Until late September 1918, the German government had led its citizens to believe that the
Central Powers would be victorious in
World War I. When the
Supreme Army Command abruptly admitted that the war was lost and that Germany needed to sue for peace, the public was deeply shocked. Four years of deprivation, hardship and suffering suddenly appeared to have been in vain, and the public mood rapidly darkened. The discontent in Württemberg became manifest on 4 November 1918 when the communist
Spartacus League sponsored a demonstration in
Stuttgart, Württemberg's capital. Over 10,000 workers marched through the city centre and listened to Fritz Rück, leader of the city's Spartacists, call for the abdication of
Emperor Wilhelm II and Württemberg's King William II. On the same day, a
workers' and soldiers' council was formed at Stuttgart. The council was part of the revolutionary wave that had started in the final days of October when
mutinous sailors sparked the
German revolution by setting up a workers' and soldiers' council at
Kiel and then rapidly spreading them across Germany. In response to the events in both Württemberg and Germany as a whole, the government under Minister President
Karl von Weizsäcker of the
National Liberal Party resigned on 6 November. Three days later, a new State Ministry under
Theodor Liesching of the
Progressive People's Party ordered on behalf of King William that a
constituent state assembly be convened. It was to be elected under universal suffrage and draft a democratic constitution for Württemberg. The announcement was intended to prevent the revolution from breaking out in Stuttgart, but by the time it was made it was already too late.
Revolution in Stuttgart At a demonstration organised jointly by the moderate
Social Democratic Party (SPD) and radical left
Independent Social Democratic Party (USPD) on 9 November, of the SPD proclaimed a "social republic" to a crowd of almost 100,000 in front of the
New Castle in Stuttgart. Some revolutionaries, against the wishes of the demonstration's leaders, forced their way into the King's residence, the
Wilhelm Palais, and replaced the royal standard flying over the building with the red flag of the revolution. A provisional government consisting of members of the SPD and USPD was formed on the same afternoon when news reached Stuttgart that the Social Democrats in Berlin had
proclaimed a German republic.
Wilhelm Blos of the SPD and
Arthur Crispien of the USPD were chosen to be leaders of the new government. Two days later it expanded beyond the socialist parties to include representatives of the liberal
German Democratic Party (DDP) and Catholic
Centre Party. The provisional government's most urgent priorities were security, order, providing the people of Württemberg with sufficient food and other necessities, and reintegrating demobilized soldiers into civilian life. As reports of the revolutionary events in Stuttgart spread, local councils were formed at
Heilbronn,
Ludwigsburg and
Ulm. On 12 November, Stuttgart workers elected a 15-member Greater Stuttgart Council made up of 11 SPD members and four from the USPD. The Württemberg soldiers' councils also chose a majority of SPD representatives when they elected a state committee on 17 November. A state convention of workers' councils on 8 December formed a Württemberg workers' executive committee that gave its support to the provisional government. In an announcement to the people of Württemberg on 30 November, King William II voluntarily abdicated the throne and thanked all those who had served him and Württemberg during his 27-year reign. William was the last of Germany's ruling monarchs to step down from his throne. Even
Emperor Wilhelm II had formally submitted his abdication two days previously. The post-
World War II mayor of Ulm, Theodor Pfizer, summed up the revolution in Württemberg in the following words:The end of the monarchy brought about a turning point but not a profound break in the development of the state and its capital. The [royal] court, uniforms and orders disappeared, but the state apparatus and civil servants remained committed to their duties under the new regime ... The men of the new era, such as the Social Democrats Blos and Keil, were not inclined towards extremes. Perhaps too little room was given to new ideas in the bloodless revolution, and too much was left unchanged. But a profound change of heart was hardly necessary in Württemberg. The conservative citizens of the state who were loyal to the king were, like the king, tolerant and politically liberal, as their fathers had been, even if they voted for conservatives, and they were charitable, anointed with the often-invoked oil of democracy. They remained loyal to the state, even if they often railed against the
Prussians, forgetting that behind the desks and counters in Württemberg sat South Prussians who meticulously enforced the laws that were conceived in Berlin and ridiculed in
Bavaria.
Spartacist uprising and constituent state assembly The
Spartacist uprising, a communist-led putsch against the revolutionary government in Berlin on 5–12 January 1919, was echoed in Stuttgart. A number of deaths occurred on 10 January when insurgents who wanted a soviet-style republic attempted to take control of the printing presses of the , but overall the level of violence did not compare to that in Berlin. Minister President Blos dismissed USPD ministers Crispien and Fischer for their support of the Spartacists and barred the USPD from further participation in his government. The election to the constituent state assembly, which was to write a new constitution for Württemberg, took place on 12 January 1919. Even though the Spartacist uprising was then only just ending, there were no significant incidents that impeded the voting. The SPD, German Democratic Party (DDP) and Centre Party – the three moderate parties of the
Weimar Coalition that built the new government at the national level – took 121 of the 150 seats. The USPD won just 3% of the vote and four seats. Thirteen members of the state assembly were women, among them
Mathilde Planck and
Clara Zetkin. The same dissatisfaction led the
Communist Party of Germany (KPD) in Württemberg to call for a general strike on 31 March. The Württemberg government imposed a state of siege and actively suppressed the general strike in Stuttgart and the surrounding area. In a battle between 400 Spartacists and government forces who deployed artillery, 16 people were killed and 50 wounded. The Württemberg government also sent troops into Bavaria in April 1919 to help Prussian and
Freikorps units put down the
Bavarian Soviet Republic. Württemberg's SPD state chairman spoke out against the move but found no support in the government.
Constitution , Württemberg's first minister president Württemberg's new constitution was adopted by the constituent assembly on 26 April 1919 and came into force on 25 September 1919. It established a republican state with a one-chamber parliament (the
Landtag) whose members were elected by all citizens aged 21 or older who were residents of Württemberg. The
Landtag elected a minister president who headed the government and selected and dismissed the ministers. The government was responsible to the
Landtag. The constitution included an extensive list of rights and duties of the citizens. On 4 October 1919, Wilhelm Blos was sworn in as Württemberg's first minister president. Württemberg's workers' and soldiers' councils, which had by then lost their political significance, were formally abolished when the constitution became effective.After all existing structures had been dismantled, the task was to protect the state from the threat of anarchy and the dictatorship of a violent minority. On the ruins of an old monarchy, a democratic republic in which the people of Württemberg could determine their own future had to be established. In cooperation with the workers' and soldiers' councils, it was possible to defeat the Spartacist coups of the winter and spring. Württemberg also successfully warded off the
Bolshevik threat from Munich. == Weimar Republic ==