Franz Josef Heinz

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Franz Josef Heinz (second from left) and members of his cabinet, 1923

Franz Josef Heinz, known as Heinz-Orbis, (25 February 1884 - 9 January 1924) was a Palatine separatist who briefly led the government of the "Autonomous Palatinate" during the French occupation of the Rhineland. He was assassinated by German nationalists in 1924.

Heinz came from the town of Orbis in Northern Palatinate, later using the town as part of his name. He was a farmer and became a leader of the free peasantry and the founder of the Palatine Corps.

In the aftermath of World War I, France occupied the Rhineland. Along with some other members of the liberal German People's Party (DVP), Heinz saw this as an opportunity to reject the Prussian militarist state. In 1920 he became a member of the Palatine district council, arguing for greater automomy in the area.

By 1923 a separatist movement for a Rhenish Republic in the occupied Rhineland territory had developed, encouraged by the French. In August 1923 a republic was proclaimed under Josef Friedrich Matthes of the Rhenish Independence League. In November Heinz proclaimed the "Government of the Autonomous Palatinate in the Association of the Rhenish Republic", based in Speyer. The aim was to create an independent state, adjoining France. The new government adopted a currency based on the French franc, which it promised would deal with the problem of the current hyperinflation in the Weimar Republic.[1]

With the approval of the Bavarian government, a troop of enemies of the separatists under the command of Edgar Julius Jung planned to assassinate Heinz. After part of his farm in Orbis was set on fire, Heinz predicted that an attempt would be made to murder him.[2] On 9 January 1924 Jung's troop of around twenty nationalists forced their way into the dining room of the Speyer Wittelsbacher Hof hotel and shot Heinz dead. In the shoot-out, one of his staff and another hotel guest were also killed, along with two assassins.[3] The deaths signalled the end of the independence movement. Clashes between nationalists and separatists followed, leading to a number of other deaths, notably in Pirmasens where 12 separatists trapped in a building were burned out and then massacred.[4]

A monument was later put up in the Speyer cemetery to the two murderers who died in the shoot-out after the assassination.

References

  1. Celia Applegate, A Nation of Provincials: The German Idea of Heimat, University of California Press, 1990, p.145.
  2. Gauch, Sigfrid, Traces of my Father, Northwestern University Press, pp.77-8.
  3. Die Pfalz unter französischer Besatzung, Wilhelm Kreutz/Karl Scherer, S. 72
  4. Margaret Pawley, The Watch on the Rhine: The Military Occupation of the Rhineland, I.B.Tauris, 2007, p.75.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.