French occupation of Frankfurt

French occupation of Frankfurt occurred from 6 April to 17 May 1920 as part of the Allied occupation of the Rhineland. The principal city occupied was Frankfurt, but the French also occupied Dieburg, Darmstadt, Hanau and Homburg. The occupation was in response to the mobilisation of armed forces by the government of Hermann Müller to suppress the Ruhr Uprising - which in turn was part of a widespread strike movement which defeated the Kapp Putsch.

Tricolour flying over the Imperial Hotel, Opernplatz, in front of the Alte Oper, Frankfurt

French economic concerns

On 20 January 1920 Alexandre Millerand succeeded Georges Clemenceau as Prime Minister of France. On 31 January he attended the first meeting of the Conseil supérieur de la guerre since the armistice and enquired whether the French Army was capable of occupying the Ruhr. Edmond Buat, the Chief of Staff of the French Army, replied this would only be possible with the mobilisation of reserves.[1]

The Kapp Putsch

The Kapp Putsch was an attempted coup on 13 March 1920 by parts of the Reichswehr (military), the Freikorps and other conservative, nationalist and monarchist factions. They aimed to undo the German Revolution of 1918–1919, overthrow the Weimar Republic and establish a right-wing autocratic government in its place.

The French justification for the occupation

The French claimed that Articles 42 to 44 of the peace treaty of Versailles concerning the demilitarisation of the Rhineland had been broken.[2] These had designated a neutral zone 50 kilometres deep on the left bank of the Rhine. In this area any construction of fortifications or any military maneuvers were strictly forbidden, it being further specified that any breach would "be regarded as committing a hostile act against the Powers signatory of the present Treaty and as calculated to disturb the peace of the world." When the German Army sent 7,000 troops into the areas north of the River Lippe, the French government concluded that this was a breach of the treaty, and promptly responded by sending their own troops into the Neutral Zone.[3]:228

Hauptwache incident

Photograph from L'Illustration, 1920. The morning of 7 April, before the clash which took place early that afternoon.

On 7 April, some Moroccan soldiers of the 3rd Moroccan Tirailleurs Regiment were stationed at the Hauptwache in the centre of Frankfurt. Originally they were surrounded by a curious crowd. However the situation deteriorated and the troops opened fire with a machine gun. This led to nine people being killed and twenty six wounded.[4] The following day, when newspaper publishing was recommenced, the Mayor Georg Voigt, the Police Chief Ehler and the President of the Alternative Government, Cossman, issued a call for calm.[5]

gollark: I'm sure it's solvable, but LAZINESS!
gollark: See, this is why PotatOS ends up just cloning the bare minimum from the actual environment.
gollark: `os.run`?
gollark: I mean, it should be possible to just reload that and not everything, at least.
gollark: Unfortunately it seemed when I was testing it (with a setup running some coroutines sandboxed and some unsandboxed) that it did not work.

References

  1. McDougall, Walter A. (2015). France's Rhineland Policy, 1914-1924: The Last Bid for a Balance of Power in Europe. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9781400870219. Retrieved 28 August 2018.
  2. "French march into Germany". The Times. 7 April 1920. p. 10.
  3. "The Labor Revolt in Germany". Current History. XII No. 3 (May 1920): 224–231. 1920.
  4. "Tote und Verletzte an der Frankfurter Hauptwache, 7. April 1920sen". lagis-hessen.de (in German). Hessisches Landesamt für geschichtliche Landeskunde. Retrieved 25 November 2017.
  5. Gustave Babin (1920). "Aux Bord du Rhin". L'Illustration. 78 Année (17 April 1920, 4024): 229–233.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.