The
Left was at the time also called the "Wholes", and consisted of a coalition of extreme and moderate republicans.
Centralmärzverein The Centralmärzverein was founded on 21 November 1848 with a stated goal to protect the "March achievements." It was formed out of the Donnersberg faction together with Deutscher Hof and Westendhall members (see below). The Centralmärzverein faction dominated the Rump Parliament during the last period of the revolution, and after the various uprisings of 1849 were suppressed, its many clubs were banned throughout Germany.
Deutscher Hof Deutscher Hof was one of the original factions. Its members were left-wingers who advocated a democratic republic with universal direct suffrage and equal rights for all nationalities. Beginning in May 1849, when both liberals and conservatives were becoming disenchanted with the Frankfurt parliament and abandoning it, it dominated the Märzverein. Most of the Deutscher Hof deputies also participated in the rump parliament in
Stuttgart that followed, and supported and in some cases participated in the revolutions in
Baden and
Saxony. Members included
Theodor Reh and
Wilhelm Loewe, each of whom became President of the Assembly after having left it for more moderate groups, and also
Robert Blum,
Johann Adam von Itzstein,
Johann Jacoby,
Georg Friedrich Kolb,
Franz Raveaux,
Friedrich Schüler,
Carl Vogt, and
Franz Jacob Wigard.
Donnersberg Donnersberg was a radical left-wing faction that split off from the Deutscher Hof faction that split off in September 1848, led by
Friedrich Karl Biedermann, Georg Friedrich Kolb,
Gabriel Riesser, and Wilhelm Loewe. They objected to Robert Blum's policy of involvement in Austrian politics. Members of the faction were prominent in the campaign to implement the
Frankfurt Constitution and in the rump parliament in Stuttgart. The group met in the
Nürnberger Hof, which was where merchants from
Nuremberg stayed while attending the
Frankfurt Trade Fair and was the largest such establishment in the
Old City. It consisted of several medieval buildings around a central courtyard that had originally been an alley and that were unified in 1485. All but the north and south entrances was destroyed in the 20th century.
Westendhall The Westendhall faction formed in July 1848 as a more left-wing offshoot of the centrist Württemberger Hof. The members supported the Frankfurt Constitution and were thus in effect republicans, but pragmatically lent some of their support to the position of the Casino faction, supporting hereditary
monarchy in the decisive vote. They were denigrated by the Left as
Linke im Frack (
frock-coated leftwingers). The group was led by
Heinrich Simon and also included
Gottlob Friedrich Federer,
Wilhelm Heinrich Murschel,
Franz Raveaux,
Adolph Gottlieb Ferdinand Schoder,
Jodocus Donatus Hubertus Temme,
Friedrich Wilhelm Schulz, and
Friedrich Theodor Vischer. They met at a hotel called Westendhall, which was located against the city walls between two stations, the Taunusbahnhof and the Main-Weser-Bahnhof. All these buildings have now been demolished. ==The Liberal Center==