Right-wing nominee
Theodor Duesterberg for president of Germany in the
1932 election. The message on the truck reads: "Whoever wants a true people's community votes for Duesterberg, the German man". •
Der Stahlhelm, Bund der Frontsoldaten (The Steel Helmet, League of Front-Line Soldiers), was officially a veterans' organization with about 500,000 members. Led by
Franz Seldte and with ties at the leadership level to the
Reichswehr, it was opposed to the Weimar Republic and politically close to the
German National People's Party (DNVP) and other conservative groups. In 1931, it formed part of the
Harzburg Front, an anti-democratic political alliance that included the
Nazi Party. In 1934, it was integrated into the SA and dissolved in 1935. •
Deutschvölkischer Schutz- und Trutzbund (German Nationalist Protection and Defiance Federation) was an antisemitic
völkisch group led by
Alfred Roth. Its membership peaked at about 200,000 when it was banned by the German government in 1922. It was notable for its revisionist propaganda regarding Germany's defeat in World War I and for attacking Jews,
Social Democrats and middle-class supporters of the Republic. •
Sturmabteilung (SA; English "Storm Division") was formed by
Adolf Hitler in 1921, with most of its members coming from the
Freikorps. As part of the Nazi Party, it protected its meetings, marched in its rallies and was often involved in street violence against members of the political left. Led by
Ernst Röhm beginning in 1931, it had an estimated 2,000,000 members when Hitler became German chancellor. •
Kampfbund (Battle League) was a Bavarian umbrella group involving the SA, the
Freikorps Oberland and the
Bund Reichskriegsflagge (Imperial War Flag Society). It was created on 1 September 1923 to consolidate and streamline their agendas after the government in Berlin called off passive resistance to the French and Belgian
occupation of the Ruhr. It planned and conducted the
Beer Hall Putsch and disbanded after it failed. •
Organisation Consul (O.C.) was an ultra-nationalist and antisemitic militant secret society formed in 1920 by members of the disbanded
Freikorps group
Marinebrigade Ehrhardt. With an estimated 5,000 members, it engaged in
Feme murders and political assassinations with the aim of destabilizing and overthrowing the Republic and replacing it with a right-wing dictatorship. Responsible for hundreds of murders, its two most prominent victims were the former finance minister
Matthias Erzberger and Foreign Minister
Walther Rathenau. It was banned by the Reich government in July 1922. •
Viking League (German:
Bund Wiking) was founded on 2 May 1923 by members of the banned
Organisation Consul as its successor organization. Its leader was former
Freikorps commander
Hermann Ehrhardt. It advocated right-wing
nationalism, anti-
republicanism and a violent overthrow of the Republic in favor of a military dictatorship. At its height, it claimed 10,000 members. After plans to overthrow the Republic were exposed in May 1926, it was banned in
Prussia and its influence declined. Ehrhardt dissolved the league in April 1928.
Center to center-left •
Reichsbanner Schwarz-Rot-Gold (Reich Banner Black-Red-Gold) was devoted to the defense of the Weimar Republic. It was founded by former front-line soldiers of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (who made up the majority of the group), the
German Democratic Party and the Catholic
Centre Party. Organized militarily, its main opponents were the Nazi SA and the
Communist Party of Germany's
Roter Frontkämpferbund. The
Reichsbanner claimed more than three million members at its peak and was banned by the Nazis in 1933. •
Eiserne Front (Iron Front) brought together the
Reichsbanner, free labor unions and workers' gymnastics and sports associations in 1931 in response to the far right's
Harzburg Front. Not itself organized as a paramilitary, the Iron Front's central goal was to strengthen the Social Democrats in the
1932 Reichstag election. •
Jungdeutscher Orden (Young German Order) was a nationalist and antisemitic association founded by
Artur Mahraun. Initially a paramilitary, it changed into a more politically oriented group with the goal of recreating the camaraderie experienced by soldiers at the front during
World War I in order to overcome class and social differences in German society. In 1930, its political arm merged with the liberal
German Democratic Party to form the short-lived
German State Party. The Young German Order was banned by the Nazis in 1933.
Left-wing '' at the
Berlin Cathedral in 1928 •
Roter Frontkämpferbund (Red Front Fighters' League) was founded by the
Communist Party of Germany (KPD) in 1924 and attained a peak membership of 110,000. It was banned across Germany in 1929 after the
Blutmai demonstrations in Berlin that left 33 dead. Despite the ban, it engaged in frequent street battles with the Nazi SA until Hitler came to power in 1933. •
Antifaschistische Junge Garde (Young Antifascist Guard) was the youth wing of the
KPD and was banned in 1933. • (Fighting League against Fascism) was the successor to the
Roter Frontkämpferbund after it was banned in 1929. The
Kampfbund itself was banned in 1933. •
Antifaschistische Aktion (Antifascist Action) was founded in 1932 and affiliated with the
KPD. Its primary activity was to boost the KPD campaign during the
July 1932 and
November 1932 German federal elections. It was banned in 1933. • (Ruhr Red Army) was an army of approximately 50,000 workers that formed in the industrialized
Ruhr district during the
Kapp Putsch with the goal of establishing a council republic. Not a true paramilitary in structure, it was suppressed with considerable loss of life by government troops and
Freikorps units in what was known as the
Ruhr uprising (13 March – 12 April 1920). •
Schwarze Scharen (Black Band) were resistance groups of anarchist and
anarcho-syndicalist youth affiliated with the
Free Workers' Union of Germany (FAUD). The Black Band was banned in 1933. Similar organisations existed in the
First Austrian Republic, most notably the
Schutzbund and the
Heimwehr. ==See also==