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Rural protest in the Weimar Republic

Rural Protest in the Weimar Republic

The Free Peasantry in the Rhineland and Bavaria

By Jonathan Osmond

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Publish Date

1993

Publisher

Palgrave Macmillan

Language

eng

Pages

224

Description:

After the First World War peasants in south and west Germany campaigned to defend their economic position. They did so on their own account and not as tools of the Prussian Junkers. One radical organisation was the Free Peasantry, which thrived in the Bavarian Palatinate on the Rhine and led agitation further north and in southern Bavaria. Its peasant demagogues whipped up strong feelings in the farmers and wine-growers about state agricultural policy and parliamentary government. The results were peasant refusal to deliver produce, angry marches on government offices, and mass ceremonies to symbolise the peasants' plight. One political consequence was a separatist putsch in the Palatinate, followed by the gory assassination of the Free Peasant president by German nationalist paramilitaries. Another was a growing link between peasant discontent and the appeal of Hitler. The Nazis took over all the peasant organisations, including what remained of the Free Peasantry, and destroyed them.