1L The quest for political stability: Germany, 187 (1L)
Établissement
AQA
1L The quest for political stability: Germany, revision notes including Bismarckian Germany, Wilhelmine Germany, WW1, Weimar Republic, Nazi Germany, Post-war Germany, and the Reunification of Germany.
1L The quest for political stability: Germany, 187 (1L)
Tous les documents sur ce sujet (1)
1
vérifier
Par: jessdorricott • 6 mois de cela
Vendeur
S'abonner
tiafrancisbrown
Avis reçus
Aperçu du contenu
BISMARCKIAN GERMANY
Government
● Viewed reichstag and minorities (10% pop) as reichsfeinde
● Outlawed the Polish language being taught in schools
● Prussia made up 60% pop + 2/3 landmass
● Divisions between rich+poor, north+south
Army
● Army was conservative, served for 2-3 years, mostly prussian + mostly
independent of reichstag control
Economic
● French indemnity payments caused a boom, helped assist banks, build
railways and new industries eg electricity
● Production in alsace-lorraine increased rapidly
● Steel production increased by 700%
● Railway doubled in size
● 1871 5% living in urban areas, 1900 25%
Army Budget 1874
● Bm used realpolitik + believed in nationalism
● Army budget 1874 : Bismarck proposed the army be automatically
financed by federal expenditure, this threatened to reduce the
Reichstags monetary powers, military budget set at 80% for 7 years
Kulturekampf
● NLs 1871-1879 : against Catholicism
● Kulturekampf: 1872- Catholic schools bought under state supervision
● 1873 may laws
● By 1878 BM accepted Kulturekampf had failed
● Strengthened the Zentrum (1871=58 seats, 1874=91 seats)
Tarifs
● During NL era supported free trade but by 1979 began to support tariffs
● Gr agriculture experienced bad harvests + cheap imports from Britain
and Russia, reliance on foreign grain would weaken gr during war
● Protectionism make Germany self sufficient
● Tarifs bring revenue to government
● Landowners and industrialists wanted tariffs
, ● 1879 Tariff Act
● Passed as protectionists had a majority in the reichstag
SPD
● Anti Socialist Bill 1878 : soc organisations banned, soc meetings broken
up, soc publications outlawed, soc were imprisoned
● However did not prevent SPD members from standing for elections and
speaking in the reichstag
● Rise in SPD support
-------> 1877 500,000 votes + 12 seats
1890 - 1M votes + 35 seats
REACTION TO SPD / State Socialism
● State socialism (reduce SPD support by using socialist measures)
● 1883 Sickness Insurance Act
● 1884 Accident Insurance Act
● 1889 Old Age And Disability Act
● Although considered a sham, laid foundations for welfare
Weltpolitik
● 1886, BM asked for military increases, Reichstag agreed if allowed to
review military expenditure every 3 years
BM and Wilhelm II
● Wilhelm wanted to win over w/c with a modest expansion of the welfare
system
● End child labour + Sunday working
● BM wanted further repression and in 1889, proposed anti-socialist bill
be made permanent
● Wilhelm didn't agree + reichstag rejected the bill
● Feb 1890, issued a proclamation of social legislation without BMs
counter signature
● BM given ultimatum to resign or be dismissed
WILHELMINE GERMANY
Structuralists : old elites continued to hold powerAnti Structuralist : Wilhelm
was authoritarian
HOWEVER: freedom of the press + reichstag majority needed to push
legislation
,Army
● Continued the Schlieffen Plan (prevent a 2 front war Germany would
attack France first and then Russia)
● By 1913, army was no longer prussian dominated
● Most officers were m/c and army remained rw
● Army was given special status - soldiers were above the law
Economic
● Expansion of old (coal,iron,textiles) and new (steel, chemical)
industries
● By 1914 nearly ½ the world's electrical products came from Germany
● Output rose with new machinery
● German population grew, expanding the workforce 50M in 1890, 68M in
1914
● Many moved from the countryside to urban areas
● By 1910 nearly 2/3 of Germans lived in towns
● Natural resources: (coal from ruhr, saar, silesia) 1871=37.7m tons
produced vs 1910= 222 tons
● Railway system allowed the transport of products and new materials
● Cartels encouraged large scale production and removed unnecessary
competition
● German imports rose from 2.8b in 1880 to 10.8b in 1913
Social
● By 1911 80% of the German population were under 45
● Infant mortality fell by 10% from 1870-1912
● Improved living standards
● Rise in uni enrollments
● Between 1885-1913 real wages rose by 30%
● More opportunities raised for women to work
● By 1914 more women were publicly active
● w/c women forced to work
● Poor working conditions
● 1/3 german population lived below the poverty line
● w/c lived in overcrowded housing
● Rural society : 1/3 Germans had no access to railways
Political
● 1914: 3m in unions
● SPD has 1m members, largest socialist party ww
, Culture
● High culture eg avant garde
● Modernist architecture and designs
● Realism and expressionism
● Berlin was a cultural hub
● Anti establishment culture in Munich
● Rise in psychology and spirituality
● Americanisation as a threat to traditional values
● Proletariat suspicious of mass culture
Anti Semitism
● In mid C19th nationalism was considered good and promoted
parliamentary government
● By end of the C19 nationalism was a conservative movement, hostile to
other races, wanting an ethnically and linguistically homogeneous
german state claiming Germans were the "master race"
● Race struggle due to rise is social darwinism and the idea of "racial
purity"
● Jews were granted civil equality under 1871 constitution
● Jews had came to Germany fleeing persecutions in Russia
● Many were doctors, lawyers, bankers
● Jews were what conservatives despised: Liberal, pacifists, socialists
● Scapegoats for economic troubles
● Post 1900, AS parties lacked funding so began to decline
● By 1910 Jews made up 1% population
● Most considered themselves German>Jewish
Caprivi's "New Law"
● Chosen as he would do what was told
● Tried to not be influenced by parties
● Aims were:
- End anti socialist laws
- Reduction in tariffs
-----> reformed 1879 tariff act, making deals with Russia, Italy and
Austria between 1891-94 to lower food prices OPPOSED BY
AGRARIAN LEAGUE
- Social reform
-----> made confessions to poles, centrists and leftists
-----> 1891: prohibited Sunday work and employment for children
okay under 13
Les avantages d'acheter des résumés chez Stuvia:
Qualité garantie par les avis des clients
Les clients de Stuvia ont évalués plus de 700 000 résumés. C'est comme ça que vous savez que vous achetez les meilleurs documents.
L’achat facile et rapide
Vous pouvez payer rapidement avec iDeal, carte de crédit ou Stuvia-crédit pour les résumés. Il n'y a pas d'adhésion nécessaire.
Focus sur l’essentiel
Vos camarades écrivent eux-mêmes les notes d’étude, c’est pourquoi les documents sont toujours fiables et à jour. Cela garantit que vous arrivez rapidement au coeur du matériel.
Foire aux questions
Qu'est-ce que j'obtiens en achetant ce document ?
Vous obtenez un PDF, disponible immédiatement après votre achat. Le document acheté est accessible à tout moment, n'importe où et indéfiniment via votre profil.
Garantie de remboursement : comment ça marche ?
Notre garantie de satisfaction garantit que vous trouverez toujours un document d'étude qui vous convient. Vous remplissez un formulaire et notre équipe du service client s'occupe du reste.
Auprès de qui est-ce que j'achète ce résumé ?
Stuvia est une place de marché. Alors, vous n'achetez donc pas ce document chez nous, mais auprès du vendeur tiafrancisbrown. Stuvia facilite les paiements au vendeur.
Est-ce que j'aurai un abonnement?
Non, vous n'achetez ce résumé que pour €9,84. Vous n'êtes lié à rien après votre achat.