Morale in the High Seas Fleet Following the
Battle of Jutland in mid-1916, the leadership of the
German Empire did not want to risk losing additional ships that it would be unable to replace. The fleet had consequently lain for the most part idly at anchor since the battle. Many officers transferred from capital ships to submarines and light vessels, which still had a role to play in the fighting. They were generally replaced by young officers who did not know how to handle the more experienced crews. The discipline and spirit of those who remained with the capital ships consequently suffered. Significant unrest in the fleet began in the summer of 1917. On the battleship , a system of shop stewards began to be established as early as March. During the following months, a number of sailors expressed dissatisfaction with their poor rations and treatment to representatives of the anti-war
Independent Social Democratic Party (USPD). On 1 August, 49 men from the dreadnought SMS
Prinzregent Luitpold disembarked without permission at
Wilhelmshaven after a free watch and a movie showing were cancelled. Eleven were arrested and imprisoned. The next day, almost the entire crew of 600 men walked off in support of their comrades. Two of the ringleaders were later executed, and others sentenced to prison. During the remaining months of the war, secret sailors' councils were formed on a number of the fleet's
capital ships.
Political changes On 29 September 1918, the
Supreme Army Command informed Emperor
Wilhelm II that the military situation was hopeless in the face of the enemy's overwhelming advantage in manpower and equipment. General
Erich Ludendorff said that a request for an immediate ceasefire should be sent to the
Entente powers. In hopes of more favorable peace terms, he also recommended accepting American president
Woodrow Wilson's demand that the imperial government be democratized. His aim was to protect the reputation of the Imperial Army by placing the responsibility for the capitulation and its consequences at the feet of the democratic parties and the
Reichstag. Emperor Wilhelm II appointed
Prince Maximilian of Baden the new imperial chancellor on 3 October. The Prince was considered a liberal and was a representative of the royal family.
His cabinet included, for the first time, members of the
Social Democratic Party (SPD). The following day, the new government offered the Allies the truce on which Ludendorff had insisted, and, on the fifth, the German public was informed of the dismal situation that its military was facing. Even up to that late point, government propaganda and the press had led the people to believe that the war would still be won. The shock of the impending defeat caused a "paralytic bitterness and deep resignation" that eased the way for those who wanted an immediate ceasefire.
Naval order of 24 October 1918 , who ordered the attack on the British Navy that sparked the Kiel mutiny Following the
Allied successes during the
Hundred Days Offensive, the new German government under
Prince Max of Baden, at the insistence of the
Supreme Army Command, asked
President Woodrow Wilson on 5 October 1918 to mediate an
armistice. One of Wilson's preconditions was the cessation of Germany's
submarine war. Despite the objections of
Admiral Scheer, the Chief of the German Admiralty Staff, the government made the concession on 20 October, and the submarines at sea were recalled on 21 October. The following day, Scheer, on his own authority and without the knowledge of the new German government, ordered
Admiral Hipper, commander of the
High Seas Fleet, to prepare to attack the British with the main battle fleet, reinforced by the newly available submarines. Hipper's order was promulgated on 24 October, and Scheer approved it on 27 October. The fleet then began to concentrate at
Schillig Roads off
Wilhelmshaven to prepare for the battle. Historian
Michael Epkenhans describes the action as a mutiny by the admirals: When we think of the end of the war in 1918, we have to imagine admirals who had hoped throughout the war to be able to fight a major naval battle, perhaps even to defeat the British. The naval leadership was basically itself mutinous; it was an admirals' rebellion, because contrary to the orders of the political Reich leadership to hold back, especially in regard to the armistice, it made plans that were not politically legitimized. For the admirals, the battle was a matter of saving their honor and their futures. The commander of the battleship spoke later of going down with "the flag flying". The Chief of Staff of the High Seas Fleet Command, Rear Admiral
Adolf von Trotha, wrote to the Chief of Staff of the Naval War Command, Captain
Magnus von Levetzow: "We are seized with horror and shame at the thought that the fleet could be consigned to internal ruin without having come to blows." Levetzow replied: "As long as we are still able to fight, we will never, ever agree to a peace treaty that is based on the degradation or atrophy of our fleet." == The uprising ==