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Weimar constitution |
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Weimar constitutionThe Weimar constitution (German: Weimarer Verfassung) was the document that governed the short-lived Weimar Republic (1919-1933) of Germany. Formally it was the Constitution of the German Reich (Die Verfassung des Deutschen Reiches) but it shared this title with the imperial constitution that preceded it.Following the end of WWI, a German National Assembly gathered in the town of Weimar, in the state of Thuringia, in January of 1919 to write a constitution for the Reich. The fundamentals of the constitution were known: It was to be a Democratic, Federal Republic, with a President and Parliament to govern it. Supreme power was to be delegated by The People. Disagreements arose between the delegates over such things as the new national flag, religious education for the youth, and the rights of the regional states that were to make up the Reich. All of these disagreements were resolved by August of 1919. The document was divided into 2 parts. Each part was divided into sections (7 sections in Part I, 5 sections in Part II). In all, there were almost 200 articles in the Constitution. In short, they declare Germany a republic which derives its consent from the people in accordance with international law and natural law. The main tenets of the Constitution are as follows:
Sixty-seven delegates abstained from voting to adopt the Constitution. The 1919 constitution had a number of fundamental weaknesses, which made the establishment of a dictatorship all too easy. Whether a different constitution could have prevented the Third Reich is debatable though. Upon Hitler’s rise to the Chancellery in 1933, and his subsequent seizure of the Presidency, the Constitution was abused. After the dissolution of the Parliament, the suspension of civil rights through the Reichstag Fire Decree, the Constitution was only a dead form but it was never formally revoked. External links
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