The Treaty of Versailles

The Treaty of Versailles

War Guilt Clause

Germany To Blame For War

Lays sole responsibility for the war on Germany and her allies, which is to be accountable for all damage to civilian populations of the Allies.

Allows all other restrictions on germany to be done legally

10% of German lands were lost as a result, all of Germany's overseas colonies were taken away and shared between the allies and a massive 12.5% of the German population found itself living outside of the new German borders.

These terms had several very dramatic consequences on Germany.

Initially they refused to sign the treaty and opted to scuttle the fleet in protest.

The economy was ruined as much of the produce and profit had to be sent to the allies as reparations payments. This meant that the German economy was unable to recover itself.

The disarmament of the armed forces was viewed as an embarrassment and the Germans felt very insecure about their inability to defend themselves: it also meant a loss of status as military power means that a nation has political power.

The German people felt bitter that they were excluded from the league of nations and enforced to live by other peoples rules.

Military

The first line of part 5, in the Treaty of Versailles says; "In order to render possible the initiation of a general limitation of the armaments of all nations, Germany undertakes strictly to observe the military, naval and air clauses which follow."

Army limited To 100,000 men, and conscriptions will be abolished

Import and export of weapons - prohibited

Tanks and armoured cars - not allowed

Air Force disbanded

Armed aircraft are prohibited

Poison gas - not allowed

Navy limited To 15,000 Sailors, 6 Battleships and 6 cruisers - NO SUBMARINES

Blockades on ships - prohibited

RhineLand occupied by Allies For 15 Years, no German troops allowed In

Restrictions on the manufacture of machine guns

Stab In The Back

Many Germans believed that the army had been stabbed in the by weak politicians. Right-Wingers who looked back fondly to the pre-war days when Germany was powerful were happy to blame the new democratic government for making peace.

The “Dagger-stab-in-the-back Legend”: Austrian right-wing caricature of a Jew stabbing the German Army in the back with a dag

The “Dagger-stab-in-the-back Legend”: Austrian right-wing caricature of a Jew stabbing the German Army in the back with a dagger. The capitulation was blamed upon the unpatriotic populace, the Socialists, Bolsheviks, the Weimar Republic, and especially the Jews. (1919)

Reparations

This was the debt Germany owed to the Allies for In January 1921. The total sum due was decided by an Inter-Allied Reparations Commission and was set at 269 billion gold marks (the equivalent of around 100,000 tonnes of pure gold), about £13 billion or US $64 billion ($785 billion in 2010), a sum that many economists at the time deemed to be excessive. The yearly amount paid was reduced in 1924 and in 1929 the total sum to be paid was reduced by over 50%. Payments ceased when Adolf Hitler's National Socialist German Workers' Party took power in 1933, with only about one-eighth of the initial reparations paid. The final payments were made on 4 October 2010, the twentieth anniversary of German reunification.

Allies Could Claim Compensation

10% Of German Industry Lost

15% Of Agricultural Land Lost

Forced to pay the equivalent of 382 Billion dollars today