Unification of East Germany and West Germany took place on Oct. 3, 1990. Millions of Germans celebrated throughout the country, including these people at the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin.
Sculpture and ceramics have long traditions in German art. A carving by Tilman Riemenschneider,
is a masterpiece of late medieval sculpture. The Meissen factory created
beautiful ceramic figurines, in the 1700's.
Richard Wagner's opera Lohengrin, first performed in 1850, is based on a medieval German legend. Wagner's
music dramas established a new style in opera and influenced many composers.
His operas are performed each year at a special festival in Bayreuth.
German filmmaking has excelled in portraying psychological themes. The silent film Metropolis
(1926), was directed by the famous German director Fritz Lang.
The film depicts a city of the future that has been corrupted by mad
scientists.
The interior of the Wies church near Oberammergau is a masterpiece of rococo decoration. The interior was
intended to give visitors a vision of heaven. The church, designed by Dominkus
Zimmermann, was built between 1745 and 1754.
German expressionism was one of the most important art movements of the 1900's. In 1911, Franz Marc
helped found a school of expressionism in Munich called Der Blaue Reiter
(The Blue Rider). Marc's The Large Blue Horses, above, is one of his
best-known paintings.
The Bauhaus was an
internationally important school of design founded by German architect Walter
Gropius in Weimar in 1919. This photograph shows the buildings Gropius designed
for the school when ii moved from Weimar to Dessau in 1925.
Average January temperatures - January is Germany's coldest month. Winds from the sea warm the northern
part of Germany during winter.
Average July temperatures - July is
Germany's hottest month. But German summers are mild, thanks to sea winds that
cool the land.
Average yearly precipitation - Precipitation
levels vary throughout Germany. Mountainous areas in the south receive the
most rain and snow.
The Central Highlands are a series of flat to mountainous plateaus. Many rivers, including
the Rhine, one of Europe's most important rivers, flow through the region.
The Black Forest is a mountainous region of southwestern Germany. It is named after the
dark fir and spruce trees that cover its slopes. Many German legends are set in
the Black Forest.
The Bavarian Alps, forming part of Germany's southern boundary, are part of Europe p
highest mountain chain. Their scenic beauty makes them a popular all-year-round
holiday destination.
Cars built in Germany
are shipped worldwide, making motor vehicles one of the nation's chief export.
German unification was completed in 1871 under the leadership of Ottovon Bismarck, prime
minister of Prussia. By manoeuvring the German states to fight three wars,
Bismarck unified them to form the German Empire
Germany's gross domestic product (GDP) was 1,574,330,000,000 U.S. dollars in 1991. The GDP is the total value
of goods and services produced within a country in a year. Services
include community, government, and personal services; finance, insurance, and
property; wholesale and retail trade; and transportation and communication. Industry
includes mining and utilities; manufacturing; and construction. Agriculture
includes agriculture, forestry, and fishing. (Industry = 40% , Agriculture = 1%,
Services = 59%)
Farms in western Germany are mostly small. German farmers produce only about two-thirds of the
nation's food. Germany is one of the world's largest importers of agricultural
goods.
Otto I (the Great) drove the Hungarians out of southern Germany in the battle of the Lech
River, above, in A.D. 955. In 962 he was crowned emperor of what became
the Holy Roman Empire.
The powerful German army won early victories in World War j. These German forces fought Russian
troops in trenches along the Eastern Front during 1914.
Germany in World War I drove deep into eastern Europe, overwhelming the old-fashioned Russian
army. But continued battles along the western front eventually defeated the
Germans. Germany gave up some of its territory in the peace agreement.
Burning money for fuel became a symbolic gesture in Germany in the 1920's. Runaway inflation
in 1922 and 1923 made German money almost worthless and ruined the economy.
Adolf Hitler's Nazi Party controlled most aspects of German life from 1933 to 1945. Large rallies,
like this one at Nuremberg, glorified Hitler and encouraged loyalty to the Nazi
cause.
Nuremberg, like cities throughout Germany, lay in ruins after the Nazis' defeat in
World War II.
After World War II, Germany was divided into zones occupied by the victors—the United
States, Great Britain, France, and the Soviet Union. These zones later became
East and West Germany Other German lands were lost to Poland and the Soviet
Union
East Germans flocked into West Germany when reforms gave them freedom to travel in 1989. Many crossed at Checkpoint
Charlie, a border station along the Berlin Wall.
The beautiful Rhine River, made famous in song and legend, has come to symbolize Germany. Picturesque
towns line the river, which is also one of Europe's most important waterways.
Neuschwanstein Castle in Bavaria was begun in 1869 by King gion. The beautiful Rhine River
winds through valleys Louis II, known as Mad King Ludwig. The
"fairy-tale" castle is one with grand castles overlooking
the river of Germany's popular tourist attractions.
Shops and cafes line the Kurfurstendamm, a famous boulevard in Berlin. At its east end,
the bombed-out Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church, serves as a reminder of World
War II.
Picturesque Heidelberg includes the ruins of Heidelberg Castle, centre background. The
castle dates from the Middle Ages and overlooks the old city and a square
called the Kornmarkt.
Oktoberfest is a lively festival held in Munich each autumn. People fill beer halls
for food, beer, and music. Oktoberfest began in the 1800's after a royal
wedding celebration.
Soccer is the most popular organized
sport in Germany. Thousands of teams represent towns and cities. The photo
above shows a game between clubs from Munich and Stuttgart.
Schools in Germany are famous for the quality of their education. Students must attend
school for at least 9 or 10 years. These students are watching their teacher
conduct an experiment.
Important dates in Germany
c. 1000 B.C. Tribes from northern Europe began to arrive in what is now Germany.
A.D. 486 Clovis, a Germanic king, defeated the Roman governor of Gaul (now
mainly France).
800 Charlemagne's empire was established.
843 The Treaty of Verdun divided Charlemagne's empire.
962 Otto I was crowned emperor of what later became the Holy Roman
Empire.
1438 The Habsburg family of Austria began almost continuous rule of the Holy
Roman Empire.
1517 The Reformation began in Germany.
1618-1648 The Thirty Years' War devastated much of Germany. 1740-1786 Frederick
the Great made Prussia a great power. 1806 The Holy Roman Empire came to
an end.
1815 The German Confederation was established at the Congress of Vienna.
1848 Revolution broke out, but it failed.
1866 Prussia forced Austria out of
German affairs.
1867 Prussia established the North
German Confederation.
1870-1871 Germany defeated France in the Franco-Prussian
War, and the German Empire was founded.
1914-1918 The Allies defeated Germany in World War I, and the German Empire ended.
1919 The Weimar Republic was established.
1933 Adolf Hitler began to create a Nazi dictatorship.
1939-1945 The Allies defeated Germany in World War II, ending Hitler's
dictatorship. They divided Germany into four military occupation zones in 1945.
1948-1949 A Soviet blockade failed to force the Western Allies out of Berlin.
1949 East and West Germany were established.
1953 The Soviet Union crushed an East German revolt.
1955 East and West Germany were declared independent, and joined opposing
Cold War military alliances.
1961 The East German Communists built the Berlin Wall to prevent East
Germans from escaping to West Berlin.
1973 East and West Germany ratified a treaty calling for closer relations
between the two nations. Both nations joined the United Nations (UN).
1989 East Germany opened the Berlin
Wall and other border barriers, and allowed its citizens to travel freely to
West Germany for the first time since World War II.
1990 East Germany held free
elections in March, resulting in the end of Communist rule there. In October,
East and West Germany were unified and became the single nation of Germany.
Germany is a large country in central Europe. From 1949 to 1990, it was divided
into the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) and the Federal Republic of
Germany (West Germany). On Oct. 3,1990, East and West Germany were unified into
a single nation, also called the Federal Republic of Germany.
For hundreds of years, Germans lived in
many separate states, one of the most powerful of which was the kingdom of Prussia.
During the late 1800's, Otto von Bismarck, the prime minister of Prussia,
united most of these states and cities under Prussian leadership. After
Bismarck, German leaders tried to expand their influence in Europe and
overseas. These policies helped trigger World War I in 1914. When the war ended
in 1918, Germany had been defeated and a period of political and economic
crises followed.
In 1933, Adolf Hitler—leader of the Nazi
Party, an extremely militaristic and nationalistic political movement-established
his dictatorship and began to rebuild Germany's military power. In 1939, Hitler
started World War II. Germany was defeated in 1945 and was divided into zones
that, in 1949, became West Germany and East Germany. Berlin, the old capital,
was also divided. West Germany became a parliamentary democracy with strong
ties to Western Europe and the United States. East Germany became a Communist
dictatorship closely associated with the Soviet Union.
After World War II, the West Germans and
East Germans rebuilt their shattered industries and made them more productive
than ever. West Germany became one of the leading industrial nations. Although
East German’s economic development was not as rapid, the country ranked as one
of the most economically advanced of the nations that adopted Communism. Yet
dissatisfaction led millions of East Germans to flee to West Germany between
1946 and 1961, the year that East Germany built the Berlin Wall to cut off the
major escape route.
In 1989, reform movements swept through
the Communist nations of Europe. In East Germany, political protests and
massive emigration set in motion the chain of events that ended in the
unification of East and West Germany. In November 1989—in response to the
protests—the East German government allowed its citizens to travel freely for
the first time. The end of travel restrictions included the opening of the
Berlin Wall.
Also for the first time, non-Communist
political parties were permitted to organize in late 1989. In March 1990,
East Germany held free parliamentary
elections, and non-Communists gained control of the government
With the end of Communist control in East
Germany, many Germans, both East and West, began considering unification. In
July 1990, East Germany and West Germany united their economies into a single
system. In August, both nations signed a treaty that would finalize unification.
The treaty took effect on October 3. Germany held its first national elections
after unification in December 1990.
Germans are famous for being hard-working
and disciplined, but they are also known for their love of music, dancing,
good food, and fellowship. Germans also enjoy vacations in their world-famous
scenic areas. The Bavarian Alps, for example, are a popular winter sports
region. The beautiful Rhine River winds through valleys with grand castles
overlooking the river.
The German people have made many important
contributions to culture. Johann Sebastian Bach and Ludwig «an Beethoven
composed some of the world's greatest music. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and
Thomas Mann wrote masterpieces of literature. German scientists have made
breakthroughs in chemistry, medicine, and physics.
Government
Germany is a federal republic in which the
people elect their representatives by secret ballot. The government's main
bodies and offices include a Parliament, a federal chancellor, and a Cabinet.
The government was established after the unification of East and West Germany
in 1990. It was based on the democratic government system of West Germany.
East Germany had operated under a dictatorial Communist government system
until shortly before unification, when a democratic system was established.
Parliament of Germany has two houses, the Bundestag (Federal Diet) and the Bundesrat
(Federal Council). The Bundestag, the more powerful of the two houses, passes
the laws and chooses the head of government. The Bundestag has 662 deputies
elected by the voters to four-year terms.
The Bundesrat is the house in which
Germany's states are represented. Each state has three to six votes in the
Bundesrat, depending on the population of the state. Each state government may
appoint up to as many delegates to the Bundesrat as the state has votes. The
maximum membership of the Bundesrat is 68. Some laws passed by the Bundestag
require approval of the Bundesrat. They include laws that relate directly to
the states' responsibilities, such as matters dealing with education and local
government The Bundesrat can raise objections to other laws. Its objections can
be overridden by a majority vote of the Bundestag.
Executive. The Bundestag elects a member of the strongest political party in that
house to be federal chancellor, the head of the government. The Bundestag can
remove the chancellor from office by electing a replacement. The chancellor
selects the ministers who make up the Cabinet and head government departments.
The federal president is the head of
state, but the powers of the office are largely ceremonial. Bundestag deputies
and an equal number of electors selected by German state legislatures elect the
president to a five- year term.
State government. Germany has 16 states. Each state has a legislature. Members of most of
the legislatures are elected to four-year terms. In most of the states, the
legislature elects one of its members as minister president to head the state
government. In Berlin, Bremen, and Flamburg, which are cities as well as
states, a mayor heads the state government.
Politics. The Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and the Social Democratic Party are
Germany's largest political parties. The CDU's branch in Bavaria is the
Christian Social Union. Traditionally, both large parties support close ties to
other Western nations. The Christian Democratic Union has conservative
economic and social policies. The Social Democratic Party supports more social
welfare programmes and greater regulation of the economy.
In most national elections, neither major
party gains enough votes to control the Bundestag. In such cases, the political
party with more votes must form a coalition (alliance), usually with the
liberal Free Democratic Party (FDP), in order to gain a majority of seats in
the Bundestag.
The Party of Democratic Socialism—the
Communist Party that formerly controlled East Germany—has maintained some of
its membership since unification. Germany also has a number of smaller
parties. These include the Green Party, which represents environmental causes,
and the extremely conservative Republican Party. Germans must be at least 18
years old to vote.
Courts. Germany's highest court is the Federal Constitutional Court. It
interprets the Constitution and settles disputes between the executive and the
legislature and between federal and state governments. The court's 16 judges
are appointed for 12-year terms. Half of the judges are appointed by the
Bundestag and half by the Bundesrat. The regular court system tries civil and
criminal cases, which can be reviewed by regional and national appellate
courts. Judges in all these courts are appointed for life. Administrative
courts decide disputes between individuals and government agencies. There are
special courts for disputes about labour issues, taxes, and social security
payments.
Armed forces. After World War II, the Allies planned to keep Germany disarmed. But by
the 1950's, the Western Allies wanted West Germany's help against possible
Communist expansion. West Germany joined the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) in 1955, and began to build up its armed forces under NATO command.
After unification, Germany remained in NATO. The East German armed forces were
dissolved, but some of its personnel joined the unified German armed forces.
The German armed forces have about 500,000 men, but plan to reduce it to about
370,000 by the mid-1990>s. German men must serve at least one year in the
armed forces after reaching the age of 18.
People
Unification brought many changes to the
German people. For many years, the people were divided by the heavily guarded
1,381-kilometre border that split their land between East and West. Many
relatives and friends were separated from one another. The East German government
restricted travel between East and West Germany.
Until 1961, millions of East Germans fled
to West Germany through Berlin. In August 1961, the Communists closed off this
escape route by building the high, heavily guarded Berlin Wall between eastern
and western sectors of the city. Although some East Germans were allowed to
resettle in West Germany, most people could not even visit there.
In 1989, thousands of East Germans fled to
West Germany by way of neighbouring countries. In response to these departures
and popular protests, the East German government lifted all restrictions on
travel. East Germans were permitted to travel to West Germany or any other
country. In addition, West Germans were permitted to visit East Germany without
any restrictions. After unification, all Germans were granted complete freedom
of travel.
Population and ancestry. For Germany's total population, see the Germany in brief table
with this article. Among all the countries of Europe, only Russia has more
people. Almost all the people living in Germany were born there. Germans are
descended from many ancient tribes, including the Cimbri, Franks, Goths, and
Teutons. A small group of Slavic people called Sorbs live in eastern
Germany. Most non-Germans who live in the country moved there as guest
workers from Turkey, the former Yugoslavia, and Italy. Since the late
1980's, about a million ethnic Germans from Eastern Europe and thousands of
refugees of other ethnic backgrounds have moved to Germany.
Ppopulation, see the Germany in brief
table with this article. Among all the countries of Europe, only Russia has more
people. Almost all the people living in Germany were born there. Germans are
descended from many ancient tribes, including the Cimbri, Franks, Goths, and
Teutons. A small group of Slavic people called Sorbs live in eastern
Germany. Most non-Germans who live in the country moved there as guest
workers from Turkey, the former Yugoslavia, and Italy. Since the late
1980's, about a million ethnic Germans from Eastern Europe and thousands of
refugees of other ethnic backgrounds have moved to Germany.
Language. Two main forms of the German language have long been spoken in
Germany—High German in the south and centre and Low German in the north. In
addition, there are many dialects associated with particular regions or
cities. Today, schools, businesses, newspapers, and radio and television
broadcasts use a standardized form of High German called Standard German.
Way of life
Before unification, the people of West
Germany had a higher standard of living than the people of East Germany. West
Germans generally dressed better, were more likely to own a car, and had access
to more luxury goods. But East Germany was one of the most prosperous
countries in Eastern Europe. Government-controlled businesses provided jobs,
and the government regulated prices. Medical care was free. Unification
brought about a free enterprise economy for all of Germany, opening up new
economic opportunities for Germans in the eastern states. But the changes also
resulted in some problems. Many people in what had been East Germany lost their
jobs because their companies or factories could not compete in the new
economy. Also, the cost of many goods rose, and medical care is no longer free.
However, Germans still enjoy one of the highest standards of living in Europe.
City life. About 84 per cent of Germany's people live in urban areas. Berlin, with
more than 3 million people, is the largest German city. Hamburg and Munich both
have more than a million people. Thirteen other German cities have populations
of more than 500,000.
Many German cities were destroyed during
World War II. In some of them, such as Munich, the old city centre has been
restored. Most cities, however, have buildings dating from the postwar
construction of the 1950s and 1960's.
German cities face the problems of
pollution and congestion that affect urban areas everywhere. Many Germaan
cities also have housing shortages.
Rural life. About 6 per cent of German workers are •aimers. In western Germany, most
farms are small and owned by families that live on them. In eastern Germany,
most farms were large collective farms formerly controlled by the East German
government. Since unification, the German government has begun the process of
returning this land to private ownership.
Food and drink. Germans are known for enjoying good food in large quantities. They
usually eat their main meal at noon, a heavy meal often featuring veal, pork,
beef, or chicken. The main meal also includes such vegetables as beetroot,
carrots, onions, potatoes, or turnips. Breakfast usually consists of rolls and
jam with coffee or milk. In the afternoon, especially on Sunday, many Germans
enjoy a snack of rich pastries. They generally eat a light supper of bread,
cheese, and sausage. German beer and wine are internationally famous for their
high quality.
Many world-famous German dishes were
created hundreds of years ago to prevent foods from spoiling. Sauerkraut,
perhaps the best-known German food, was developed to preserve cabbage. To
preserve meat, German cooks soaked it in vinegar and spices and created
sauerbraten. The Germans also preserved meats by making such sausages as
bratwurst and frankfurters. They developed many kinds of cheeses, including
Lim- burger, Munster, and Tilsiter, which were named after the regions where
they were first made.
Recreation. Germans enjoy hiking, reading, gardening, swimming, and watching
television. Many young people take bicycling, hiking, or hitchhiking trips.
They carry knapsacks and spend the night in the open or at inexpensive inns
called youth hostels (see Youth hostel). Germany has many lakes and rivers for
canoeing, rowing, sailing, and swimming. High, snow-covered mountains help
make skiing a favourite winter sport.
Soccer is the most popular organized
sport in Germany. There are thousands of soccer teams, most of which represent
various towns or cities. Gymnastics, tennis, and athletics are also popular.
Some Germans belong to sharpshooting clubs.
Religion. The Reformation began in Germany during the early 1500's. This religious
movement brought about the establishment of Protestantism. By 1600, most people
in northern and central Germany had become Protestants. Most of those in the
south remained Roman Catholics. These religious groups are about the same
today. For more information, see Reformation.
About 45 per cent of Germans are
Protestants, mostly Lutherans. About 40 per cent of the people are Roman
Catholics. About 2 per cent are Muslims.
About 560,000 Jews lived in Germany when
the Nazis came to power in 1933. By the end of World War II, most Jews had been
killed by the Nazis or had fled the country. Today, about 40,000 Jews live in
Germany.
Education. The German states were among the first in the world to set up a state
education system for all children. Prussia established a system
during the early 1800's. The other German states developed their own systems by
the mid-180Qfs. By the 1900's, almost all Germans over the age of 15 could
read and write. Germany also developed one of the finest university systems in
the world. In the late 1800rs and early 190ffs, students came from
many countries to study in Germany. Such German universities as the University
of Berlin (now Humboldt University) and the University of Leipzig (now Karl
Marx University) were especially famous for scientific research. Between 1900
and 1933, German scientists won more Nobel Prizes than those from any other
country.
Education in Germany is controlled by the
individual states. All children must go to school full time for at least 9 or
10 years, starting at the age of 6.
In the states that made up West Germany,
children attend primary school for four years. The nine-year gymnasium, for
students aged 11 to 19 years, is the traditional secondary school. The
gymnasium prepares students for entrance into a university. Vocational schools
provide students with various types of job training, as well as some academic
subjects. There are also some comprehensive schools in Germany, which offer the
curricula of both the gymnasium and the vocational schools.
In the states that were part of East
Germany, children attend a 10-year polytechnical school that stresses technical
training, mathematics, sciences, and languages. At 16 years of age, students
may take a three-year continuation course to fulfil university entrance
requirements.
Germany has about 60 universities and many
specialized and technical colleges. These universities and colleges have about
2 million students. About 6 per cent of German adults have a university
education. The University of Heidelberg, founded in 1386, is Germany's oldest
university. See Heidelberg, University of.
Arts
Many of the world's greatest artists,
musicians, writers, and thinkers have been German. During the Middle Ages and
Renaissance, German architects, painters, and sculptors produced great works,
mostly with religious subjects. During the 1700s, many German writers and
thinkers were part of the European Enlightenment, which focused on rational
thinking and the order of nature. In the late 1700's and early 1800's, Germans
helped create the Romantic movement. More recently, Germans were among the
pioneers in modern art, films, literature, and music. This section mentions
only some of the most important German contributions to the arts.
For more detailed information, see
Architecture; Classical music; Drama; German literature; Opera; Painting;
Sculpture; and Theatre.
Literature and philosophy. The greatest period of German literature lasted from about 1750 to 1830.
During these years, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Gotthold Ephraim Lessing,
Friedrich Schiller, Friedrich Holderlin, Heinrich von Kleist, and many other
German novelists, poets, and dramatists produced works of lasting importance.
The most important German philosopher during this period was Immanuel Kant, who
wrote three influential works in the 1780's. During the early 1800's, Georg
Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel produced a philosophy of history that would have a
lasting impact on Western thought. Hegel's work greatly influenced Karl Marx,
who used Hegelian ideas as the basis for his revolutionary theories.
From the mid-1800's on, German writers and
philosophers often focused on the political and cultural situations in their
own land. Poet Heinrich Heine produced works that were critical of the German
political establishment. Theodor Fontane wrote gently ironic novels about
Prussian society in the late 1800's. Friedrich Nietzsche wrote a series of
poetic philosophical works on the nature of language and culture. Between 1890
and 1920, Max Weber created a series of studies about modern society. During
the 1900's, novelist Thomas Mann and dramatist Bertolt Brecht wrote about the
problems of German politics and culture. After the collapse of Nazi Germany,
Gunter Grass, Heinrich Boll, and many other writers tried to come to terms with
the burden of the Nazi past
Music. The great tradition of German music was established during the early
1700's by Johann Sebastian Bach and George Frideric Handel. Later in the
1700's, one of the greatest musical geniuses of all time, Wolfgang Amadeus
Mozart, carried on this tradition in Austria, which was historically connected
to the other German states. In the early 1800^, Ludwig van Beethoven invented
new and powerful forms of symphonic expression and then reached new heights of
creative power with his last quartets. Felix Mendelssohn became the most famous
composer of his time, with his own classical works and by reviving interest in
the works of Bach. Franz Schubert and Robert Schumann achieved greatness by
composing the romantic German art songs
called liederi,see Lieder). In the
mid-180ffs, Richard Wagner established a new style in opera with his music
dramas, which sought to combine music, poetry, and theatrical design.
In the late 1800's and early 1900's,
Richard Strauss and Arnold Schoenberg wrote important music in different
styles. During the 1920's, Kurt Weill broke new musical ground with his
innovative music for the stage.
Painting and sculpture. German artists created some outstanding works during the Renaissance.
Albrecht and Hans Holbein the Younger produced great paintings and engravings.
They are especially famous for their portraits. Matthias Grunewald painted masterpieces
of religious art, and sculptor Tilman Riemenschneider made beautiful
woodcarvings.
In the early 1800's, Caspar David
Friedrich was an important romantic painter. In the late 1800s and early 1900’s,
Max Beckmann and other German painters developed the expressionist style. They
sought to express unconscious emotions and dreamlike states.
Architecture. During the Middle Ages, magnificent cathedrals in the Romanesque and
Gothic styles were built in such cities as Bamberg, Cologne, Regensberg, Ulm,
and Worms. In the 1700's, German princes built palaces modelled on the
magnificent French palace at Versailles. At the same time, Germans built great
baroque and rococo churches, especially in the predominantly Roman Catholic
southern German states. During the 1800s, such architects as Friedrich Schinkel
built museums and other public buildings in the neoclassical style. After 1900,
Walter Gropius and his Bauhaus group developed a basic style of modern
architecture.
Land
Germany has a varied landscape made up of
five main land regions. From north to south, they are (1) the North German
Plain, (2) the Central Highlands, (3) the South German Hills, (4) the Black
Forest, and (5) the Bavarian Alps.
The North German Plain, the largest land region in Germany, is low and nearly flat. Almost the
entire plain lies less than 90 metres above sea level. The region is drained by
broad rivers that flow northward into the North Sea or the Baltic Sea. These
rivers include the
Elbe, Ems, Oder, Rhine, and Weser, all of
which are important commercial waterways. Large ports and industrial centres
are located on them.
The wide river valleys, as well as land
along the sea- coasts, have soft, fertile soil. Between the valleys are large
areas covered with sand and gravel. These areas are called heathlands.
The sand and gravel were deposited by glaciers that moved across much of
Europe thousands of years ago. The glaciers also formed many small lakes in the
North German Plain. The soil of the heathlands is not suitable for farming, and
trees have been planted in many to provide timber.
The southern edge of the North German
Plain has highly fertile, dustlike soil called loess. This area is heavily
cultivated and thickly populated. Many of Germany's oldest cities, including
Bonn and Cologne, are located in this area.
The Central Highlands are a series of plateaus that range from nearly flat to mountainous.
They are covered with rock and poor soil. Most of the plateaus lie from 300 to
750 metres above sea level. Two of them—the Harz Mountains and the Thuringian
Forest—have peaks that rise more than 900 metres.
Rivers in the Central Highlands have cut
steep, narrow valleys. These rugged gorges, especially that of the Rhine
River, are among the most beautiful sights in Germany. In some areas, the
valleys broaden into small, fertile basins. See Rhine River.
The South German Hills include a series of long, parallel ridges, called escarpments,
that extend from southwest to northeast. Sheep are raised on these rocky
ridges. Lowlands between the ridges have fertile clay soil. Some of these
lowlands are among the best farmlands in Germany. Along the southern edge of
the hill region are large areas covered with sand and gravel. This soil was
deposited by ancient glaciers that spread northward
from the Alps. Most of the South German Hills
rise from 150 to 750 metres. Much of the region is drained by the Rhine River
and at its branches, the
Main and Neckar rivers. The Danube River drains the southern part. See Danube
The Black Forest is a
mountainous region. Its name comes from the thick forests dark fir and spruce
trees that cover the mountainsides. The region consists of granite and
sandstone uplands with deep, narrow valleys. It averages between 750 and 900
metres above sea level. Some peaks rise more than 1,200 metres. The Black
Forest is the scene of many old German legends and fairy tales. It is also
known for its mineral springs. Many famous health resorts are located near
them. See Black Forest.
The Bavarian Alps are part of the Alps, the largest mountain system in Europe. The
majestic, snow-capped Bavarian Alps rise more than 1,800 metres. The highest
joint in Germany, the 2,963-inetre peak Zugspitze, is in this region. The beauty of the
Bavarian Alps has made them an all-year-round holiday destination. The region
has many lakes formed by the ancient glaciers from the Alps. It is drained by
mountain streams that flow into the Danube River. See Alps.
Climate
Germany has a mild climate, largely
because the land is near the sea. In winter, the sea is not so cold as the
land. In summer, it is not so warm. As a result, west winds from the sea help
warm Germany in winter and cool it in summer. Away from the sea, in southern
areas, winters are colder and summers are warmer.
The average temperature in January, the
coldest month in Germany, is above — 1° G Cold winds from eastern Europe
sometimes reach Germany in winter, and the temperature may drop sharply for
short periods. In July, the hottest month in Germany, the temperature averages
about 18” C
Most of Germany receives from 50 to 100
centimetres of precipitation (rain, melted snow, and other forms of
moisture) a year. Some hilly and mountainous areas receive more precipitation.
The moisture-bearing west winds first reach Germany in the northwest. In that
area, rain falls almost evenly throughout the year, with a little more in
autumn and winter than in spring and summer. Inland, most rain falls in summer,
often in heavy thunderstorms. Deep snow covers some mountainous areas throughout
the winter.
Economy
In 1945, at the end of World War II,
Germany's economy lay almost in total ruin. Both West and East Germany had to
be rebuilt by the controlling Allied powers. West Germany's postwar recovery
was greatly helped by aid that the United States began to send in 1948 under
the Marshall Plan (see Marshall Plan). The West German economy recovered at an
amazing rate in the 1950s. This recovery is described as West Germany's
"economic miracle."
In East Germany, the Soviet Union set up a
strong Communist state where the government controlled the economy, including
production, distribution, and pricing of almost all goods. Under this system,
East Germany grew to be one of the wealthiest Communist countries, though it
lagged well behind West Germany.
In 1989, popular protests forced the East
Cerman government to make political and economic reforms. As part of these
reforms, free, multiparty elections were held in 1990. East Germans elected
officials who favoured unification with West Germany. One of the first steps
taken toward unification was economic union.
Germany began economic unification on July
1, 1990. East Germans traded their money, called DDR marks, for West
German money, called Deutsche marks. The Deutsche mark became the unit
of currency throughout Germany. East Germany began to operate under a free enterprise
system. The East German government started to sell government-owned businesses.
Economic unification had several results.
Goods that had been scarce in East Germany became readily available. But the
cost of many goods in the free market was higher than they had been when the
government controlled prices. Economic unification also caused problems for
East German businesses. Many companies could not operate without the government's
financial support. Many businesses closed or operated on shorter hours, causing
increased unemployment.
Before unification, West Germany had one
of the world's strongest economies. Many economists believe the united German
economy will remain strong, but will require several years of adjustment. In
1957, West Germany joined the European Economic Community, which later became
part of the European Community (EC). This union helped strengthen the economy
through increase trade. United Germany
remained in the EC—later renamed the European Union (see European Union)
Manufacturing, Germany's fastest-growing industry, -is brought rapid economic
recovery. Germany has several major manufacturing regions, and there are factoris
almost everywhere. The Ruhr is Germany's most important industrial region. It
includes such manufacturing centres as Dortmund, Duisburg, and Dusseldorf. This
region has more than 8 million people. It produces most of the nation's iron
and steel, and has important chemical and textile industries. See Ruhr.
Much of Germany's steel is used to make
cars and trucks, industrial and agricultural machinery, ships, and tools. The
country is the world's third largest manufacturer of cars, after Japan and the
United States. Germany also produces large quantities of cement, clothing, electrical
equipment, and processed foods and metals. The chemical industry produces large
quantities of drugs, fertilizer, plastics, sulphuric acid, and artificial
rubber and fibres. Other important products include cameras, computers, leather
goods, scientific instruments, toys, and wood pulp and paper.
Service industries are those economic activities that produce services, not goods. Service
industries account
Economy of Germany
This map shows the economic uses of land
in Germany. It also shows the main farm and mineral products, and it includes
German cities that are important manufacturing centres.
for about half of the value of Germany's
economic production. The most important group of service industries in Germany
is community, government, and personal services. Community services include
such economic activities as education and health care. Personal services
consist of such activities as advertising and data processing, and the
operation of cleaning establishments, repair shops, and beauty salons.
Government includes both public administration and defence. Other service
industries are finance and insurance, trade, transportation and communication,
and utilities.
Agriculture. About a third of Germany's food must be imported. Germany is one of the
world's largest importers of agricultural goods. Potatoes are the only food
produced in large enough quantities so that they do not have to be imported.
The chief grains include barley, oats, rye, and wheat. Sugar beet, vegetables,
apples, grapes, and other fruit are also important crops. Fine wines are made
from grapes grown in vineyards along the Rhine and Moselle (or Mosel) rivers.
Livestock and livestock products are important sources of farm income. Large numbers
of farmers raise beef and dairy cattle, pigs, horses, poultry, and sheep.
Many German farms are 10 hectares or less
in size. Most of these small farms are operated part-time by farmers who have
other jobs. In eastern Germany, the government has begun the process of
breaking up the large farms formerly controlled by the East German government
and selling them to individuals.
Mining. Germany has large supplies of potash and rock salt. It also has some
lead, copper, petroleum, tin, uranium, and zinc. In the 1800's, coal deposits
near the Ruhr River helped German industries grow. But by the 1970's, most of
the high-quality deposits had been exhausted. Eastern Germany produces large
quantities of a low-quality coal called lignite.
Foreign trade. Only the United States outranks Germany in the value of its foreign
trade. Germany exports more than it imports, even though it imports great
amounts of food, fuel, manufactured goods, and industrial raw materials. Its
major exports include cars, chemicals, iron and steel products, and machinery.
Germany trades with countries in all parts of the world. More than half its
trade is with other nations in the European Union. The United States is also an
important trading partner.
Energy sources. Coal is still a major source of electrical power in Germany, but its
use has declined since 1970 as oil-burning and nuclear-powered generating
plants have become more common. In southern Germany, mountain streams are used
to generate hydroelectric power. Germany has some gas fields, but must import
most of its natural gas. The nation also depends on imported oil, mainly from
the Middle East.
Transportation and communication. Railways and roads connect all parts of Germany. Germany has one of the
most extensive railway networks in the world, providing excellent passenger
and freight service. The fine road system includes about 10,500 kilometres of
four- lane motorways called autobahns. Hitler began building the
autobahns in the 1930's. Today, Germany has one of the highest rates of private
car ownership in the world.
The Rhine River and its branches carry
more traffic than any other European river system. Canals connect the major
rivers of Germany. The chief seaports are Hamburg, Wilhelmshaven, and Bremen.
The government-owned airline, Deutsche
Lufthansa, flies to all parts of the world. Major airports operate at many cities, including Berlin, Dusseldolf, Frankfurt am Main, Hamburg,
Leipzig, and Munich.
Germany has about 400 daily newspapers.
The largest is the BildZeitung of Hamburg. Several other large
newspapers circulate throughout the country. The press is free from government
censorship.
Nearly all German homes have one or more
radios, and most homes have a TV set Three major channels, all produced by
public corporations, are broadcast nationwide. Local programmes are also
broadcast. Commercials may be broadcast at only a few times a day. The public
corporations receive money from licence fees paid by owners of radios and TV
sets. The government owns and operates the postal, telegraph, and telephone
systems.
History
Ancient times. Fossils discovered in what is now Germany indicate that the area was
home to primitive human beings as early as 650,000 years ago. The Neanderthal
people, who lived throughout Europe between about 130,000 and 35,000 years ago,
are named after a ! fossil discovered in Neander Valley, near Dusseldorf.
But the history of the German people
really began sometime after 1000 B.C., when warlike tribes began to migrate
from northern Europe into what is now Germany. These tribes roamed the area,
and lived by hunting and farming. In the 100s B.C, they moved south to the
Rhine and Danube rivers, the northern frontiers of the Roman Empire. The Romans
called the tribes Germany, though that was the name of only one tribe.
Other tribes included the Cimbri, Franks, Goths, and Vandals.
The Romans called the tribes' land Germania.
In AD. 9, the Romans tried to conquer the
tribes, but fc Germanic warriors crushed the Roman armies in a decisive battle
at the Teutoburg Forest. The Romans built a wall, called the limes,
between the Rhine and Danube rivers to protect their lands to the south from
attacks by Germanic tribes. By the late A.D. 300’s, Roman power had begun to
collapse. In the 400's, Germanic tribes moved south, plundered Rome, and
eventually broke up j the western portion of the empire into tribal kingdoms.
The kingdom of the Franks became the
largest and most important. See Rome, Ancient (Decline and fall).
Kingdom of the Franks. In 486, Clovis, a Frankish king, defeated the independent Roman governor
of Gaul (now mainly France). Clovis extended the boundaries of his territory
by defeating other Germanic tribes t in Gaul and parts of what is now western
Germany. He became an orthodox Christian, and also introduced other Roman ways
of life into his kingdom (see Clovis
I). The greatest Frankish ruler, Charlemagne, came to power in
768. He established his capital in Aachen. Charlemagne expanded his kingdom
east to the Elbe River and, in some places, beyond the river. In 800, Pope Leo
III crowned him emperor of the Romans. See Charlemagne.
The breakup of Charlemagne's empire. In 843, the Treaty of Verdun divided Charlemagne's empire into three
kingdoms, one for each of his grandsons. Louis II (called the German) received
lands east of the Rhine River, most of which later became what is now Germany.
The western part, later called France, went to Charles I (the Bald). Lothair I
received the middle kingdom a narrow strip that extended from the North Sea to central
Italy. He also kept the
title of emperor.
In 911, the German branch of the Frankish
royal family died out. By then, the German kingdom had been divided into five
powerful duchies (territories ruled by a duke)—Bavaria, Lorraine,
Franconia, Saxony, and Swabia. The dukes elected Conrad I of Franconia as king.
In 919, Conrad was succeeded by Henry I (the Fowler) of Saxony, whose family
ruled until 1024. With the founding of the Saxon dynasty (a series of
rulers from the same family), the lands given to Louis II became permanently
separated from the French parts of Charlemagne's empire.
Henry's son, Otto I (the Great), drove
invading Hungarians out of southern Germany in 955, and extended the German
frontier in the north. Otto also won control over most of the old middle
Frankish kingdom, including Italy. This gave him the right to claim the title
of emperor. In 962, Otto was crowned emperor in Rome. This marked the
beginning of what later was called the Holy Roman Empire. See Otto (I, of
Germany).
The Holy Roman Empire. Under the Saxon emperors, the Holy Roman Empire was a powerful combination
of territories, each with a separate ruler. The Salian dynasty (1024-1125)
included several strong emperors. In 1075, Pope Gregory VII disputed the right
of Emperor Henry IV to appoint bishops. Many German princes sided with the pope
and a series of civil wars began.
See Henry (IV, of Germany); Gregory VII,
Saint.
The Hohenstaufen emperors (1138-1254)
reestablished order. But after the dynasty died out, disorder returned. By
the 1300's, the emperors were almost powerless. The last Hohenstaufen died in
1254. The German princes did not elect another emperor until 1273. He was
Rudolf I of Habsburg (or Hapsburg). Rudolf seized Austria and made it his main
duchy. After Rudolf, emperors of various families reigned. Starting in 1438,
the Habsburgs reigned almost continuously until 1806. See Habsburg, House of;
Holy Roman Empire.
The Holy Roman Empire was never fully a
German territory. Some Germans lived outside its borders, while some non-German
areas were part of the empire. For a time, the empire included parts of Italy,
as well as Slavic areas in eastern Europe, and part of what are now Belgium
and the Netherlands. The empire also was made up of independent territories. A
strong emperor could make their rulers cooperate. But often the emperor could
not force them to do what he wanted.
The rise of cities. Before the fall of the West Roman Empire in 476, Roman towns stood along
and near the Rhine and Danube rivers. These towns were centres of trade. They
included what are now Bonn, Cologne, Regensburg, Trier, and Vienna. After the
fall of Rome, these towns almost disappeared. Trade gradually resumed under
the Saxon and Salian emperors. Some of the old towns grew again, and new ones
appeared around the castles of princes and bishops. Many cities became so large
and rich that they gained self-rule.
When the emperors began losing power, the
cities could not rely on outside help in case of attack. The more prosperous
cities banded together into leagues and formed their own armies for protection.
The strongest league was the Hanseatic League, which began to develop in the
late 1100's. It included Cologne, Dortmund, and the major ports of Bremen,
Hamburg, and Liibeck. The Hanseatic League became a great commercial and naval
power in the North and Baltic seas during the 130ffs. See Hanseatic League.
Serfdom in Germany. By the 700's, most peasant farmers in western Germany had become serfs.
Each serf worked on land that was owned by a powerful person or by the church.
In return for their work, the serfs received protection and a share of the
harvest Generally, serfs were not free to leave the land they worked.
Beginning in the 1100s, some serfs gained their freedom by escaping to towns.
In the western parts of Germany, serfdom gradually died out as peasants were
allowed to substitute monetary payments for labour. In eastern Germany,
serfdom did not begin to develop until the 1300's. It lasted until the early
1800's.
The Reformation. In 1517, Martin Luther, a German monk, began to attack many teachings
and practices of the Roman Catholic Church. Nobles, peasants, and townspeople
joined this movement, called the Reformation, and it spread quickly. Its
followers became known as Protestants, meaning those who protest.
Some princes were sincere reformers, but
others became Protestants in order to gain church property. Many peasants
hoped the Protestant movement would free them from their lord's control. The
peasants revolted against the lords in the Peasants' War of 1524-
1525, but were brutally crushed. See
Luther, Martin; Peasants' War.
Neither the pope nor Emperor Charles V
could stop the Protestant movement. In 1555, Protestant princes forced Charles
to accept the Peace of Augsburg. This treaty gave each Lutheran and Roman
Catholic prince the right to choose the religion for his own land. It also
established a division of church lands between the two religions. See
Reformation.
During the 1500's and 1600's, the Roman
Catholic Church underwent its own reform, called the Counter Reformation
or Catholic Reformation. In this movement, the church won back many
Protestants by peaceful means or by force. By 1600, relatively few Protestants
were left in Austria, Bavaria, and parts of Bohemia and the Rhineland. The rest
of Germany remained chiefly Lutheran. See Counter Reformation.
The Thirty Years' War. By 1600, the German lands were divided by many political and religious
rivalries. In 1618, a Protestant revolt in Bohemia set off a series of wars
that lasted for 30 years. The wars were partially religious struggles between
Protestants and Catholics, but they were also political struggles between
certain princes and the emperor. In addition, the kings of Denmark, Sweden,
and France entered the wars to gain German lands and to reduce the Habsburgs'
power.
The Peace of Westphalia ended the Thirty
Years' War in 1648. Under this treaty, France and Sweden received some German
lands. The wars had been hard on German trade and farming. Large parts of
Germany were ruined, and some towns had nearly disappeared. The emperor's
already limited power had been further weakened by the wars. Germany was a
collection of free cities and hundreds of states. See Thirty Years' War.
The rise of Prussia. During the 1600's, the Hohenzollern family began to expand its power in
eastern Germany. The Hohenzollerns ruled the state of Brandenburg. Berlin was
their capital. In 1618, the ruler of Brandenburg inherited the duchy of
Prussia. The Peace of Westphalia added part of Pomerania and some territories
on the lower Rhine River to the Hohenzollern holdings. See Hohenzollern.
The Hohenzollerns' rise to power began
with Frederick William (the Great Elector), who became ruler of Brandenburg in
1640. He began to unite and expand his lands after the Thirty Years' War. In
1701, his son, Frederick I, was given the title king of Prussia. The Hohenzollerns'
power continued to grow under the next two kings, Frederick William I and
Frederick II (the Great).
See Frederick II (of Prussia); Frederick
William (of Brandenburg and of Prussia); Prussia.
The Hohenzollerns built a large,
well-trained professional army and a strong civil service to defend and rule
their scattered territories. Through their civil service, they improved farming
and industry, and filled their treasury with tax money. They built canals,
schools, and roads, and promoted the arts and learning.
After Frederick the Great became king in
1740, he seized Silesia, a rich province of Austria. This invasion led to
fighting between Prussia and Austria in two wars, the War of the Austrian
Succession (1740-1748) and the Seven Years' War (1756-1763). Many other nations
fought in these wars. Some sided with Frederick, and others with his enemy,
Empress Maria Theresa of Austria.
Under the final peace treaty, Silesia
remained under Prussian rule. Prussia was now recognized as a great power. See
Maria Theresa; Seven Years' War; Succession wars (The War of the Austrian
Succession).
During the 1770's, Prussia, along with
Austria and Russia, began to seize parts of Poland. By the end of 1795, Poland
had been divided among these states.
Conflicts with France. The French Revolution, which began in 1789, caused many changes
throughout Europe. France built huge armies made up of citizens inspired by
patriotism. Germany's old-fashioned professional armies were not prepared for
the new age.
From 1792 until 1815, France was almost
continually at war with other European states. Much of the fighting involved
German states and took place on German soil. By the end of 1806, Napoleon—who
had seized control of France in 1799—had taken parts of western Germany, set up
dependent states, and destroyed the Holy Roman Empire. Some German states
became members of the Confederation of the Rhine, which Napoleon had established
in 1806 and which was allied with France.
Between 1795 and 1806, Prussia stayed out
of the wars. But Napoleon's threats became too great. In 1806, Prussia declared
war on France. Napoleon crushed the Prussian army at the battles of Jena and
Auerstadt that same year. As a result, Prussia lost its territories west of the
Elbe River and had to pay war damages to France.
To recover from this defeat, the Prussian
government introduced reforms, including laws that freed the serfs and gave
some self-government to the cities. In the army, reformers fired incompetent
officers and improved training.
After the failure of Napoleon's Russian
campaign in 1812, Prussia, Austria, Russia, and Great Britain joined against
him. The reformed Prussian army helped defeat Napoleon at Leipzig in 1813 and
at Waterloo in 1815. For the story of the Napoleonic wars, see Napoleon I.
The Congress of Vienna. The victorious powers met in Vienna from late 1814 to early 1815 to
restore order to Europe. They left intact most of the middle-sized states
created in the Confederation of the Rhine.
But their treaty divided the rest of Napoleon's lands among themselves.
Prussia received lands including the Rhineland, Westphalia, and much of Saxony,
greatly increasing its power in northern and western Germany. Austria gave up
its territories in southern Germany and the lands that are now Belgium and
Luxembourg, and it took territories in Italy. Austria, Prussia, and Russia
again divided Poland. See Vienna, Congress of.
The German Confederation. The Congress of Vienna also set up the German Confederation, a union of
39 independent states. An assembly called the Bundestag was
established. Members of the Bundestag were appointed by the rulers of the
states. Austria appointed the president.
Except for four self-governing cities, the
German states were ruled by kings or princes. Each state had its own laws,
collected its own taxes, and was responsible for its own defence. Several
states had constitutions and parliaments, but even in these states the people
had little voice in their government. Though the king of Prussia had promised
to grant a constitution during the war against Napoleon, he did not keep his
word.
During the early 1800's, the German
population was growing faster than the economy. Some regions prospered, but
most areas were still poor. Cities were small, and most people still lived by
farming. In the 1840's, popular discontent increased. Business and professional
people wanted more opportunities for political involvement. Farmers and
craftworkers suffered from poor harvests and economic depression.
The Revolution of 1848. In February 1848, the people of Paris rebelled against their king. When
this news reached the Germans, they also rebelled. In Austria, rioting and
demonstrations forced the chancellor to resign. In Berlin, people defied the
army and forced the Prussian king to appoint new ministers and to promise a
constitution. Similar rebellions occurred in most other German capitals. Many
Germans hoped that they could replace the Confederation with a more unified
nation. In May, an elected assembly met in Frankfurt to write a new
constitution.
However, some people began to lose
interest in the revolution. Others disagreed about its goals. Meanwhile, the
governments began to recover. In October 1848, Austrian troops recaptured
Vienna. In December, the new Prussian assembly was dissolved by troops.
The Frankfurt Assembly was divided on many
issues, especially on whether Catholic Austria or Protestant Prussia should be
the leading power in the new German nation. In March 1849, members compromised
on a constitution that called for an emperor and a two-house parliament. The
Prussian king Frederick William IV was invited to be emperor but he refused. The
assembly then broke up. The revolution was defeated in the spring of 1849. The
German Confederation of 1815 was reestablished.
The unification of Germany. In the early 1860's, a conflict about army reforms caused a
constitutional crisis in Prussia. The Prussian king, Wilhelm I, appointed Otto
von Bismarck prime minister in 1862. Bismarck hoped he could resolve the
constitutional crisis with foreign triumphs. He also wanted to establish
Prussia as the leading German power.
Between 1864 and 1870, Bismarck had the
German states fight three short, victorious wars, in the first, Austria and
Prussia, in the name of the German Confederation, took the duchies of
Schleswig and Holstein from Denmark. In 1866, Bismarck picked a quarrel with
Austria. His army easily defeated Austria at Koniggratz in what was called the
Seven Weeks' War (see Seven Weeks' Wart. Bismarck then dissolved the German Confederation,
annexed some territory to Prussia, and established the North German
Confederation under Prussian leadership. The four German states south of the
Main River remained independent, but made military alliances with Prussia.
Austria's defeat left it greatly weakened. In 1867, the Austrian emperor was
forced to give equal status to his Hungarian holdings, creating the Dual
Monarchy of Austria-Hungary. Austria was never again a power in Germany.
To complete the unification of Germany,
Bismarck knew that he needed to overcome the opposition of France. In 1870, he
encouraged a Hohenzollern prince to accept the throne of Spain. As Bismarck
expected, France objected. Although the prince withdrew as a candidate,
Bismarck used the dispute to start the Franco- Prussian War. This conflict
pitted France against the North German Confederation and its south German allies.
After several battles, the Germans defeated the main French armies at Sedan in
September 1870. The German army captured Paris in January 1871. Under the peace
treaty, France gave up almost all of Alsace and part of Lorraine. See
Franco-Prussian War.
During the Franco-Prussian War, the four
south German states agreed to join a united German nation under Prussian
leadership. On Jan. 18,1871, Wilhelm I was crowned the first kaiser
(emperor) of the new German Empire. Wilhelm appointed Bismarck chancellor and head
of government. See Bismarck, Otto von; Wilhelm (I).
The German Empire. The German constitution provided for a two-house parliament. Members of
one house, the Reichstag, were popularly elected. Members of the other house,
the Bundesrat, were appointed by the state governments. The empire had 26
member states. Most states were very small, and several were completely
surrounded by Prussia. The emperor, who was also the king of Prussia,
controlled foreign policy, commanded the army, and appointed the chancellor.
The parliament approved all laws and taxes, but could not force the chancellor
to resign.
Bismarck allowed all men over 25 to vote,
thinking that most Germans would support the government. He won support from
the growing class of business people and the traditional Prussian landowners
and nobles. But Bismarck faced opposition from Roman Catholics and Socialists.
Catholics did not trust the Protestant-led empire and organized their own
political party. Socialism was growing popular among city dwellers and the
workers in the developing industries. Bismarck tried to wreck the Catholic and
Socialist parties, but failed.
Foreign policy. After 1871, Bismarck tried to avoid conflicts so the newly united empire
could develop. He particularly feared a combined attack from east and west. He
tried to keep Germany allied with Russia and Austria-Hungary so they would not
form alliances with France. But Russia and Austria-Hungary had opposing
interests in the Balkans, which made it difficult to keep an alliance with both
of them.
Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Russia
formed a loose alliance in 1873, but it soon broke up over the Balkan problem.
In 1879, Bismarck established a military and political alliance with
Austria-Hungary. Italy joined in 1882, and the alliance became known as the
Triple Alliance. During the 1880s, Germany also established colonies in
Africa and on islands in the Pacific Ocean.
In 1888, Wilhelm I died. He was succeeded
by his terminally ill son Frederick III, whose reign lasted only 99 days. The
crown then passed to Frederick's son, Wilhelm 11/ who was eager to establish
his own authority. In 1890, he forced Bismarck to resign. Wilhelm demanded that
Germany have influence throughout the world. He also wanted to build a modern
navy to defend German interests and challenge British naval supremacy. Wilhelm's
ambitions, which he often expressed in an aggressive manner, frightened other
powers. In 1894, Russia allied itself with France. Great Britain felt its
control of the seas threatened and established the Entente Cordiale
(cordial understanding) with France in 1904. In 1907, Britain and Russia signed
a similar agreement. Under these agreements, the three countries formed the
Triple Entente. Europe was divided into two armed camps, with the Triple
Alliance on one side and the Triple Entente on the other. See Triple Alliance;
Triple Entente; Wilhelm (II).
World War I started in the Balkans. On June 28, 1914, Archduke Francis Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary and his wife were murdered in
Sarajevo, Bosnia. Bosnia was an Austrian
territory claimed by Serbia, a
little Balkan country where
the murder had been planned.
Austria- Hungary decided to
punish Serbia, and Germany promised to
support these efforts.
Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia
on July 28, 1914. Russia
prepared for war to support Serbia.
Germany then declared war on Russia. After France called up its troops
to support Russia, Germany went
to war against France. In an effort to reach Paris quickly, German troops
invaded neutral Belgium. Great Britain then declared war on Germany.
Germany won the opening battles of the
war, but France, Britain, and Russia continued to fight. Germany,
Austria-Hungary, and their allies were called the Central Powers. The nations
opposing them were called the Allies. As the war dragged on, other countries
became involved. Almost all of them joined the Allies. In 1915, Italy joined
the Allies, hoping to gain Austrian land. In 1917, the United States entered
the war on the Allied side.
Despite the size and strength of the
Allies, Germany seemed close to winning the war. After 1914, German troops held
Luxembourg, most of Belgium, and part of northern France. In 1917, Germany won
on the Eastern Front as the Russian war effort collapsed. But by 1918, Germany's armies
were exhausted. Supplies were running low and there was social unrest at home.
Meanwhile, an increasing number of fresh American troops were arriving to
reinforce the Allies. In the summer of 1918, American troops helped stop the
last great German offensive in the west. On November 11, Germany signed an
armistice. For the story of Germany in World War I, see World War I.
Under the Treaty of Versailles, which was
signed after World War I, Germany lost its colonies and some of its European
territory. Alsace and the German part of Lorraine were returned to France.
Poland was reestablished, and it received Posen (now Poznan), some of Silesia,
and part of West Prussia. France got control of the Saar region for 15 years.
The treaty also placed the Rhineland under Allied occupation for 15 years.
Germany's army was reduced to 100,000 men, and the nation was forbidden from
having an air force. Germany was also required to pay the Allies vast reparations
(payments for war damages).
The Weimar Republic. Before the armistice was signed in November 1918, German workers and
troops had revolted in protest against continuing the war. This revolution
began in Kiel, and spread quickly from city to city. On November 9, Germany was
declared a republic. Emperor Wilhelm II fled to safety in the Netherlands.
In January 1919, the German voters,
including women for the first time, elected a national assembly to write a
constitution. The assembly met in Weimar, and the new republic became known as
the Weimar Republic. The constitution established a democratic federal republic
in August 1919. It provided for a parliament of two houses—the Reichstag and
the Reichsrat—and a popularly elected president. The chancellor and the
cabinet members were appointed by the president, but could be removed from
office by the Reichstag.
The Weimar Republic was weak from the
start. Many important Germans remained loyal to the empire. German army
officers claimed that Germany had been defeated by the revolution, not by
Allied armies. The terms of the Treaty of Versailles were harsher than the Germans
had expected.
In 1922 and 1923, the economy collapsed
when inflation ruined the value of German money. By 1923, the republic
appeared doomed. Communists rebelled in some areas. In Munich, the National
Socialist German Workers Party—better known as the Nazi Party—attempted an
armed rebellion under its leader, Adolf Hitler. But despite these events, the
republic survived.
Gustav Stresemann became chancellor and
then foreign minister. Under his leadership, order was restored. A new money
system was set up to end the inflation. In 1924, the Allies made it easier for
Germany to pay its reparations. At the Locarno Conference in 1925, Stresemann
signed a security pact with France and Belgium. The pact was also guaranteed by
Great Britain and Italy (see Locarno Conference).
The republic's prospects looked much
brighter by the late 1920^. But in 1929, a worldwide economic depression
began. Millions of Germans lost their jobs. The government appeared powerless
and political violence increased. The voters increasingly supported groups
that promised a new system of government. After the 1930 electio’ns, political
parties in the Reichstag failed to agree on a programme. Between 1930 and 1933,
President Paul von Hindenburg ruled largely by issuing laws without the
approval of parliament.
Nazi Germany. During the political confusion of the early 1930's, the Nazi Party made
rapid gains in German elections. The Nazi Party had been founded in 1919.
After his 1923 revolt failed, Hitler
decided to gain power by lawful means rather than by revolution. From 1924 to
1929, the republic was prosperous and stable, so the Nazis attracted few
voters. After the Great Depression struck, more Germans were attracted to Hitler's
promises to improve the economy, defy the hated Treaty of Versailles, and
rebuild Germany's military power. In 1932, the Nazis emerged as the strongest
party in the Reichstag. In 1933, Hindenburg appointed Hitler chancellor. See
Hitler, Adolf; Nazism.
Soon after he became chancellor, Hitler
began to destroy the constitution and build a dictatorship. He permitted only
one political party—the Nazis. The party seized control of the nation's courts,
newspapers, police, and schools. People who opposed the government were
murdered, imprisoned in concentration camps, forced to leave Germany, or beaten
up by the Nazis' private army called storm troopers. After Hindenburg
died in 1934, Hitler declared himself derFuhrer (the leader) of Germany.
The Nazis called their government the Third Reich (Third Empire). The
first was the Holy Roman Empire, and the second was the German Empire.
Many Germans approved of Nazism. Many
others objected to some features of Nazi rule, but supported Hitler's efforts
to improve the economy and rebuild the military. Some Germans opposed Hitler
but remained silent. Only a very few resisted.
Hitler pursued two goals. He wanted to
assert German superiority over what he believed to be inferior races,
including jews, Slavs, and other non-German peoples. He also wanted to gain territory—Lebensraum
(living space)—for Germany, especially in eastern Europe.
In 1933, Hitler removed all German Jews
from government jobs. In 1935, he took away the rights of Jewish citizens. Faced with this
persecution, more than half of Germany's 500,000 jews left the country. On
Nov. 9, 1938,
Nazi crowds burned down synagogues and
broke the windows of Jewish businesses in an event later called KristallnachI
(Crystal Night). In English, the event is known as the Night of Broken Glass.
At the same time as Hitler was acting
against the Jews, he was also preparing for war. In 1936,
German troops reoccupied the
Rhineland. Also in 1936, Germany formed
an alliance with Italy and signed an anti-Commu- nist agreement with
Japan. The three countries became known as the Axis powers. In March
1938, Germany occupied Austria
and made it part of the Third Reich. In September, Britain and France consented
to Hitler's demands to take
over the German-speaking areas of Czechoslovakia
(see Munich Agreement). The next year, Germany seized the rest of
Czechoslovakia.
In August 1939, Germany and the Soviet
Union (which had been formed under Russia's leadership in 1922 and existed
until 19911 agreed to remain neutral if the other became involved in a war.
They also secretly agreed to divide Poland and much of Eastern Europe between
them. On September 1, Germany invaded Poland and World War II began.
World War II. On Sept. 3,1939, Great Britain and France declared war on Germany to
help defend Poland. But Poland fell quickly under the German, and later, Soviet
attacks. In the spring of 1940, German forces captured Denmark, Norway, the
Netherlands, Belgium, and Luxembourg. The Allied forces that opposed the Germans
had been unprepared for Germany's blitzkrieg (lightning war) methods.
Hitler used fast-moving tanks and infantry supported by dive bombers.
In May 1940, the German army moved around
France's eastern defences and overwhelmed the French army. France fell by the
end of June.
The German advance stopped at the English
Channel. After a series of desperate air battles over Britain in the summer and
fall of 1940, the Germans failed to gain the air superiority they needed to
invade England. Hitler now turned to the east and the south. He conquered the
Balkans, occupied Crete, and sent an army to northern Africa. In June 1941, a
huge German force invaded the Soviet Union and drove deep into Soviet
territory.
At the end of 1941, Nazi Germany dominated
the continent. Hitler used his power as proof of his theory that the Germans
belonged to a "master race." The Nazis ruthlessly murdered about 6
million European Jews and about 5 million Poles, Gypsies, and others. Many of
these people died in the Nazi concentration camps.
Despite his army's initial success, Hitler
could not defeat the Soviet Union. The Soviets continued to resist and slowly
pushed the invaders back. Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7,1941,
brought the United States into the war. The tide turned against Germany in
1943. The Soviets counterattacked in the east. American and British troops
drove the Germans out of North Africa and invaded Italy from the south. In June
1944, the Allies invaded France. After the failure of the last German offensive
in December 1944, Allied troops poured into Germany. As Soviet troops closed in
on Berlin from the east, Hitler committed suicide on April 30,1945. On May 7,
Germany surrendered. For the story of Germany in World War II, see World War
II.
Occupied Germany. The war left most of Germany in ruins. The Allied bombing and invasion
had destroyed cities, farms, industries, and transportation. Supplies of
food, fuel, and water were very low. People were half starved, and many lived
in ruined buildings.
In June 1945, the Allied Big Four—the
United States, Great Britain, France, and the Soviet Union—officially took over
supreme authority in Germany. The country was divided into four zones of
military occupation, with each power occupying a zone. Berlin was also divided
into four sectors of military occupation.
In July and August 1945, leaders of the
United States, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union met in Potsdam, Germany.
They agreed to govern Germany together and to rebuild it as a democracy. They
also agreed to stamp out Nazism and to settle German refugees from Eastern Europe
in Germany. Under the agreement, the Soviet Union also was granted northern
East Prussia, which it claimed. The rest of that region, and German territory east
of the Oder and Neisse rivers, were placed under Polish control. As a result,
Germany lost about a fourth of its land. See Potsdam Conference.
Many of the most important Nazi leaders
had committed suicide or had disappeared. The Allies brought to trial those
remaining. A number of these Nazis were hanged or imprisoned. The most
important trials took place in Nuremberg (see Nuremberg Trials).
The division of Germany. Almost immediately after their victory over the Nazis, the Allies began
to quarrel among themselves. The Soviet Union began to establish Communist
governments in the Eastern European countries its army had occupied at the end
of the war. The Western powers tried to block Communist expansion in the areas
under their control. The Soviets imposed barriers against communication,
trade, and travel between East and West. The extreme mistrust and tension grew
and became the Cold War. See Cold War.
The outbreak of the Cold War affected
Germany immediately. When the Soviet Union and the Western Allies could not
agree on a common policy in Germany, each side began to organize its own
occupation zones in Germany overall and in Berlin. Great Britain, France, and
the United States combined the economies of their zones and prepared to unite
the zones politically. The Soviet Union imposed Communist rule on its zone.
In June 1948, the Western Allies moved to
rebuild the economy of their occupation zones in Germany. They reorganized the
German monetary system and issued new money, replacing the virtually worthless
existing currency. Under the Marshall Plan, U.S. aid began to pour into the
Western zone, and economic recovery got underway (see Marshall Plan). The
Soviets responded by stopping all road, rail, and water travel between Berlin
and the Western zone. The Soviets hoped that they could force the Allies out of
Berlin. But the Allies set up the huge Berlin airlift and flew about 7,300
metric tons of supplies into the city every day. The Soviets lifted the
blockade in May 1949, realizing it had failed. See Cold War (The Berlin
blockade).
West Germany. The Western Allies turned over increasing authority to German
officials. As the division between the Eastern and Western zones grew, the
Allies arranged for a German council to write a federal constitution, which
they approved in May 1949. On Sept. 21, 1949, the three Western zones were
officially combined as the Federal Republic of Germany. The military occupation
ended, and the Allied High Commission, a civilian agency, replaced the
military governors. Military occupation continued in West Berlin, because
treaties uniting Germany had not been signed. On May 5,1955, the Allied High
Commission was dissolved, and West Germany became completely independent.
The new West German parliament met for the
first time in Bonn, the country's capital, in September 1949. It elected Konrad
Adenauer chancellor. Under him, West Germany helped found the Council of Europe
and the European Economic Community, which later became the European Union
(EU). In 1955, West Germany joined the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
and began to establish its armed forces.
By 1955, West Germany had made an amazing
economic recovery. The value of goods produced there was greater than that for
all Germany in 1936. This "economic
miracle" helped West Germany absorb
more than 10 million refugees from Eastern Europe, and more than a million
workers from the rest of Europe.
West Germany's prosperity helped the
republic gain the support of its citizens. Also, Adenauer was a strong leader,
though he was criticized in his later years for ignoring the views of others.
He retired in 1963. Ludwig Erhard succeeded Adenauer as chancellor and served
until 1966. Kurt Georg Kiesinger was chancellor from 1966 to 1969. Adenauer,
Erhard, and Kiesinger were members of the Christian Democratic Union.
Willy Brandt of the Social Democratic
Party, who had been vice chancellor since 1966, became chancellor in 1969. He
resigned in 1974 after it was discovered that one of his aides was an East
German spy. Helmut Schmidt, also a Social Democrat, succeeded Brandt. In 1982,
Schmidt was forced from office by a vote of no confidence from the Bundestag.
The small Free Democratic Party, which had supported the Social Democrats,
switched its parliamentary support to the Christian Democratic Union. The
Bundestag elected Christian Democratic leader Helmut Kohl chancellor. Kohl remained
chancellor following the 1983 and 1987 elections, in which the Christian
Democratic coalition with the Free Democrats won majorities in the Bundestag.
In the 198ffs, many Germans, especially
young people, expressed concern for the environment and opposition to the
placement of U.S. missiles in West Germany. Mass protests occurred. The Green
Party, an organization devoted to environmental issues, gained popularity and
won seats in the Bundestag. In 1989, the Green Party gained support in local
elections. The party formed coalitions with the Social Democratic Party in
several states and participated in state governments.
East Germany. After World War II, the Soviet Union appointed German Communists to
local offices and set up a system much like that of the Soviet Union. Banks,
farms, and industries were seized and reorganized. People suspected of
opposing Communism were thrown into prison camps. In 1946, the Communists
forced the Social Democratic Party to join them in forming the Socialist Unity
Party. The party came under control of the Communist leader Walter Ulbricht.
Ulbricht became first secretary, or head, of the Socialist Unity Party. The
first secretary (later general secretary) was the most powerful leader in East
Germany.
A Communist-prepared constitution was
adopted in May 1949. On October 7, the Soviet zone became the German Democratic
Republic, with East Berlin its capital. Ulbricht held the real power, though
he did not head the government. In October 1955, East Germany became officially
independent from the Soviet Union, but Soviet influence continued. Also in
1955, East Germany joined the Warsaw Pact, an Eastern European military
alliance under Soviet command (see Warsaw Pact). East Germany's armed forces
were established officially in 1956, though special "police" units
had been given tanks as well as other heavy weapons as early as 1952.
The East German economy recovered after
1945, but the standard of living remained much lower than West Germany's. In
1953, Ulbricht tried to increase working hours without raising wages. Strikes
and riots broke out in East Berlin and other cities. Soviet tanks and troops
crushed the revolt. Living and working conditions slowly improved, but many
people remained dissatisfied. Every
week, thousands of East Germans fled to West
Germany. Almost 3 million East Germans left, and the work force fell
sharply. Most refugees fled through Berlin,
because the Communists had sealed off the East-West border. In August
1961, the Communists built the Berlin Wall
between East and West Berlin. They also strengthened barriers around the rest
of West Berlin.
See Berlin Wall.
In 1971, Ulbricht resigned as head of East
Germany's Socialist Unity Party. Erich Honecker, a member of the party's
Central Committee, succeeded him. Under Honecker, East Germany improved its
relations with many non-Communist nations. Before 1960, only the
Soviet Union and several other Communist countries had diplomatic relations
with East Germany. But eventually, East Germany established relations with
other nations.
East Germany experienced major changes in
1989. In many Eastern European nations, people demonstrated for more freedom
from their Communist governments. Communist
Hungary removed its barriers on its border with non-Communist
Austria. Thousands of East Germans went to Hungary, crossed into Austria, and
then moved to West Germany. Throughout East Germany, citizens protested for
more freedom. In October, the growing pressure forced Honecker to resign as
head of the party and from government positions he held. He was succeeded in
all his positions by another Communist, Egon Krenz.
In a dramatic change in policy, the East
German government announced on Nov. 9,1989, that it would open its borders and
permit its citizens to travel freely. The opening of the Berlin Wall, long a
symbol of the East German government's control of its citizens, was part of
this policy change. Thousands more East Germans moved to West Germany. Throughout
this time, protests continued. Thousands of East Germans continued to move to
the west. Non-Communist political parties and organizations were started. In
December, Krenz resigned as party head and from his government positions.
Hans Modrow, chairman of East Germany's cabinet, took control of the
government, though he was not a party head.
On March 18,1990, East Germans voted in
free parliamentary elections for the first time. The Christian Democratic
Union, a non-Communist party, won the most seats in parliament. Together with
the Social Democrats and some smaller parties, the Christian Democrats formed a
government with CDU leader Lothar de Maiziere as its head. The Socialist Unity
Party, which had been renamed the Party of Democratic Socialism, won only about
17 per cent of the seats.
East-West relations. Throughout the 195ffs and 1960's, relations between East Germany and
West Germany were strained. Little travel was permitted between the two
nations. Following the construction of the Berlin Wall in 1961, many East
Germans were killed trying to flee to the west. Relations improved slightly
during the 1970's. Nevertheless, the governments of East and West Germany
continued to view each other with suspicion and hostility. In 1973, both
countries joined the United Nations.
The unification of East and West Germany. With the move toward a more democratic government in East Germany, many
people began to consider the idea of a unified Germany. In February 1990, East
German leader Modrow announced that he favoured unification with West Germany.
In their March elections, most East Germans voted for candidates who favoured
rapid unification.
Most West Germans also supported
unification, but they wanted to keep their strong ties with western Europe and
their position in NATO. At first, the Soviet Union objected to united Germany
remaining in NATO. However, in July, it agreed that united Germany could be a
member of NATO.
In mid-1990, East Germany began selling
many government-owned businesses. In May, East Germany and West Germany signed
a treaty providing for close economic cooperation. In July, the economies of
East and West Germany were united. The West German Deutsche mark became the
unit of currency throughout Germany.
Between May and September, talks about
unification were held among the foreign ministers of the two German states and
the four Allied powers of World War II— France, the Soviet Union, the United
Kingdom, and the United States. The Allied powers still held some occupation
rights in Berlin and in East and West Germany, including certain rights to
oversee Berlin and to approve Germany's borders. In a treaty signed on
September 12, the Allied powers agreed to give up these rights. The treaty,
called the Treaty on the Final Settlement With Respect to Germany, made it
possible for the Germans to complete the unification of East and West Germany.
On August 31, representatives of East
Germany and West Germany signed their own treaty for unification. The treaty
detailed the major aspects of unification, including the merging of the social
and legal systems. The treaty took effect on Oct. 3,1990, marking the official
date for the unification of East and West Germany. Berlin was also unified. It
was named the capital of united Germany. West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl
continued to serve as chancellor of Germany after unification. The first
national elections of unified Germany were held in December 1990. In those
elections—and again in October 1994 elections—the Christian Democratic Union
won the most seats in the Bundestag and formed a coalition with the Free
Democratic Party. Kohl remained chancellor.
Since unification, unemployment has grown
in the eastern German states, and Germans there have protested. Germans in the
western states have complained because the government has raised taxes to pay
for the high cost of unification. In addition, large numbers of immigrants have
entered the country. Neo-Nazis and other right-wing Germans have protested
against the increased immigration. Some of them have made attacks against
foreigners, resulting in a number of deaths.
Large numbers of Germans took part in
public demonstrations that protested against the attacks. Germany had a policy
of allowing any people who said they were fleeing persecution to enter the
country. In 1993, the German parliament amended the constitution to reduce the
flow of immigrants into Germany.
Outline
Government
People
Population and ancestry
Language
Way of life
City life
Food and drink
Rural life
Recreation
Religion
Education
Arts
Literature and
philosophy
Music
Painting and sculpture
Architecture
Land
The North German Plain
The Central Highlands
The South German Hills
The Black Forest
The Bavarian Alps
Climate
Economy
Manufacturing
Service industries
Agriculture
Mining
Foreign trade
Energy sources
Transportation and communication
History
Questions
Why was sauerkraut created?
What conditions led to the rise of Adolf
Hitler and the Nazis? What is Germany's leading industrial region?
What was called West Germany's
"economic miracle"?
Why did the Communists build the Berlin
Wall in 1961?
What two German states were rivals for
German leadership during the 1800's? Which state won?
What events in East Germany helped bring
about the unification , of East and West Germany?
What are Germany's main land regions?
What nations occupied Germany after World
War II?
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