In the
German Revolution of 1918–19, the "imperialist" black, white, and red were abandoned in favour of the "democratic" black, red, and gold colours of 1848. In view of Germany's unfortunate position after the lost war and under the terms of the
Versailles Treaty, monarchist and
German National forces advocated the retention of the imperial colours as a matter of national pride. Since then, and up to today, black, white, and red are often associated with right wing radicalism because of their use by right wing parties and in
far-right circles.
Weimar Republic Though even liberal deputies in the
Weimar National Assembly spoke against a change of colours, Article 3 of the
German Constitution of 11 August 1919 determined black, red, and gold both for the tricolour national flag and the eagle coat of arms of the
Weimar Republic. Considering the preceding debates however, the former black, white, and red colours were retained as the German
civil ensign, with black, red, and gold in the upper left corner. Not until 1922, the
Reichskriegsflagge banner was officially outlawed on ships of the
German Navy. The official black, red, and gold colours were refused by wide circles in the
Reichswehr armed forces and World War I veterans' associations. The issue of the national colours was, however, continuously debated in the German society.
Studentenverbindung organisations emphasized the
Greater German meaning of black, red, and gold, which had actually been frustrated by the
Allied Powers prohibiting the accession of
German-Austria to Germany. Most of the
centrist political parties were in favour of the new colours, but many people of different political views still felt that black, white, and red were the true colours of Germany. The flag of the Weimar Republic was insulted by conservatives and nationalists,
Communists and
Nazis alike, who sometimes referred to it as "black-red-yellow" or even "black-red-mustard", if not even worse. In 1921, even
Gustav Stresemann, chairman of the national liberal
German People's Party argued for the reintroduction of black, white, and red. In May 1926, the German government of Chancellor
Hans Luther had to resign after a quarrel over the display of flags at German embassies. To encounter antidemocratic forces, the
Reichsbanner Schwarz-Rot-Gold society was founded by members of the
Social Democratic Party of Germany, the Catholic
Centre Party, and the liberal
German Democratic Party in 1924. Led by the Social Democrat
Otto Hörsing, the defined goal of the organisation was to defend the colours and the
parliamentary values they represented. Initially a league of World War I veterans, the
Reichsbanner soon evolved to a
mass organisation with a membership of more than three million. Increasingly attacked by the
Sturmabteilung,
Der Stahlhelm paramilitary groups, it joined forces with the
Allgemeiner Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund and
Allgemeiner freier Angestelltenbund trade unions to form the democratic
Iron Front. With the Weimar democracy, the black, red, and gold colours went down fighting.
Nazi rule Upon the
Nazi Party's
Machtergreifung when
Adolf Hitler came to power in January 1933, the "democratic" colours quickly fell out of use, though they were not officially abolished. The Nazis preferred the old imperial colours of black, white, and red, and then their own party symbol, the
swastika flag, which also used a combination of black, white, and red colours, but not in the same way as the old
flag of the German Empire. Instead, red was the dominant colour. Hitler added new symbolism to the colours, stating that "[t]he red expressed the social thought underlying the movement. White the national thought", and that the black
swastika was an emblem of the "
Aryan race" and "the ideal of creative work which is in itself and always will be
anti-Semitic." The black-red-gold tricolour flag of the Weimar Republic was banned on 14 March 1933 and initially replaced by the old black-white-red tricolour of the German Empire as the national flag. At the same time, the swastika flag of the Nazi Party was introduced as the official flag, mandatory for use in parallel with the national flag. The quickness with which the change of the national colours took place was evidenced by the fact that Reich President
Paul von Hindenburg by order of 7 March 1933, just two days after the
German federal election, instructed the authorities to fly black-white-red flags as official decorations on for the upcoming
Volkstrauertag public holiday (13 March). After Hindenburg's death on 2 August 1934, Hitler styled himself
Führer and
Reich Chancellor. The position of the Nazi Party seemed so solid that further measures could be taken towards the unification of party and state. In the course of this unification, the Nazi swastika flag was elevated to the rank of the national flag of Nazi Germany. The main reason for this change is said to have been that on 26 July 1935 in
New York a group of anti-Nazi demonstrators boarded the
SS Bremen, tore the Nazi flag from the
jackstaff and threw it into the
Hudson River. The German ambassador sharply protested, but the protest was rejected, with the statement that only a political party symbol was desacrated and the national flag was not affected. On 15 September 1935, in response to this incident, the
Reichsflaggengesetz (Reich Flag Law) came into effect, declaring the Nazi Party swastika to be the national flag and civil ensign of Germany and banning usage of the black, white, and red flag of the German Empire because of its "
reactionary nature". National conservative protests had become silent. In a speech,
Reichstag president
Hermann Göring called the black, white, and red flag of the German Empire a "honorably pulled down".
Post-war in front of the
Reichstag in
Berlin on 3 October 1990. After
World War II, Germany was occupied and divided. Both new states founded in 1949, the
Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) and the
German Democratic Republic (East Germany), once again took up the "democratic" colours of black, red, and gold from the Weimar Republic, with the GDR modifying it by adding their own socialist symbols to
their flag in 1959. As a compromise, the Olympic
United Team of Germany, which had first competed in 1956, had to add white Olympic rings to the flag for the games of 1960 and 1964, and also for 1968 when two separate German teams entered under common symbols. After the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, East German citizens cut out the socialist symbols of the East German flag in order to show support for a unification with West Germany, which had also continued the use of the traditional eagle coat of arms, called
Bundesadler. In the Federal Republic of Germany (since 1949), and especially after the 1960s, only very
far-right parties use black, white, and red, especially radical conservatives and
neo-Nazis.
Right-wing populist and
national conservative parties, for example
The Republicans, pointedly display black, red, and gold in their logo. Beside the right-wing extremists only the very small group of
monarchists display the old colours. == Use of colours in sports ==