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Germany 1918–1939:
Collapse of the Weimar Republic
1929 – 1933
Paul Brown
Camden High School
Hitler in a walk through Danzig.
Image courtesy of the Treu family
Outcomes
A student:
| H2.1 |
explains forces and ideas and assesses their significance in contributing to change and continuity during the twentieth century |
| |
Extract from Modern History Stage 6 Syllabus © Board of Studies NSW 2004. |
Principal focus:
Students investigate the key features and issues of the history of Germany 1918 – 1939.
Key features and issues
- successes and failures of democracy
- nature and role of nationalism
- influence of the German army
- changes in society
- the nature and impact of Nazism
From this tutorial you will learn about:
- political economic and social issues in the Weimar Republic
- collapse of the Weimar Republic
1929–1933
- Hitler's accession to power.
Introduction
The collapse of the Weimar Republic and the subsequent
take over by Adolf Hitler in 1933 was influenced by a wide
range of factors. The following points need to be considered
when discussing the fall of the Republic and the rise of the
Nazi state.

Political, economic and social issues and the collapse of the Weimar Republic
-
The Revolution of 1918 had altered Germany's
political system without changing the social structure.
The monarchy had been destroyed, but many of the old
institutions were little changed. If the Republic was to
survive, there had to be drastic changes to the old
institutions. The parties of the Weimar failed to do
this. For example:
- The civil service, which was the instrument for
implementing government policy, retained a high
proportion of its personnel. Members were in a position
to guide policy making or obstruct policies with which
they did not agree.
- The judiciary, which had a conservative and
nationalistic outlook, remained intact. Hence the
lenient sentences given to right wing enemies of the
Republic (e.g. Hitler and Ludendorff in 1923) and harsh
sentences to left wing communist enemies.
- Education administrators and teachers who were
hostile to democracy were permitted to remain in their
positions. Many used these positions to indoctrinate
students with nationalist, authoritarian and
anti-republican principles.
- The great industrialists were permitted to grow in
strength and influence. Their manoeuvres played a
considerable part in the overthrow of the
Republic.
- The army was responsible to the President and stood
largely outside political control, but it was in a
position to exert influence on political questions. The
Weimar leaders were forced to call upon the army to
sustain the Republic against attack and were also
forced to introduce policies with which the army
agreed.
- The Presidential elections of 1925 resulted in the
defeat of the Social Democrat candidate and the election of
Hindenburg. At the age of 77 he was elected to head the
Republic for which he had little sympathy. He was a loyal
servant of the Republic, but as he declined into near
senility, his presidential powers were exploited by less
scrupulous, anti-republicans. The very election of a person
such as Hindenburg indicated that the people's
attachment to a democratic, republican government was only
superficial.
- The character of the Social Democratic Party was
important; its leaders came to power unexpectedly and were
unprepared to cope with a revolutionary situation. They
were accustomed to working through parliament to gain
reforms. They had never expected to govern. They had no
definite program or policy to put into action. They were
reluctant to carry through reforms which touched too
closely on the institutions of the old regime.
- The German authoritarian tradition had deep
psychological and social roots. There was no deep adherence
to parliamentary government as there was in France and
England. Particularly in times of crisis the German people
expected the government to take strong, decisive action and
to take decisions out of their hands. The Weimar leaders
failed to do this. This also helped to explain the appeal
of Hitler and his authoritarian methods.
- Germany suffered a spiritual and material collapse
after war and revolution. The Republican democratic
experiment seemed alien to the German tradition and so was
never fully accepted.
- The Republic was associated from the beginning with a
lack of discipline, with anarchy and revolution, with
economic distress and international humiliation. Weimar was
associated with the instability which was the aftermath of
defeat and was saddled with the impositions of Versailles. It
represented to many a system of government which had
permitted the disastrous hyperinflation of 1923.
Hitler emphasised these points in his propaganda when he
labelled the Jews and the socialists as being responsible
for all the terms of the Treaty of Versailles. Associated
with this was Hitler's insistence that the glorious
army had been stabbed in the back. The Nazis
pledged themselves to wipe out the shame of Versailles and
to give Germany a leading place among the powers of the
world.
- The existence of military bands and private armies,
particularly the Freikorps, was a danger to
peaceful political development. They contained violent men
whose political objectives were alien to a democratic
republican regime. The failure of democratic governments to
take firm action to suppress these bands permitted the
electorate to be intimidated and contributed to the
destruction of democracy.
- The operation of the party system and the use of
proportional representation multiplied the number of
political parties and made coalition necessary. This
resulted in unstable government and consequently frequent
changes of government. (Look closely at the period from 1930
to 1933 to see the catastrophic effect of this.)
Parliamentary government with its deadlocks, bickering and
frequent elections disgusted the German people whose
traditions were those of authority and discipline.
Parliamentary government and democracy were discredited.
The Nazis appeared to offer strong, decisive and stable
government.
- The political instability was heightened by the growth
of extremist mass parties — Nazis and Communists
— neither of whom had any real belief in
parliamentary government. Hitler used the smokescreen of
working within the democratic political system to undermine
it at every opportunity.
- The Republic, which was established after the war, was
backed by the least influential elements in the nation. The
most energetic elements and many of the most influential
were anti-liberal, anti-democratic and
anti-republican.
- There was a lack of solidarity among the Socialist
parties; they split their vote and therefore divided the
loyalty of the electorate.
- The existence of emergency powers in the constitution,
e.g. Article 48 allowed democratic governments to rule in a
dictatorial manner thereby setting the ground rules for
Hitler's regime.
- he Republic. Inflation did much to wipe out the stable
middle class. Depression created over 6 000 000 unemployed,
weakened the morale of the trade union movement and
produced political instability, which the army, the
Nationalists and the Nazis sought to exploit.
As the depression deepened and the extremist parties grew
in strength, the Republican forces presented to the country
with an uninspiring picture of confusion and disunity.

Hitler's accession to power
- The appeal of Nazism was important. The National
Socialists received support from the white-collar middle
class, the lower middle class, small merchants, clerks,
craftsmen, civil servants, farmers and professionals who
were ruined as a result of inflation and who saw themselves
sinking to the level of the lower classes whom they
despised.
Many workers and students turned to Communism, but there
was a real fear of a Communist coup in the wider community.
This advance of Communism frightened the middle class, the
propertied classes and professional groups who turned to
the Nazis as the only group capable of preventing a
communist coup.
The Nazis appealed to the younger generation of the middle
class who could look forward to a future that was not
compatible with their education and their traditions. They
saw in National Socialism a hope for the future because it
promised them and their country a worthwhile future. There
was also support from those who wished to eliminate Jewish
competition. The Army saw in Nazism a chance for
Germany's rehabilitation and the development of a
powerful military state.
- The personality of Hitler and his genius for mass
demagogic emotionalism were ultimately very important
factors. He demonstrated a capacity to exploit the
weaknesses of his opponents and to construct a large and
highly efficient organisation which was finally able to
take advantage of the turmoil in which the Weimar Republic
found itself.
