Sedantag

Sedantag
Date around the second September
Frequency (1871–1918)
Illuminated Brandenburg Gate on Sedantag in 1898
Sedantag in Schüttorf in 1895
Sedantag in Berlin in 1914
The exhibited trophies of Sedan Festival (Lübeck)

Day of Sedan (German: Sedantag) was a semi-official memorial holiday in the German Empire celebrated on the second of September to commemorate King Wilhelm of Prussia's victory in the Battle of Sedan (1870). After the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War a few weeks earlier, French emperor Napoleon III and his army were taken prisoner in the fortress of Sedan by Prussian troops, a major step to eventual victory.

In 1871, the now united Germans could hardly agree on a common German holiday, as most were related to the Prussian royal family. While the German Emperor and Empire was proclaimed on 18 January 1871, the Prussians themselves held the first coronation of a Prussian king on the same day in 1701 in higher esteem. The signing of the final peace Treaty of Frankfurt, several months later on 10 May 1871, was also not unequivocally welcomed. The southern states of Bavaria, Baden and Württemberg preferred to celebrate the victories in battles to which their troops had contributed significantly, like the Battle of Wörth which had occurred already on 6 August 1870.

While never proclaimed officially, participation and official support for Sedantag celebrations varied over time, and working class leaders never really accepted it, Sedantag became a de facto national holiday, last celebrated in 1918.

After the Treaty of Versailles had been signed in mid 1919, on 27 August 1919 the Innenministerium of the Weimar Republic declared that no further Sedantag celebrations should take place.

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