When the revolutionary upsurge revived in the spring of 1849, the uprisings started in
Elberfeld in the Rhineland on 6 May 1849. However, the uprisings soon spread to the Grand Duchy of
Baden, when a riot broke out in
Karlsruhe. The state of Baden and the
Palatinate (then part of the
Kingdom of Bavaria) were separated only by the Rhine. The uprising in Baden and the Palatinate took place largely in the Rhine Valley along their mutual border, and are considered aspects of the same movement. In May 1849, the Grand Duke was forced to leave Karlsruhe, Baden and seek help from Prussia. Provisional governments were declared in both the Palatinate and Baden. In Baden conditions for the provisional government were ideal: the public and army were both strongly in support of constitutional change and democratic reform in the government. The army strongly supported the demands for a constitution; the state had amply supplied arsenals, and a full exchequer. The Palatinate did not have the same conditions. , 14 June 1849 The Palatinate traditionally contained more upper-class citizens than other areas of Germany, and they resisted the revolutionary changes. In the Palatinate, the army did not support the revolution, and it was not well supplied. When the insurrectionary government took over in the Palatinate, they did not find a fully organized state or a full exchequer. Arms in the Palatinate were limited to privately held muskets, rifles and sporting guns. The provisional government of the Palatinate sent agents to France and Belgium to purchase arms but they were unsuccessful. France banned sales and export of arms to either Baden or the Palatinate. The provisional government first appointed
Joseph Martin Reichard, a lawyer, democrat and deputy in the Frankfurt Assembly, as the head of the military department in the Palatinate. The first Commander in Chief of the military forces of the Palatinate was
Daniel Fenner von Fenneberg, a former Austrian officer who commanded the national guard in Vienna during the 1848 uprising. He was soon replaced by
Felix Raquilliet, a former Polish staff general in the
Polish insurgent army of 1830–1831. Finally
Ludwik Mieroslawski was given supreme command of the armed forces in the Palatinate, and
Franz Sznayde was given field command of the troops. Other noteworthy military officers serving the provisional government in the city of
Kaiserslautern, were
Friedrich Strasser,
Alexander Schimmelpfennig, Captain Rudolph von Manteuffel, Albert Clement, Herr
Zychlinski,
Friedrich von Beust,
Eugen Oswald,
Amand Goegg,
Gustav Struve,
Otto Julius Bernhard von Corvin-Wiersbitzki,
Joseph Moll,
Johann Gottfried Kinkel, Herr
Mersy, Karl Emmermann,
Franz Sigel, Major
Nerlinger,
Colonel Kurz, Friedrich Karl, Franz Hecker and
Herman von Natzmer. Hermann von Natzmer was the former Prussian officer who had been in charge of the arsenal of
Berlin. Refusing to shoot insurgent forces who stormed the arsenal on 14 June 1848, Natzmer became a hero to insurgents across Germany. He was sentenced to 15 years in prison for refusing orders to shoot, but in 1849, he escaped prison and fled to the Palatinate to join its insurgent forces.
Gustav Adolph Techow, a former Prussian officer, also joined Palatinate forces. Organizing the artillery and providing services in the ordnance shops was Lieutenant Colonel
Freidrich Anneke. He was a member of the
Communist League and one of the founders of the Cologne Workers Association in 1848, editor of the and a member of the Rhenish District Committee of Democrats. Democrats of the Palatinate and across Germany considered the Baden-Palatinate insurrection to be part of the wider all-German struggle for constitutional rights. Franz Sigel, a second lieutenant in the Baden army, a democrat and a supporter of the provisional government, developed a plan to protect the reform movement in Karlsruhe and the Palatinate. He recommended using a corps of the Baden army to advance on the town of
Hechingen and declare the Hohenzollern Republic, then to march on
Stuttgart. After inciting Stuttgart and the surrounding
Kingdom of Württemberg, the military corps would march to
Nuremberg and set up camp in the state of
Franconia. Sigel failed to account for dealing with the separate
Free City of Frankfurt, the home of the Frankfurt Assembly, in order to establish an All-German character to the military campaign for the German constitution. burns, 15 June 1849. Despite Sigel's plan, the new insurgent government did not go on the offensive. The uprising in Karlsruhe and the Grand Duchy of Baden was eventually suppressed by the
Bavarian Army.
Lorenz Peter Brentano, a lawyer and democrat from Baden, headed its government, wielding absolute power. He appointed
Karl Eichfeld as War Minister. Later, Eichfeld was replaced as War Minister by
Rudolph Mayerhofer.
Florian Mördes was appointed as Minister of the Interior. Other members of the provisional government included
Joseph Fickler, a journalist and a democrat from Baden. Leaders of the constitutional forces in Baden included
Karl Blind, a journalist and a democrat in Baden; and Gustav Struve, another journalist and democrat from Baden.
John Phillip Becker was placed in charge of the peoples' militia. Ludwik Mieroslawski, a Polish-born national who had taken part in the military operations during the Polish uprising of 1830–1831, was placed in charge of the military operation on the Palatinate side of the Rhine River. Brentano ordered the day-to-day affairs of the uprising in Baden, and Mieroslawski directed a military command on the Palatinate side. They did not coordinate well. For example, Mieroslawski decided to abolish the long-standing toll on the Mannheim-Ludwigshaven bridge over the Rhine River. It was not collected on the Palatinate side, but Brentano's government collected it on the Baden side. Due to the continued lack of coordination, Mieroslawski lost battles in Waghausle and Ubstadt in Baden. He and his troops were forced to retreat across the mountains of southern Baden, where they fought a last battle against the Prussians in the town of
Murg, on the frontier between Baden and
Switzerland. Mieroslawski and the other survivors of the battle escaped across the frontier to Switzerland, and the commander went into exile in Paris.
Frederick Engels took part in the uprising in Baden and the Palatinate. On 10 May 1848, he and
Karl Marx traveled from
Cologne, Germany, to observe the events of the region. From 1 June 1848, Engels and Marx became editors of the . Less than a year later, on 19 May 1849, the Prussian authorities closed down the newspaper because of its support for constitutional reforms. In late 1848, Marx and Engels intended to meet with
Karl Ludwig Johann D'Ester, then serving as a member of the provisional government in Baden and the Palatinate. He was a physician, democrat and socialist who had been a member of the Cologne community chapter of the Communist League. D'Ester had been elected as a deputy to the
Prussian National Assembly in 1848. D'Ester had been elected to the Central committee of the German Democrats, together with
Reichenbach and
Hexamer, at the Second Democratic Congress held in Berlin from 26 October through 30 October 1848. Because of his commitments to the provisional government, D'Ester was unable to attend an important meeting in Paris on behalf of the German Central Committee. He wanted to provide Marx with the mandate to attend the meeting in his place. Marx and Engels met with D'Ester in the town of
Kaiserslautern. Marx obtained the mandate and headed off to Paris. Engels remained in the Palatinate, where in 1849 he joined citizens at the barricades of Elberfeld in the Rhineland, preparing to fight the Prussian troops expected to attack the uprising. On his way to Elberfeld, Engels took two cases of rifle cartridges which had been gathered by the workers of
Solingen, when those workers had stormed the arsenal at
Gräfrath. The Prussian troops arrived and crushed the uprising in August 1849. Engels and some others escaped to Kaiserslautern. While in Kaiserslautern on 13 June 1849, Engels joined an 800-member group of workers being formed as a military corps by
August Willich, a former Prussian military officer. He was also a member of the Communist League and supported revolutionary change in Germany. The newly formed Willich Corps combined with other revolutionary groups to form an army of about 30,000 strong; it fought to resist the highly trained Prussian troops. Engels fought with the Willich Corps for their entire campaign in the Palatinate. The Prussians defeated this revolutionary army at the
Battle of Rinnthal, and the survivors of Willich's Corps crossed over the frontier into the safety of Switzerland. Engels did not reach Switzerland until 25 July 1849. He sent word of his survival to Marx and friends and comrades in London, England. A refugee in Switzerland, Engels began to write about his experiences during the revolution. He published the article, "The Campaign for the German Imperial Constitution." Due to the Prussian Army's ease in crushing the uprising, many South German states came to believe that Prussia, not Austria, was going to be the new power in the region. The suppression of the uprising in Baden and the Palatinate was the end of the German revolutionary uprisings that had begun in the spring of 1848. == Prussia ==