Bethmann Hollweg, Theobald von

Bethmann Hollweg, Theobald von
born Nov. 29, 1856, Hohenfinow, Prussia
died Jan. 1, 1921, Hohenfinow, Germany

German politician and chancellor (1909–17).

A member of the civil service, he was appointed Prussian minister of the interior in 1905 and became German chancellor in 1909. Before World War I, he allowed the militarist factions to dominate the government; in 1914 he supported a "blank check" to Austria-Hungary for measures against Serbia. In 1916 he tried to secure the mediation of the U.S. to end the war, but he also failed to restrict submarine warfare. In 1917 he angered conservatives by promises of electoral reforms in Prussia and was forced to resign.

Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg, detail from a portrait by Brant, 1909.

Archiv fur Kunst und Geschichte, Berlin

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▪ German statesman
in full  Theobald Theodor Friedrich Alfred von Bethmann Hollweg  
born November 29, 1856, Hohenfinow, Prussia [now in Germany]
died January 1, 1921, Hohenfinow, Germany
 German imperial chancellor before and during World War I who possessed talents for administration but not for governing.

      A member of a Frankfurt banking family, Bethmann Hollweg studied law at Strassburg, Leipzig, and Berlin and entered the civil service. He was appointed Prussian minister of the interior in 1905 and state secretary in the Imperial Office of the Interior in 1907. He succeeded Bernhard, Fürst (prince) von Bülow (Bülow, Bernhard, Fürst von), who resigned as chancellor on July 14, 1909.

      Bethmann's domestic policies were mildly liberal for their time and place, but he almost invariably yielded to persons more extreme and more forceful than himself. In foreign policy, his negotiations with the British over reduction of naval armaments (March 1909 and February 1912) came to nothing because of the opposition of German admiral Alfred von Tirpitz (Tirpitz, Alfred von), supported by William II (Kaiser [emperor] Wilhelm II). Bethmann's secretary of state, Alfred von Kiderlen-Wächter (Kiderlen-Wächter, Alfred von), created the Moroccan (Agadir) crisis (see Moroccan crises) of July–November 1911, in which Germany backed down before France and Great Britain. Bethmann and Sir Edward Grey (Grey, Sir Edward, 3rd Baronet), the British foreign secretary, worked successfully to prevent the expansion of the Balkan Wars into a major conflict between Austria-Hungary and Russia; this was probably Bethmann's greatest success in foreign affairs.

      At home, the enactment of his legislation for enlarging the army did not reduce anxiety about Germany's international situation. Although he believed that a democratic monarchy based on a Reichstag majority was inevitable, he was not an enthusiast of parliamentary government, and his half-hearted efforts to reform the Prussian suffrage were ineffective.

      Having no desire for war, Bethmann nonetheless is thought to have initiated the July crisis of 1914 with the “blank check” to Austria-Hungary for measures against Serbia. Subsequent German warnings to Austria-Hungary and its prospective opponent Russia could not prevent the outbreak of war. Bethmann capitulated to the German general staff, which wanted war immediately.

      It is no longer universally thought that Bethmann then simply worked for a negotiated peace, with no idea of German annexations, although this was doubtless his own preference. He made more concessions to nationalist-expansionist feeling and to military demands than were once supposed. However, in 1916 he tried to secure the mediation of the United States, and, realizing that U.S. entry into the war would be decisive, he resisted the advocates of unrestricted submarine warfare.

      On April 7, 1917, Bethmann further angered military leaders and civilian conservatives by his promise of electoral reforms in Prussia. In the debates on the peace resolution that was passed by the Reichstag in July 1917, Bethmann was forced to resign; he was replaced by Georg Michaelis (Michaelis, Georg) on July 13. In retirement he wrote Betrachtungen zum Weltkriege (two parts, 1919–21; Eng. trans. of Part I, Reflections on the World War).

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Universalium. 2010.

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