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Centre Party Germany - In War and Revolution

Centre Party Germany - In War and Revolution: Encyclopedia II - Centre Party Germany - In War and Revolution

The party supported the government upon the outbreak of World War I, but it also used the debates about war bonds to push for a repeal of the last remnants of anti-Jesuit laws. As the war continued, many of the leaders of the Centre's left wing, particularly Matthias Erzberger, came to support a negotiated settlement, and Erzberger was key in the passage of the Reichstag Peace Resolution of 1917. The same year, the Centre's Georg Count Hertling, formerly Prime Minister of Bavaria, was appointed Chancellor, but he could not overcome the domin ...

See also:

Centre Party Germany, Centre Party Germany - Origins of Political Catholicism, Centre Party Germany - Catholic groups in the Prussian Diet, Centre Party Germany - The Soest programme and the founding of the Centre party, Centre Party Germany - Kulturkampf, Centre Party Germany - Out of the tower!, Centre Party Germany - In War and Revolution, Centre Party Germany - In the Weimar Republic, Centre Party Germany - The Brüning administration, Centre Party Germany - Between coup d'etat and authoritarian democracy, Centre Party Germany - The Hitler government and new elections, Centre Party Germany - The Enabling Act, Centre Party Germany - The end of the Centre Party, Centre Party Germany - Refounding and post-war history, Centre Party Germany - External link

Centre Party Germany, Centre Party Germany - Between coup d'etat and authoritarian democracy, Centre Party Germany - Catholic groups in the Prussian Diet, Centre Party Germany - External link, Centre Party Germany - In War and Revolution, Centre Party Germany - In the Weimar Republic, Centre Party Germany - Kulturkampf, Centre Party Germany - Origins of Political Catholicism, Centre Party Germany - Out of the tower!, Centre Party Germany - Refounding and post-war history, Centre Party Germany - The Brüning administration, Centre Party Germany - The Enabling Act, Centre Party Germany - The Hitler government and new elections, Centre Party Germany - The Soest programme and the founding of the Centre party, Centre Party Germany - The end of the Centre Party

Centre Party Germany: Encyclopedia II - Centre Party Germany - In War and Revolution



Centre Party Germany - In War and Revolution

The party supported the government upon the outbreak of World War I, but it also used the debates about war bonds to push for a repeal of the last remnants of anti-Jesuit laws. As the war continued, many of the leaders of the Centre's left wing, particularly Matthias Erzberger, came to support a negotiated settlement, and Erzberger was key in the passage of the Reichstag Peace Resolution of 1917. The same year, the Centre's Georg Count Hertling, formerly Prime Minister of Bavaria, was appointed Chancellor, but he could not overcome the dominance of the military leadership of Hindenburg and Ludendorff. When a parliamentary system of government was introduced in October 1918, the new chancellor Max von Baden appointed representatives from the Centre party, the Social Democrats and the left-liberals as ministers.

After the fall of the monarchy, conflict arose between the party and the new Social Democratic government. Adolf Hofmann, the Prussian minister for culture, attempted to decree a total separation of church and state, forcing religion out of schools. This stirred up a wave of protest among the catholic population, and bishops, Catholic organisations and the Centre Party itself united to combat the "red danger". This conflict bridged internal tensions within the party and secured its continual existence despite the turmoil of the revolution.

The party however was weakened by its Bavarian wing splitting off and forming the Bavarian People's Party (BVP), which emphasized autonomy of the states and also took a more conservative course.

In the 1919 elections for the National Assembly the Centre Party gained 91 representatives, being the second largest party after Social Democratic Party of Germany. The Centre's Konstantin Fehrenbach was elected president of the National Assembly. The party actively cooperated with Social Democrats and left-liberal DDP in drawing up the Weimar Constitution, which guaranteed what the Centre had fought for since its founding, namely liberty, equality and autonomy of the Catholic religion and of the Roman Catholic Church in the whole of Germany. The party was less successful in the school question, for though religious education remained an ordinary subject in most schools, the comprehensive, inter-denominational schools became default.

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article "In War and Revolution", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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