Spread in the urban area Researchers are in dispute as to where exactly the "potato revolution" started. The difficulties here lie in the large-scale distribution of the riots throughout the city and the numerous actions by independent groups. On the morning of April 21, 1847, riots broke out in eight marketplaces in the city at roughly the same time. The centers of these first riots were mostly the outer districts of Berlin, especially
Friedrichstadt,
Rosenthaler Vorstadt and the area to the east of
Alexanderplatz. According to Rüdiger Hachtmann, the "potato revolution" actually began on Belle-Alliance-Platz, today's
Mehringplatz. At a potato stall, a farmer's wife provoked a crowd with " rough answers" to such an extent that several women violently attacked her and stole her potatoes. Manfred Gailus, on the other hand, describes the
Gendarmenmarkt as the starting point of the riots. A crowd had attacked a potato seller because of inflated prices. She fled to a bakery in
Charlottenstraße, which was subsequently besieged, stormed and looted by the crowd. While only the market squares were affected on the morning of April 21, the riot spread to the streets and stores in the city center at midday. The area around the
Berlin Palace and the street
Unter den Linden was seized. "Symbols of state power", churches and bourgeois wealth became the focus of the insurgents on the evening of April 21. The windows of the
Royal Opera House, several luxury hotels, the
Kranzler and
Spargnapani cafés and, more by chance, some windows of the
Prince of Prussia's palace were smashed on , which some contemporaries "probably wrongly" saw as a political protest against its occupant. The windows of churches in the center, such as the Bethlehem Church, and the gas lanterns in
Wilhelmstraße and
Friedrichstraße were also destroyed, so that passers-by - as one contemporary noted - could "only walk on broken glass."
Storming of stores A total of 45 stores were stormed, including 30 bakeries and eleven butcher's shops. An illustrative scene of the riots can be reconstructed from the report of a court hearing: Around noon on April 22, 1847, a crowd gathered in Weberstraße in front of a bakery. In this heated situation, the wife of a locksmith is said to have attracted the attention of the crowd. Not only did she claim that the master baker was baking "the smallest bread", she also accused him of not having distributed any bread yet. The crowd then forced their way into the bakery and the harassed baker lost bread worth around 50 thalers. The store sign was also stolen from him. Throughout the city, the theft of food, especially bread and sausages, could not be stopped. The insurgents did not only steal out of hunger. In some cases, they deliberately destroyed the food, for example "by trampling it and throwing it into the gutter". In this way, they publicly expressed their anger at the methods of the shopkeepers. When storming the stores, the insurgents also damaged or stole "furniture" and "equipment". All doors and windows were smashed and public life came to a standstill: Markets remained deserted, the doors and windows of stores were barricaded with heavy objects. On April 22 and 23, performances in the theaters were canceled. Schools remained closed.
Role of the police and the military It was difficult for the police to intervene quickly for many reasons: the market police and
gendarmerie formally assigned to the area initially underestimated the extent of the unrest, as the different incident locations were spread over a wide area of the city. The soldiers stationed in Berlin were therefore initially not deployed. Although a few soldiers were on duty on the afternoon of April 21, they were overwhelmed by the scale of the uprising. The commander-in-chief of the garrison in Berlin, Prince Wilhelm, was still in the theater for part of the evening. It was not until the morning of April 22 that Wilhelm had a meeting with his officers in which Berlin was divided into three "districts". One cavalry and one infantry regiment were responsible for each district. Nevertheless, the military did not succeed in completely dispersing the uprising until around midnight. The military maintained a presence in the
public sphere until April 25, 1847. It enforced lower prices for food in the marketplaces and searched for participants in the uprising. A contemporary archivist of the city of Berlin,
Paul Clauswitz, assumes that at the time of the "potato revolution", only 30 police officers were supposed to maintain public order. This deplorable state of affairs brought the bourgeois opposition onto the scene. They demanded the establishment of a larger police force or, alternatively, the formation of a vigilante group that could react to social unrest at an early stage. On April 23, 1847, the Berlin magistrate approached the Prussian Ministry of the Interior with a request to approve the formation of military "protective associations" in times of unrest. Interior Minister Bodelschwingh rejected the request, as vigilante groups would undermine the
state's monopoly on the use of force. Under no circumstances did the state want to allow the liberal opposition to be supported by the forces of law and order. The leadership was to remain solely in the hands of the aristocracy close to the government. Nevertheless, the Potato Revolution brought about personnel changes: the city governor Karl von Müffling had to vacate his post in October 1847. He was replaced by
Friedrich von Wrangel.
Julius von Minutoli replaced
Eugen von Puttkamer as Chief of Police.
Arrests Gailus estimates that a total of five to ten thousand people took part in the potato revolution. Given this scale, the military was only able to capture a small proportion of them. The prisoner log can therefore provide little information about the actual social composition. However, craftsmen and unskilled workers appear to have made up the majority of the insurgents. Only around three hundred people were arrested. But even this number pushed the capacity of the Berlin prisons to their limits. 120 prisoners had to be provisionally housed in the military detention center in . Of those arrested, 107 were brought before the Berlin Court of Appeal, 87 of whom received sentences. However, some of the insurgents were sentenced by police judges without a lengthy trial. The statistics do not show how many people were affected by this. The trials lasted six weeks. The harshest sentence was passed on a 32-year-old worker, father of two children, who was sentenced to ten years in prison and 30 lashes for beating an officer and snatching a soldier's sabre. Most of those sentenced were released again thanks to an
amnesty on October 15, 1847, on the occasion of King
Friedrich Wilhelm IV's birthday. == Political dimension ==