People have
dwelled for thousands of years in the territory now occupied
by the Federal Republic of Germany. The first significant
written account of this area's inhabitants is
Germania, written about A.D. 98 by the Roman
historian Tacitus. The Germanic tribes he describes are
believed to have come from Scandinavia to Germany about 100
B.C., perhaps induced to migrate by overpopulation. The
Germanic tribes living to the west of the Rhine River and
south of the Main River were soon subdued by the Romans and
incorporated into the Roman Empire. Tribes living to the
east and north of these rivers remained free but had more or
less friendly relations with the Romans for several
centuries. Beginning in the fourth century A.D., new
westward migrations of eastern peoples caused the Germanic
tribes to move into the Roman Empire, which by the late
fifth century ceased to exist. One of the
largest Germanic tribes, the Franks, came to control the
territory that was to become France and much of what is now
western Germany and Italy. In A.D. 800 their ruler,
Charlemagne, was crowned in Rome by the pope as emperor of
all of this territory. Because of its vastness,
Charlemagne's empire split into three kingdoms within two
generations, the inhabitants of the West Frankish Kingdom
speaking an early form of French and those in the East
Frankish Kingdom speaking an early form of German. The
tribes of the eastern kingdom--Franconians, Saxons,
Bavarians, Swabians, and several others--were ruled by
descendants of Charlemagne until 911, when they elected a
Franconian, Conrad I, to be their king. Some historians
regard Conrad's election as the beginning of what can
properly be considered German history. German kings soon
added the Middle Kingdom to their realm and adjudged
themselves rulers of what would later be called the Holy
Roman Empire. In 962 Otto I became the first of the German
kings crowned emperor in Rome. By the middle of the next
century, the German lands ruled by the emperors were the
richest and most politically powerful part of Europe. German
princes stopped the westward advances of the Magyar tribe,
and Germans began moving eastward to begin a long process of
colonization. During the next few centuries, however, the
great expense of the wars to maintain the empire against its
enemies, chiefly other German princes and the wealthy and
powerful papacy and its allies, depleted Germany's wealth
and slowed its development. Unlike France or England, where
a central royal power was slowly established over regional
princes, Germany remained divided into a multitude of
smaller entities often warring with one another or in
combinations against the emperors. None of the local
princes, or any of the emperors, were strong enough to
control Germany for a sustained period. Germany's
so-called particularism, that is, the existence within it of
many states of various sizes and kinds, such as
principalities, electorates, ecclesiastical territories, and
free cities, became characteristic by the early Middle Ages
and persisted until 1871, when the country was finally
united. This disunity was exacerbated by the Protestant
Reformation of the sixteenth century, which ended Germany's
religious unity by converting many Germans to Lutheranism
and Calvinism. For several centuries, adherents to these two
varieties of Protestantism viewed each other with as much
hostility and suspicion as they did Roman Catholics. For
their part, Catholics frequently resorted to force to defend
themselves against Protestants or to convert them. As a
result, Germans were divided not only by territory but also
by religion. The terrible
destruction of the Thirty Years' War of 1618-48, a war
partially religious in nature, reduced German particularism,
as did the reforms enacted during the age of enlightened
absolutism (1648-1789) and later the growth of nationalism
and industrialism in the nineteenth century. In 1815 the
Congress of Vienna stipulated that the several hundred
states existing in Germany before the French Revolution be
replaced with thirty-eight states, some of them quite small.
In subsequent decades, the two largest of these states,
Austria and Prussia, vied for primacy in a Germany that was
gradually unifying under a variety of social and economic
pressures. The politician responsible for German unification
was Otto von Bismarck, whose brilliant diplomacy and
ruthless practice of statecraft secured Prussian hegemony in
a united Germany in 1871. The new state, proclaimed the
German Empire, did not include Austria and its extensive
empire of many non-German territories and
peoples. Imperial Germany
prospered. Its economy grew rapidly, and by the turn of the
century it rivaled Britain's in size. Although the empire's
constitution did not provide for a political system in which
the government was responsible to parliament, political
parties were founded that represented the main social
groups. Roman Catholic and socialist parties contended with
conservative and progressive parties and with a conservative
monarchy to determine how Germany should be
governed. After Bismarck's
dismissal in 1890 by the young emperor Wilhelm II, Germany
stepped up its competition with other European states for
colonies and for what it considered its proper place among
the great states. An aggressive program of military
expansion instilled fear of Germany in its neighbors.
Several decades of military and colonial competition and a
number of diplomatic crises made for a tense international
atmosphere by 1914. In the early summer of that year,
Germany's rulers acted on the belief that their country's
survival depended on a successful war against Russia and
France. German strategists felt that a war against these
countries had to be waged by 1916 if it were to be won
because after that year Russian and French military reforms
would be complete, making German victory doubtful. This
logic led Germany to get drawn into a war between its ally
Austria-Hungary and Russia. Within weeks, a complicated
system of alliances escalated that regional conflict into
World War I, which ended with Germany's defeat in November
1918. The Weimar
Republic, established at war's end, was the first attempt to
institute parliamentary democracy in Germany. The republic
never enjoyed the wholehearted support of many Germans,
however, and from the start it was under savage attack from
elements of the left and, more important, from the right.
Moreover, it was burdened during its fifteen-year existence
with serious economic problems. During the second half of
the 1920s, when foreign loans fed German prosperity,
parliamentary politics functioned better, yet many of the
established elites remained hostile to it. With the onset of
the Great Depression, parliamentary politics became
impossible, and the government ruled by decree. Economic
crisis favored extremist politicians, and Adolf Hitler's
National Socialist German Workers' Party became the
strongest party after the summer elections of 1932. In
January 1933, the republic's elected president, Paul von
Hindenburg, the World War I army commander, named a
government headed by Hitler. Within a few
months, Hitler accomplished the "legal revolution" that
removed his opponents. By 1935 his regime had transformed
Germany into a totalitarian state. Hitler achieved notable
economic and diplomatic successes during the first five
years of his rule. However, in September 1939 he made a
fatal gamble by invading Poland and starting World War II.
The eventual defeat of Hitler's Third Reich in 1945 occurred
only after the loss of tens of millions of lives, many from
military causes, many from sickness and starvation, and many
from what has come to be called the Holocaust.
Library of Congress Country Study
Early History to 1945
Library of Congress Country Study
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