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People's State of Reuss

German state (1918–1920)


German state (1918–1920)

FieldValue
conventional_long_namePeople's State of Reuss
native_namede
common_nameReuss
stat_pop1211,324
p1Principality of Reuss-Greiz
flag_p1Flagge Fürstentum Reuß ältere Linie.svg
p2Principality of Reuss-Gera
flag_p2Flagge Fürstentum Reuß jüngere Linie.svg
s1State of Thuringia (1920–1952)Thuringia
flag_s1Flag of Thuringia.svg
todayGermany
image_flagFlag of Germany (3-2 aspect ratio).svg
flag_captionFlag
image_coatWappen Volksstaat Reuß.svg
image_mapThuringia in the German Reich (1925).svg
image_map2Thuringia 1910 - en.svg
image_map_captionThuringia within the Weimar Republic
map_caption2People's State of Reuss (in dark and light pink) within Thuringia
capitalGera
coordinates
government_typeRepublic
eraInterwar period
date_start4 April
year_start1918
event_endMerged into Thuringia
date_end1 May
stat_area11,143
stat_year11919
year_end1920
population_census_year1919

The People's State of Reuss () was a small, short-lived (1918–1920) central German state during the early years of the Weimar Republic. It was formed following the dissolution of the principalities of Reuss-Gera and Reuss-Greiz during the German revolution of 1918–1919. After Prince Heinrich XXVII abdicated for both principalities, they joined to form the People's State of Reuss. It became part of the new state of Thuringia when it was created on 1 May 1920.

Predecessor states

The People's State of Reuss was formed from the merger of two former principalities of the House of Reuss: Reuss-Greiz (also known as Reuss Elder Line) and Reuss-Gera (the Junior Line). Both had been member states of the German Empire from 1871 until its fall in 1918 at the end of World War I. Due to the incapacity of Prince Heinrich XXIV of Reuss-Greiz, the two principalities were ruled in a personal union by Prince Heinrich XXVII of the Junior Line from 1908 to 1918. Each principality had one seat in the Empire's Reichstag and one in the Bundesrat.

Revolution of 1918

The two principalities collapsed during the revolution of 1918–1919, which brought down the German Empire and all of Germany's royal houses at the end of World War I. The revolution began in late October 1918 when rebellious sailors at Kiel set up a workers' and soldiers' council and in early November spread the revolt across the rest of Germany. Emperor Wilhelm II fled to Holland on 10 November, and councils quickly took power from the existing military, royal and civil authorities with little resistance or bloodshed.

The revolution reached the Reuss principalities on 10 November. At Gera, a workers' and soldiers' council was formed following a public assembly that had demanded Prince Heinrich's abdication and the resignation of his ministers and of the mayor of Gera. Shortly afterwards, the Prince formally abdicated for both principalities. A demonstration at Greiz the same day also called for Heinrich to abdicate and for the principality to become a socialist republic. A workers' and soldiers' council was set up the next day, and the Prince's abdication was announced.

Elections and the Kapp Putsch

The principalities set up separate transitional governments under the leadership of their respective workers' and soldiers' councils. Reuss-Gera's state minister was the independent Karl Freiherr von Brandenstein and Reuss-Greitz's was William Oberländer of the liberal German Democratic Party (DDP). Each government had a single state councilor (Staatsrat) from the radical left Independent Social Democratic Party (USPD). An administrative union of the two states was formed on 21 December 1918.

On 2 February 1919 both states held elections for their still separate state parliaments (Landtag in the singular). In Reuss-Gera, a combined list of the USPD and the moderate Social Democratic Party (SPD) won 62% of the vote; in Greitz 45% went to the USPD and 16% to the SPD. Two months later, on 4 April, the combined Landtags passed the "Law on the Unification of the Two Free States of Reuss into One People's State of Reuss and on the Provisional Constitution and Administration". Brandenstein and Oberländer became joint state ministers of the new government. All of the state councilors were from the USPD. The capital was Gera.

During the March 1920 Kapp Putsch, a right-wing attempt to overthrow the government of the Weimar Republic, about 1,500 Freikorps and volunteer troops sympathetic to the putschists occupied Gera's town hall and other key buildings. A strike was called in protest, and on the 15th a demonstration led to a street battle in which two soldiers and 15 protesters were killed. At the end of eight hours of fighting, the putschists had been disarmed and the city retaken.

Another violent clash took place near the Reuss village of Naitschau on 21 March, when a hastily mustered workers' militia confronted two Reichswehr battalions marching towards Leipzig to help put down a workers' uprising there. The militia succeeded in stopping the Reichswehr units at a total cost of 13 to 15 lives.

Transition to the State of Thuringia

In late March 1919, representatives of the eight Thuringian states had met in Weimar to begin discussing plans to form a unified state. All except Coburg signed the “Community Agreement on the Merger of the Thuringian States” on 4 January 1920. Both houses of the Weimar Republic's parliament subsequently passed a federal law officially creating the State of Thuringia. When the law became effective on 1 May 1920, the People's State of Reuss formally ceased to exist as a sovereign federal state. The Reuss region continued to exist as a higher-level municipal association with its own state government and state assembly until March 1923. Over that period its powers were gradually transferred to the state. In addition, for the first 15 years after the Thuringian state constitution of 1921 came into force, one member of the state government had to come from Reuss.

References

References

  1. [[Hugh Massingberd. Montgomery-Massingberd, Hugh]]. "[[Burke's Peerage. Burke’s]] Royal Families of the World: ''Volume I Europe & Latin America'', 1977, pp. 18, 32. {{ISBN. 0-85011-023-8
  2. Montgomery-Massingberd, Hugh. (1977). "Burke’s Royal Families of the World: Volume I Europe & Latin America". [[Burke's Peerage]].
  3. Sturm, Reinhard. (23 December 2011). "Vom Kaiserreich zur Republik 1918/19".
  4. "Reuß jüngere Linie (1848–1914)".
  5. "Reuß ältere Linie (Reuß-Greiz) (1820–1914)".
  6. "Der Volksstaat Reuß. Die Regierungen 1918–1920".
  7. "Der Volksstaat Reuß. Ereignisse 1918–1920".
  8. "Der Volksstaat Reuß. Wahlen 1919–1920".
  9. ["Aus den Tagen Heinrichs XXII, souv. Fürsten Reuss ä. L., 1867–1902. Aktenstüke, Aufzichnungen und Briefe"]({{Google books). H. Bredt's Nachf..
  10. (4 April 1919). "Gesetz über die Vereinigung der beiden Freistaaten Reuß zu einem Volksstaat Reuß sowie über die vorläufige Verfassung und Verwaltung".
  11. Bartuschka, Marc. (3 October 2021). "Thüringen 1919. Zwischen Revolution und Landesgründung".
  12. Faludi, Christian. (2 September 2021). "Thüringen 1919. Zwischen Revolution und Landesgründung".
  13. "Das Land Thüringen. Ereignisse 1918–1933".
  14. Seela, Reyk. (2002). "Thüringer Landtag: Die vergessenen Parlamente. Landtage und Gebietsvertretungen in den Thüringer Staaten und Gebieten 1919 bis 1923". Hain.
  15. Post, Bernhard. (1999). "Thüringen-Handbuch. Territorium, Verfassung, Parlament, Regierung und Verwaltung in Thüringen 1920 bis 1995". Böhlau.
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