Philipp Scheidemann

Philipp Scheidemann
10th Chancellor of Germany
In office
February 13 – June 20, 1919
Preceded by Friedrich Ebert
Succeeded by Gustav Bauer
Personal details
Born 26 July 1865(1865-07-26)
Died 29 November 1939(1939-11-29) (aged 74)
Political party SPD

Philipp Scheidemann (26 July 1865, Kassel, Hesse-Kassel – 29 November 1939 Copenhagen) was a German Social Democratic politician, who proclaimed the Republic on 9 November 1918, and who became the second Chancellor of the Weimar Republic.

He was by trade a printer, but in 1895 took to editing socialist newspapers, first at Giessen and afterwards successively at Nuremberg, Offenbach and Kassel.[1] Scheidemann became a Reichstag delegate from Solingen for the Social Democrats in 1903, and soon rose to be one of the principal leaders of the party. During the First World War, Scheidemann, along with Friedrich Ebert was leader of the majority faction of the party, which continued to vote for war credits, limiting his opposition to the war to urging the negotiation of a compromise peace. In June 1918, Scheidemann was elected vice-president of the Reichstag.[1] When the Social Democrats were included in the cabinet for the first time in Prince Max of Baden's government in October 1918, Scheidemann entered the government as a minister without portfolio.

Following the Kaiser's abdication on November 9, Prince Max resigned in favour of Ebert. Although the new government intended to support a constitutional monarchy, probably in the person of one of the Kaiser's grandsons, Scheidemann, concerned in the face of a possible workers' revolution in Berlin, unilaterally proclaimed the Republic from a balcony in the Reichstag building. The timing of this proclamation was probably due to the expectation of a similar proclamation of a "Workers' Republic" by the communists led by Karl Liebknecht, which indeed followed a couple hours later.

Scheidemann continued to serve as a leader in the Provisional Government which followed for the next several months, and following the meeting of the National Assembly in Weimar in February 1919, Ebert was appointed Reich President, and Scheidemann became Chancellor, in the Weimar Coalition with the German Democratic Party and the Catholic Center Party. Scheidemann resigned in June along with the DDP owing to disagreement with the Treaty of Versailles, and never again served in the government, although he remained active in politics, serving as Mayor of Kassel (1920-1925), and then again as a Reichstag delegate, where he exposed military opposition to the Republic. Scheidemann went into exile following the Nazi takeover in 1933, and died in Denmark shortly after the outbreak of the Second World War.

Cabinet February 1919 - June 1919

Changes

References

  1. ^ a b  "Scheidemann, Philipp". Encyclopædia Britannica (12th ed.). 1922. 

External links

Political offices
Preceded by
Wilhelm Solf
Colonial Minister of Germany
1918–1919
Succeeded by
Johannes Bell
Preceded by
Siegfried Graf von Roedern
Finance Minister of Germany
1918–1919
Succeeded by
Eugen Schiffer
Preceded by
Friedrich Ebert
Chancellor of Germany
1919
Succeeded by
Gustav Bauer