Germany

Federal Republic of Germany

The proclamation of the Republic on 9 November 1918 marked the end of the German Empire and the birth of the Weimar Republic. The following year, Germany's first democratic constitution was enacted. In January 1933, after a decade of political, economic and cultural tensions, Reich President Paul von Hindenburg appointed Adolf Hitler, chairman of the National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP) and “leader” of the strongest parliamentary group in the Reichstag, as Reich Chancellor. Immediately and permanently, the NSDAP suspended essential parts of the Weimar Reich Constitution by means of the Enabling Act, including the separation of powers, parliamentary control of the government and basic civil rights.

By invading Poland, National Socialist Germany caused the Second World War and committed crimes against humanity on an unprecedented scale. The war claimed at least 60 million lives, more than half of them civilians. At the end of the war, the four occupying powers - the Soviet Union, the USA, Great Britain and France - could not agree on a common post-war order. The escalating conflicts culminated in 1949 in the founding of two German states - the Federal Republic of Germany on the territory of the three Western occupation zones and the GDR on Soviet-occupied territory.

As early as April 1946, pressure from the Soviet occupying power led to the founding of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED) through the forced unification of the Communist (KPD) and Social Democratic (SPD) Parties of Germany. By repression and indoctrination, the SED was able to assert its claim to leadership and subsequently maintained its sole rule until autumn 1989. The basic democratic rights provided for in the constitution were thereby undermined, and free elections did not take place. In 1953, uprisings broke out in Berlin and spread throughout the entire GDR. They were bloodily suppressed by the Soviet military.

It was illegal for GDR citizens to travel to western countries. Nevertheless, escape was still possible in the 1950s, but became a deadly danger after the construction of the Berlin Wall in 1961 due to the tightening of the inner-German border installations. Nevertheless, almost 5 million people fled from the Soviet occupation zone or GDR to the Federal Republic of Germany between 1945 and 1989. 72,000 were imprisoned between 1961 and 1989 for attempted escapes. At least 270 people were shot dead or killed by mines on the western GDR border. In addition, GDR refugees died on the border of other Eastern Bloc states or while fleeing, and GDR soldiers who died while serving on the inner-German border - a total of at least 1,393 people lost their lives. In February 1989, Christ Gueffroy was the last person to be shot while trying to escape.

After the local elections in May 1989, the obvious electoral fraud was proven, further undermining the credibility of the SED leadership. The hope for a reform of the system triggered by Mikhail Gorbachev's reform policy in the Soviet Union was thus shattered. After the opening of the border fence between Hungary and Austria in the summer of 1989, over 50,000 people left the GDR. Parallel to this development, demonstrations began in numerous cities of the GDR, with hundreds of thousands of participants. Besides demanding freedom of travel, people demonstrated above all for the granting of basic democratic rights. The collapse of the SED regime could no longer be stopped after the opening of the border crossings to West Berlin on 9 November 1989. On 3 October 1990, the GDR joined the Federal Republic of Germany. This reunited the two German states.

Chronik

09.11.1918
Proclamation of the Republic; Abdication of the German Emperor Wilhelm II.
14.08.1919
Weimar Imperial Constitution comes into force
10.01.1920
Treaty of Versailles, which stipulates extensive reparations for Germany, comes into force
30.01.1933
Appointment of Adolf Hitler as German Chancellor
01.09.1939
Invasion of Poland by the German Wehrmacht, marking the beginning of the Second World War
22.06.1941
German invasion of the Soviet Union; Beginning of systematic mass killings
07. – 08.05.1945
Germany agrees to an unconditional surrender
06.06.1945
Formation of the Soviet Military Administration in East Germany (SMAD) and establishment of a socialist dictatorship on the Soviet model
21. – 22.04.1946
Founding of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED) by forced unification of the Communist (KPD) and Social Democratic (SPD) Parties of Germany
07.10.1949
Founding of the German Democratic Republic (GDR); in West Germany, adoption of the Basic Law on 23 May 1949; de facto division of Germany
23.07.1952
Dissolution of East German states, formation of 14 districts or ‘Bezirke’
17.06.1953
Uprising in East Berlin, spreading over the entire GDR and suppression by the Soviet military
11. – 13.08.1961
Sealing-off of East Berlin; start of construction of the Berlin Wall
24.01.1962
Introduction of mandatory military service in the GDR
03.05.1971
Erich Honecker replaces Walter Ulbricht as the leader of the SED
30.07. – 01.08.1975
SED CSCE Summit Conference in Helsinki; extensive concessions of the GDR in human rights issues by signing the CSCE Final Act
07.05.1989
GDR local elections: citizens find evidence of electoral rigging across the board
08.10.1989
Start of a peaceful dialogue between state power and demonstrators in Dresden; foundation of the "Group of 20"
09.10.1989
Demonstration of 70,000 people in Leipzig, the state security forces do not intervene
04.11.1989
Demonstration on Alexanderplatz in East Berlin by over 500,000 people
09.11.1989
The Berlin Wall falls
03.10.1990
The GDR ceases to exist when its states join the Federal Republic of Germany according to a paragraph in the West German constitution; German Reunification