(Redirected from Deutsches Reich)
'''Deutsches Reich''' was the name for
Germany from
1871 to
1945 in the
German language. Its direct literal translation in
English is "German Empire", however this full translation is only used when describing Germany under Hohenzollern rule (until 1918). For the entire 1871-1945 period, the English name given for Germany was the part-translated "'German Reich'" (
IPA pronunciation: ˈdʒɜːmən raɪx).
Following the German
Kaiser's abdication of the German Empire after
World War I, the word "Empire" was dropped and the official name used in English was the "German Reich". Informally, this nation was also known simply as 'Germany' from 1871 to 1945.
The
history of Germany during the time of the German Reich is conventionally broken into three distinct periods:
★ the monarchy under
Hohenzollern rule, known in English as the '
German Empire' (
1871 -
1918)
★ the democratic republic, known retrospectively as the '
Weimar Republic' (
1919 -
1933)
★ the totalitarian dictatorship commonly known as the 'Third Reich' or '
Nazi Germany' (
1933 -
1945)
Following the
1938 Annexation of Austria, Germany informally named itself the 'Greater German Reich' (). This name was made the official state name only during the last two years (
1943 -
1945) of Nazi rule.
[1]
The difference between "Reich" and "Empire"
While the German word "Reich" translates to the English word "empire" (it also translates to similar words such as "realm" or "domain"), this translation was not performed throughout the full existence of the German Reich. Historically, only 1871-1918 Germany - where Germany was under the rule of an Emperor - is known in English as the "German Empire", while the term "German Reich" describes Germany from 1871 to 1945.
[2]
Under Hohenzollern rule, the German Reich was officially known as the German Empire.
[3] After the events of World War I, the official English name for Germany was the "German Reich" and this name was used as such on legal documents and English-language international treaties - for example, the
Kellogg-Briand Pact[4] and the
Geneva Convention.
[5] If "Empire" were still a valid word at this point, it would have been used on these documents instead of "Reich".
Apart from official documents, post-WWI Germany was referred to as the "German Reich" - never as the "German Empire" - for example, by British politicians
[6] and the word "Reich" was used untranslated by Allied prosecutors throughout the
Nuremberg Trials, with "German Empire" only used to signify pre-1918 Germany.
Heads of state
The German Reich since 1945
End of World War II
On
9 May 1945, the commencement of the
capitulation of the German armed forces, the
supreme command of the
Wehrmacht was handed over to the
Allies. The Allies decided not to recognise
Karl Dönitz as ''
Reichspräsident'' or to recognise the legitimacy of his
Flensburg government (so-called because it was based at
Flensburg and controlled only a small area around the town), and on
5 June 1945 the four powers signed the "Declaration Regarding the Defeat of Germany" in Berlin, creating the
Allied Control Council and assumed ''de jure'' supreme authority with respect to Germany.
[7]
Divided Germany
In its 1973 review of the
1972 Basic Treaty between East and West Germany, the German
Federal Constitutional Court (''Bundesverfassungsgericht'') made a case that the
Federal Republic of Germany is identical with the German Reich and no legal
successor.
[8] The court also emphasized that the FRG had only partial identity in questions concerning the
territory because the German Democratic Republic and
the Polish and USSR occupied territories were outside of FRG-territory.
Reunified Germany
When the
Treaty on the Final Settlement with Respect to Germany between Germany and the war time Allies was signed on
September 12, 1990 there was no mention of the term ''Deutsches Reich'', however the Allies paraphrased the international legal personality of Germany as "Germany as a whole" in the English version of the text. Instead the
states of the Federal Republic of Germany (
West Germany, FRG) and the
German Democratic Republic (East Germany, GDR) agreed to be bound by certain conditions which they had to ratify, one of which was the creation of a united Germany which to come into existence had to also agree to certain conditions agreed in the treaty. On meeting these conditions under Article 7.2 "The United Germany [has] accordingly full sovereignty over its internal and external affairs."
[9]
References
1. Decree RK 7669 E of the Reichsminister and head of the Reich chancellery, 26 June 1943
2. See "Germany" entry of the Encyclopaedia Britannica
3. Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules of Law with respect to Collisions between Vessels - an example of a legal document where Germany is officially referred to as "the German Empire"
4. Full text of the Kellogg-Briand Pact
5. Full text of the Geneva Convention
6. Speech by British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain
7. Declaration Regarding the Defeat of Germany and the Assumption of Supreme Authority by Allied Powers, June 5 1945
8. BVerfGE 36, 1: Verdict of the Federal Constitutional Court (''Bundesverfassungsgericht'') regarding the East-West Basic Treaty - in German and in English, 31 July 1973
9. Treaty on the Final Settlement with Respect to Germany (U.S. Diplomatic Mission to Germany/Public Affairs/Information Resource Centers Updated: November 2003)