Quessel Social Democratic Party 22 Hessen Darmstadt Ludwig Quidde German Democratic PartyFritz Raschig German Democratic PartyFriedrich Rauch Social Democratic PartyGustav Raute Independent Social Democratic Party 12 Merseburg Walter Reek Social Democratic PartyHeinrich Reineke German People s PartyHermann Paul Reisshaus Social Democratic Party 13 Thuringia Johanne Reitze Social Democratic Party 15 Hamburg Ernst Remmers German Democratic PartyAnton Rheinlander Centre Party 20 Westfalen Sud Adolf Richter German National People s Party 1 Ostpreussen Johann Sophian Christian Richter Centre PartyHartmann von Richthofen German Democratic PartyLorenz Riedmiller Social Democratic Party 35 Baden Jakob Riesser German People s Party 21 Hessen Nassau Paul Rodemann Social Democratic PartyElisabeth Rohl Social Democratic PartyPaul Rohle Social Democratic PartyGustav Roesicke German National People s Party ReichswahlvorschlagKurt Rosenfeld Independent Social Democratic Party 13 Thuringia Entered on 3 May 1920 as a replacement for Emanuel WurmLeopold Ruckert Social Democratic PartyHeinrich Runkel German People s Party 14 Schleswig Holstein Elfriede Ryneck Social Democratic Party 3 Potsdam II Hermann Sachse Social Democratic PartyAlwin Saenger Social Democratic Party Resigned on 2 February 1919Robert Sagawe Centre PartyAlbert Salm Social Democratic PartyErnst Schadlich Social Democratic PartyValentin Schafer Social Democratic PartyJosef Schefbeck Centre PartyPhilipp Scheidemann Social Democratic Party 21 Hessen Nassau Martin Schiele German National People s Party 11 Magdeburg Eugen Schiffer German Democratic Party 11 Magdeburg Karl Matthias Schiffer Centre Party Resigned on 24 September 1919Joseph Schilgen Centre Party Entered on 24 September 1919 as a replacement for Karl Matthias SchifferMinna Schilling Social Democratic Party 33 Chemnitz Zwickau Carl Schirmer Centre Party 29 Franken Joined Bavarian People s Party on 9 January 1920Kathe Schirmacher German National People s PartyPeter Schlack Centre Party 25 Dusseldorf Ost Alexander Schlicke Social Democratic Party ReichswahlvorschlagWilhelm Schluter Social Democratic PartyRichard Schmidt Social Democratic Party 31 Dresden Bautzen Richard Schmidt Social Democratic PartyRobert Schmidt Social Democratic Party ReichswahlvorschlagWilhelm Schmidthals German Democratic PartyAdam Josef Schmitt Centre PartyMaria Schmitz Centre PartyAlexander Schneider Centre PartyGustav Schneider German Democratic PartyGeorg Schopflin Social Democratic Party 35 Baden Carl Schreck Social Democratic Party 19 Westfalen Nord Louise Schroeder Social Democratic Party 14 Schleswig Holstein Clara Schuch Social Democratic Party 2 Berlin Walther Schucking German Democratic Party 21 Hessen Nassau Wilhelm Schummer Centre PartyGeorg Schultz German National People s Party ReichswahlvorschlagHeinrich Schulz Social Democratic Party ReichswahlvorschlagHermann Schulz Social Democratic Party WestpreussenWilhelm Schulz Social Democratic PartyGerhart von Schulze Gavernitz German Democratic Party Entered on 12 April 1919 as a replacement for Hermann DietrichOswald Schumann Social Democratic Party 5 Frankfurt Oder Jean Albert Schwarz Centre Party 21 Hessen Nassau Rudolf Schwarzer Bavarian People s Party 27 Oberbayern Schwaben Friedrich Seger Independent Social Democratic Party 32 Leipzig Friedrich Wilhelm Semmler German National People s Party 8 Breslau Carl Severing Social Democratic Party 19 Westfalen Nord Richard Seyfert German Democratic PartyOtto Sidow Social Democratic Party 4 Potsdam I Ernst Siehr German Democratic PartyKarl Sielermann German National People s Party Entered on 29 September 1919 as a replacement for Wilhelm WallbaumAnna Simon Social Democratic PartyHermann Silberschmidt Social Democratic Party 11 Magdeburg Georg Simon Social Democratic Party 27 Oberbayern Schwaben Josef Simon Independent Social Democratic Party 29 Franken Resigned on 21 November 1919Hugo Sinzheimer Social Democratic PartyHans Sivkovich German Democratic Party 7 Mecklenburg Wilhelm Sollmann Social Democratic Party 23 Koln Aachen Peter Spahn Centre Party ReichswahlvorschlagEmil Stahl Social Democratic PartyMichael Stapfer Centre PartyFranz Starosson Social Democratic PartyOtto Steinmayer Social Democratic PartyWilhelm Steinsdorff German Democratic PartyAdam Stegerwald Centre Party 19 Westfalen Nord Willy Steinkopf Social Democratic Party ReichswahlvorschlagJohannes Stelling Social Democratic Party 7 Mecklenburg Christian Stock Social Democratic PartyOtto Stolten Social Democratic Party 15 Hamburg Paul Stossel Social Democratic Party Resigned on 2 February 1919Gustav Stresemann German People s Party 3 Potsdam II Franz Strzoda Centre PartyDaniel Stucklen Social Democratic Party 33 Chemnitz Zwickau Thomas Szczeponik Centre Party 10 Oppeln Theodor Tantzen der Jungere German Democratic Party Resigned on 31 October 1919Paul Taubadel Social Democratic Party 9 Liegnitz Eugen Taucher Centre Party Joined Bavarian People s Party on 9 January 1920 resigned on 1 February 1920Johanna Tesch Social Democratic Party 21 Hessen Nassau Christine Teusch Centre Party 23 Koln Aachen Johannes Thabor Social Democratic Party 26 Dusseldorf West Adolf Thiele Social Democratic PartyGeorg Thone Social Democratic Party 21 Hessen Nassau Detlef Thomsen Schleswig Holstein Farmers and Farmworkers Democracy Resigned on 7 July 1919Franz Thurow Social Democratic Party Entered on 11 February 1919 as a replacement for Friedrich EbertGottfried Traub German National People s PartyPeter Tremmel Centre Party 24 Coblenz Trier Karl Trimborn Centre Party 23 Koln Aachen Oskar Trinks Social Democratic PartyCarl Ulitzka Centre Party 10 Oppeln Carl Ulrich Social Democratic Party 22 Hessen Darmstadt Karl Veidt German National People s Party Resigned on 29 August 1919Wilhelm Vershofen German Democratic PartyOtto Vesper Social Democratic PartyAlbert Vogler German People s Party 20 Westfalen Sud Hans Vogel Social Democratic Party 29 Franken Wilhelm Vogt German National People s Party 34 Wurttemberg Fritz Voigt Social Democratic PartyFriedrich Wachhorst de Wente German Democratic PartyFelix Waldstein German Democratic Party 14 Schleswig Holstein Wilhelm Wallbaum German National People s Party Resigned on 29 September 1919Fritz Warmuth German National People s Party 5 Frankfurt Oder Helene Weber Centre PartyVictor Weidtman German People s PartyLuitpold Weilnbock German National People s Party 29 Franken Friedrich Weinhausen German Democratic Party WestpreussenKonrad Weiss German Democratic Party 29 Franken Franz Xaver Weixler Bavarian People s Party 27 Oberbayern Schwaben Entered in March 1920 as a replacement for Wilhelm MayerOtto Wels Social Democratic Party 5 Frankfurt Oder Hugo Wendorff German Democratic PartyKuno von Westarp German National People s Party 3 Potsdam II Johannes Wetzlich German National People s PartyFranz Wieber Centre Party 26 Dusseldorf West Philipp Wieland German Democratic Party 34 Wurttemberg Carl Winkelmann Social Democratic PartyAugust Winnefeld German People s Party 20 Westfalen Sud August Winnig Social Democratic Party Resigned on 3 January 1920Joseph Wirth Centre Party 35 Baden Rudolf Wissell Social Democratic PartyFranz Heinrich Witthoefft German People s PartyTheodor Wolff Social Democratic PartyEmanuel Wurm Independent Social Democratic Party Died on 3 May 1920Constantin Zawadzki Centre Party 10 Oppeln Johann Anton Zehnter Centre PartyMarie Zettler Centre PartyPaul Ziegler German Democratic Party 20 Westfalen Sud Luise Zietz Independent Social Democratic Party 2 Berlin Georg Zophel German Democratic PartyFritz Zubeil Independent Social Democratic Party 3 Potsdam II See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Weimar National Assembly Herrenchiemsee convention of 1948 Parlamentarischer Rat of 1949References Edit Sturm Reinhard 23 December 2011 Weimarer Republik Vom Kaiserreich zur Republik 1918 19 Weimar Republic From Empire to Republic 1918 19 Bundeszentrale fur politische Bildung in German Retrieved 17 June 2013 Holste Heiko January 2009 Die Nationalversammlung gehort hierher The National Assembly belongs here Frankfurther Allgemeine Zeitung Bilder und Zeiten Nr 8 10 in German a b c Chronologie 1919 in German Deutsches Historisches Museum Retrieved 23 July 2013 a b Die Wahlen zur Nationalversammlung The Election of the National Assembly Deutsches Historisches Museum in German Retrieved 10 December 2007 Sturm Reinhard 23 December 2011 Weimarer Republik Vom Kaiserreich zur Republik 1918 19 Weimar Republic From Empire to Republic 1918 19 Bundeszentrale fur politische Bildung in German Retrieved 17 June 2013 Winkler Heinrich August 1993 Weimar 1918 1933 Die Geschichte der ersten deutschen Demokratie Weimar 1918 1933 The History of the First German Democracy in German Munich C H Beck p 69 ISBN 3 406 37646 0 Kohn Walter S G 1980 Women in National Legislatures A Comparative Study of Six Countries Westport CT Praeger p 141 ISBN 9780030475917 Schuler Anja 8 September 2008 Bubikopf und kurze Rocke Bobbed hair and short skirts Bundeszentrale fur politische Bildung in German Jindra Steffen 2 March 2021 Weimar und die 37 Frauen Weimar and the 37 Women ARD in German Gesetz uber die vorlaufige Reichsgewalt1 documentArchiv de in German Miller Susanne Matthias Erich eds 1966 Das Kriegstagebuch des Reichstagsabgeordneten Eduard David 1914 bis 1918 The War Diary of Eduard David Member of the Reichstag 1914 to 1918 in German Dusseldorf Droste pp XXXIII ISBN 9783770050376 Muller Wolfgang 8 November 2022 Versailler Vertrag Fragen und Antworten Versailles Treaty Questions and Answers NDR in German Vor 100 Jahren Nationalversammlung ratifiziert Versailler Vertrag 100 Years Ago The National Assembly Ratifies the Versailles Treaty Deutscher Bundestag 4 July 2019 Gesetz uber den Friedensschluss zwischen Deutschland und den alliierten und den assoziierten Machten documentArchiv de in German Mommsen Wolfgang J 1974 Max Weber und die deutsche Politik 1890 1920 Max Weber and German Politics 1890 1920 in German 2nd ed Tubingen Mohr pp 372 375 ISBN 9783165358612 Weipert Axel 2012 Vor den Toren der Macht Die Demonstration am 13 Januar 1920 vor dem Reichstag At the gates of power The Demonstration in Front of the Reichstag on 13 January 1920 PDF Jahrbuch fur Forschungen zur Geschichte der Arbeiterbewegung in German 11 2 16 32 Chronik 1920 Chronicle 1920 Deutsches Historisches Museum in German 23 July 2013 Braun Bernd Epkenhans Michael Muhlhausen Walter September 1998 Friedrich Ebert 1871 1925 Vom Arbeiterfuhrer zum Reichsprasidenten Friedrich Ebert 1871 1925 From labor leader to Reich President Friedrich Ebert Stiftung in German Retrieved 23 July 2013 Kabinett Scheidemann Einleitung II Scheidemann Cabinet Introduction II Bundesarchiv in German Retrieved 23 July 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Weimar National Assembly amp oldid 1131074774, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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