Creation On 18 August 1866, Prussia and fifteen north and central German states signed the
North German Confederation Treaty. It created an "offensive and defensive alliance for the preservation of the independence and integrity, as well as the internal and external security of their states". It was to last for a maximum of one year, although less if a "new federal relationship" was agreed on sooner. The federal relationship was to be defined by a constitution based on the Prussian proposal for a federal state of June 1866. All the states were to send delegates to Berlin to draft the constitution and at the same time to order that elections for representatives to a parliament be held on the basis of the Imperial Election Law of 12 April 1849. Prussia annexed outright four of its former opponents in the war.
Hanover, the
Electorate of Hesse (Hesse-Kassel),
Nassau and
Frankfurt, along with the
Hesse-Homburg area of the
Grand Duchy of Hesse, were combined into the two new Prussian provinces of
Hanover and
Hesse-Nassau. Four other states that had fought for Austria – the northern part of Hesse,
Reuss-Greiz,
Saxe-Meiningen and the
Kingdom of Saxony – became part of the North German Confederation, but not of Prussia, through individual treaties.
Mecklenburg-Schwerin and
Mecklenburg-Strelitz also joined by treaty. Schleswig and Holstein became the Prussian
Province of Schleswig-Holstein.
East Prussia,
Posen and
West Prussia, which had not been part of the German Confederation even though they were
provinces of the Kingdom of Prussia, also became part of the new north German alliance. The North German Confederation was the earliest
continual legal predecessor of the modern German nation-state known today as the
Federal Republic of Germany.
Federal constitution The election for the constituent
North German Reichstag took place on 12 February 1867. The 297 seats were divided among more than a dozen parties, with the largest shares going to the
National Liberal Party (78 seats), the
Conservative Party (63 seats) and the
Free Conservative Party (39 seats). The National Liberals were able to form a majority coalition with the Free Conservatives,
Old Liberals and a handful of independents. The draft of a constitution that adhered to guidelines set by Otto von Bismarck was waiting for the delegates when they convened on 24 February 1867. In its fundamental form, the draft proposed a federal state led by Prussia. Most delegates were favorable to federalism, although some National Liberals and most of the liberal
Progress Party fought unsuccessfully for a unitary state. The constituent Reichstag modified the draft to give the chancellor more power and made the military subject to the budgetary oversight of the legislature. The revised constitution was passed on 16 April 1867 by a vote of 230 to 53. Voting against were the Progress Party, many Catholics,
August Bebel – a founder of one of the predecessors to the
Social Democratic Party – and the Polish Reichstag members. After the constitution had been approved by the parliaments of the constituent states, it went into effect on 1 July 1867. Two weeks later,
King Wilhelm I appointed Bismarck chancellor of the Confederation. Since Bismarck wanted a loosely organized confederation in which sovereignty rested with the individual states as a whole, the Bundesrat, the body representing the states, constituted the Confederation's sovereign. Its members were chosen by the states' governments. The members of the lower house of parliament, the
Reichstag, were elected by
universal manhood suffrage. The Reichstag participated on an equal footing with the Bundesrat in legislation. Laws had to pass both houses by a majority vote in order to be adopted. The chancellor, who presided over the Bundesrat, was appointed and dismissed by the king of Prussia and was responsible only to him. The king was head of state and was responsible for executing federal laws passed by the parliament but had no veto right. He was also commander-in-chief of the federal army and navy and could declare war and make peace. The Confederation was dominated by Prussia. It had four-fifths of the Confederation's territory and population, more than the other 21 members combined. The Prussian king was head of state, and Bismarck, along with being the Confederation's chancellor, was also prime minister and foreign minister of Prussia. In that role he instructed the Prussian votes in the Bundesrat. The constitution gave Prussia just 17 of 43 votes (40%) in the Bundesrat, but it could form a majority by making alliances with the smaller states. Since it took a two-thirds majority (29 votes) to pass a constitutional amendment, Prussia could also block any major changes it did not want. ==Life of the nation-state==