Armistice By the autumn of 1918, Germany's position in the war was becoming untenable. The massive
German spring offensive had been an unmitigated disaster, whereas the Allied
counterattack, the
Hundred Days Offensive, had driven the German Army back to its own borders. On 6 November, von Tessmar announced the full withdrawal of German soldiers from Luxembourg. Five days after von Tessmar's announcement, Germany
signed an armistice, which brought an end to the war of four years. One of the terms of the armistice involved the withdrawal of German soldiers from Luxembourg, along with the other occupied countries. The Allied powers agreed that the German withdrawal from Luxembourg would be observed by the United States, and that the United States would receive the honour of liberating the captive country. On 18 November, American
General John Joseph "Black Jack" Pershing,
Commander-in-Chief (C-in-C) of the
American Expeditionary Force (AEF) on the Western Front, issued a
proclamation to the people of Luxembourg, stating that the United States' new
Third Army would move through Luxembourg to occupy the German Rhineland, but that the Americans would come as allies and as liberators, at
Echternach, and becoming amongst the first Allied soldiers to enter Germany after the armistice. The following day, American soldiers crossed the Franco–Luxembourgish border. They were fêted as liberators, in the spirit that Pershing had intended to inspire, and were met by bands and civilians waving flags, and were adorned with flowers.
Luc Housse, the
Mayor of Luxembourg City, told the advancing American army that the Germans had, on the whole, been disciplined and well-behaved in the previous three weeks, a marked improvement upon his numerous complaints earlier in the conflict.
Rebellion Although the Allies were satisfied at this remedy, at the time, the Luxembourgish government was threatened by a communist insurgency. After the retreat of the German army, revolutionaries established
Russian-influenced
Workers' councils across Luxembourg. On 10 November, the day after
Karl Liebknecht and
Rosa Luxemburg declared a similar '
socialist republic' in Germany, communists in Luxembourg City declared a republic, but it lasted for only a matter of hours. Another revolt took place in Esch-sur-Alzette in the early hours of 11 November, but also failed. The socialists had been fired up by the behaviour of Grand Duchess Marie-Adélaïde, whose interventionist and obstructive streak had stymied even Eyschen. On 12 November, socialist and liberal politicians, finding their old commonality on the issue, called for her
abdication. A motion in the Chamber of Deputies demanding the abolition of the monarchy was defeated by 21 votes to 19 (with 3 abstentions), but the Chamber did demand the government hold a popular
referendum on the issue. However, by January, the vacuum left by the German withdrawal had been filled by American and French soldiers.
President of the Chamber François Altwies asked French troops to intervene. Eager to put an end to what it perceived to be pro-Belgian revolutions, the French army crushed the would-be revolutionaries. Nonetheless, the disloyalty shown by her own armed forces was too much for Marie-Adélaïde, who abdicated in favour of her sister,
Charlotte. The dynasty's hold on power would be tenuous until September 1919, when a referendum on the future of the Grand Duchy found 77.8% in favour of continued rule by the
House of Nassau-Weilburg.
Paris Peace Conference Despite the armistice ending the war, and the end of the revolts, Luxembourg's own future was still uncertain. Belgium was one of the countries hit hardest by the war; almost the whole of the country was occupied by Germany, and over 43,000 Belgians, including 30,000 civilians, had died as a result. Belgium sought compensation, and had its eye on any and all of its neighbours; in November 1918,
Lord Hardinge, the
Permanent Secretary at the
Foreign Office, told the Dutch ambassador in London, "The Belgians are on the make, and they want to grab whatever they can." , ending the First World War and cementing Luxembourg's independence From early 1919, Belgium engaged in a propaganda campaign to promote its vision of annexation. The effects of these treaties' revocation were then explicitly stated; Luxembourg would withdraw from the
Zollverein, Germany would lose its right to use the Luxembourgish railways, and Germany was obligated to recognise the termination of Luxembourg's neutrality, thus validating the actions of the Luxembourgish government since the armistice. Furthermore, to prevent economic
embargo after the end of the customs union, the treaty allowed Luxembourg an indefinite option on German coal, and prohibited Germany from levying
duty on Luxembourgish exports until 1924. == Luxembourgers overseas ==