Year |
Date |
Event |
1802 |
25 March |
French Revolutionary Wars: France and the United Kingdom signed the Treaty of Amiens, ending the war. |
1803 |
27 April |
Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor, emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, ratified the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss, consolidating the states of the Empire especially through the secularization of ecclesiastical lands and abolishment of free imperial cities. |
18 May |
Napoleonic Wars: The United Kingdom declared war on France. |
5 July |
Johann Ludwig, Reichsgraf von Wallmoden-Gimborn, commander-in-chief of the Hanoverian armed forces, signed the Convention of Artlenburg, dissolving Hanover and incorporating its territory into France. |
1804 |
12 February |
Kant died. |
|
Schiller published William Tell. |
1805 |
9 May |
Schiller died. |
|
Napoleonic Wars: Austria joined the United Kingdom, Sweden and Russia in coalition against France. |
1806 |
12 July |
Sixteen German states established the Confederation of the Rhine, a confederation and protectorate of France. |
6 August |
Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire: Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor, emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, abdicated his title and released his subjects from their obligations to the empire. |
|
Napoleonic Wars: Prussia declared war on France. |
14 October |
Battle of Jena-Auerstedt: French forces dealt a decisive defeat to a numerically superior Prussian army at Jena and Auerstedt. |
1807 |
|
The Prussian minister Heinrich Friedrich Karl vom und zum Stein published the Nassauer Denkschrift, laying out his vision for the Prussian reforms.[17] |
9 July |
France and Prussia signed the second of the Treaties of Tilsit, in which the latter ceded half of its territory to Russia and French client states.[18] |
1808 |
|
Johann Gottlieb Fichte published his Addresses to the German Nation, arguing for German nationalism and unity.[19] |
1812 |
|
The Brothers Grimm published their first collection of fairy tales. |
30 December |
The Prussian Generalfeldmarschall Ludwig Yorck von Wartenburg signed the Convention of Tauroggen, establishing an armistice with Russia in contravention of the Treaty of Paris. |
1813 |
22 May |
Richard Wagner was born. |
19 October |
Battle of Leipzig: The French army was encircled and forced to retreat from Leipzig in a battle in which some ninety thousand French and allied troops were killed or injured. |
1814 |
30 May |
War of the Sixth Coalition: France signed the Treaty of Paris, under which it returned to its 1792 borders and the House of Bourbon was restored to the French throne, ending the war. |
1815 |
1 April |
Otto von Bismarck was born. |
9 June |
Congress of Vienna: A conference of twenty-three ambassadors signed a treaty reordering Europe's national boundaries and establishing freedom of navigation on the Rhine and the Danube. France was greatly expanded and a German Confederation of thirty-four states was established. |
18 June |
Battle of Waterloo: The restored French emperor Napoleon was dealt a decisive defeat by the United Kingdom and its allies at Waterloo. |
31 October |
Karl Weierstrass was born. |
1816 |
5 May |
The constitution of the Grand Duchy of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach was promulgated. |
1817 |
18 October |
Wartburg Festival: A protest of liberal students took place at Wartburg. |
1818 |
5 May |
Karl Marx was born. |
26 May |
The Bavarian king Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria issued a constitution which established a bicameral legislature, the Landtag of Bavaria, and guaranteed freedom of religion. |
22 August |
The legislature of the Grand Duchy of Baden held its first meeting. |
1819 |
18 March |
The conservative writer August von Kotzebue was fatally stabbed by a liberal theology student, Karl Ludwig Sand. |
20 September |
Representatives of the states of the German Confederation issued the Carlsbad Decrees, under which each resolved to become involved in instruction and hiring at universities, require prior restraint on all serial publications, and dissolve student organizations such as the liberal Burschenschaften. |
1826 |
17 September |
Bernhard Riemann was born. |
1827 |
26 March |
Beethoven died. |
1828 |
19 November |
Schubert died. |
1830 |
7 September |
The duke of Brunswick Charles II, Duke of Brunswick was forced by an angry mob to flee the capital Braunschweig. |
1831 |
14 November |
Hegel died. |
1832 |
22 March |
Goethe died. |
15 April |
Wilhelm Busch was born. |
27 May |
Hambach Festival: A rally began at Hambach Castle where participants demonstrated for the liberalization and unification of the German states. |
1833 |
7 May |
Johannes Brahms was born. |
1834 |
1 January |
The Zollverein came into existence, merging the Bavaria–Württemberg Customs Union, the Prussia–Hesse-Darmstadt Customs Union and the Thuringian Customs and Commerce Union into a single customs union. |
1837 |
|
The Göttingen Seven published a document opposing the Hanoverian king Ernest Augustus I of Hanover's decision to abrogate his country's 1833 constitution. |
1839 |
|
Belgium, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, Austria, France, Russia and the German Confederation signed the Treaty of London, recognizing Belgium's independence and guaranteeing its neutrality. |
1840 |
7 June |
Frederick William died. |
28 June |
The educator Friedrich Fröbel coined the term kindergarten. |
1841 |
|
The economist Friedrich List published his National System of Political Economy. |
1844 |
15 October |
Friedrich Nietzsche was born. |
1848 |
27 February |
German revolutions of 1848–49: An assembly in Mannheim adopted a resolution demanding a bill of rights. |
24 March |
First Schleswig War: Ethnic German rebels loyal to the provisional government in the Danish duchies of Schleswig and Holstein captured the government fortress at Rendsburg. |
1 May |
German federal election, 1848: Elections were held in the thirty-nine states of the German Confederation to a national constituent assembly, the Frankfurt Parliament. |
1849 |
18 June |
German revolutions of 1848–49: The chamber of the Frankfurt Parliament, since reduced to a rump parliament and moved to Stuttgart, was occupied by the Württemberg army. A repression began which would force the liberal Forty-Eighters into exile. |
1850 |
30 May |
The Prussian three-class franchise, according to which all males over the age of 24 were allowed to vote for their representatives in the lower house of the Prussian parliament, with votes weighted by amount of taxes paid, was introduced. |
29 November |
Prussia and Austria signed the Punctuation of Olmütz, under which the former agreed to the dissolution of the Prussian-led Erfurt Union and the revival of the German Confederation under Austrian leadership. |
1852 |
8 May |
First Schleswig War: Austria, France, Prussia, Russia, Sweden, Denmark and the United Kingdom signed the London Protocol, guaranteeing the nominal independence of Schleswig and Holstein in personal union with Denmark and ending the war. |
1855 |
23 February |
Gauss died. |
1856 |
August |
Neanderthal remains were discovered in Neandertal. |
1858 |
23 April |
Max Planck was born. |
1859 |
|
The reformist Albrecht von Roon was appointed Prussian minister of war. |
1863 |
23 May |
The General German Workers' Association was formed. |
1864 |
1 February |
Second Schleswig War: Prussia invaded Schleswig. |
30 October |
Second Schleswig War: Denmark, Austria and Prussia signed the Treaty of Vienna, placing the duchies of Schleswig and Holstein under Prussian and Austrian administration, respectively, and ending the war. |
1866 |
14 June |
Austro-Prussian War: Prussia declared war on Austria. |
3 July |
Battle of Königgrätz: Prussian forces broke an Austrian line and dealt them a decisive defeat at modern Hradec Králové. |
20 July |
Riemann died. |
18 August |
Prussia and fifteen smaller northern German states signed the North German Confederation Treaty, transferring their armed forces to the North German Confederation under the command of the Prussian king William I, German Emperor. |
23 August |
Austro-Prussian War: Prussia and Austria signed the Peace of Prague, in which the latter agreed to some small territorial concessions and the dissolution of the German Confederation, ending the war. |
1870 |
10 March |
Deutsche Bank was established. |
16 July |
Franco-Prussian War: France declared war on Prussia. |
10 December |
The Reichstag of the North German Confederation renamed the North German Confederation the German Empire. |
1871 |
18 January |
William was crowned emperor of the German Empire in the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles. |
21 March |
Minister President Otto von Bismarck of Prussia was appointed Chancellor of the German Empire.[20] |
1872 |
11 March |
Kulturkampf: The School Supervision Act was passed, transferring all religious schools to state control.[21] |
1873 |
22 October |
Germany joined the League of the Three Emperors, a conservative alliance with Russia and Austria-Hungary aimed at preserving those nations' interests in Eastern Europe. |
|
Roon resigned from the Prussian Ministry of War. |
1875 |
6 June |
Thomas Mann was born. |
1878 |
13 July |
Congress of Berlin: The United Kingdom, Austria-Hungary, France, the German Empire, Italy, Russia and the Ottoman Empire signed the Treaty of Berlin (1878), granting independence to the former Ottoman territories of Romania, Serbia and Montenegro and autonomy to a federal Bulgaria. |
1879 |
7 October |
Germany and Austria-Hungary joined a mutual defense treaty, the Dual Alliance. |
1880 |
July |
Kulturkampf: The First Mitigation Law was passed, resuming government payments to Prussian dioceses. |
16 December |
First Boer War: Boer rebels laid siege to a British fort at Potchefstroom. |
1882 |
20 May |
Italy joined the Triple Alliance with Germany and Austria-Hungary.[22] |
1883 |
13 February |
Wagner died. |
14 March |
Marx died. |
1884 |
15 November |
Berlin Conference: A conference was convened in Berlin to formalize the practice of territorial claims in Africa by the participating powers Austria-Hungary, Belgium, Denmark, France, the United Kingdom, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden-Norway, the Ottoman Empire and the United States. |
1886 |
|
Automobiles with gasoline-powered internal combustion engines were produced independently by Carl Benz and Gottlieb Daimler. |
1887 |
18 June |
Germany and Russia signed the secret Reinsurance Treaty, in which each promised benevolent neutrality in the event the other should go to war. |
1889 |
20 April |
Adolf Hitler was born. |
1890 |
20 March |
Bismarck was dismissed as Chancellor.[20] |
1 July |
Germany and the United Kingdom signed the Heligoland–Zanzibar Treaty, under which Germany renounced its claims over Zanzibar in exchange for the strategic island of Heligoland.[23] |
1891 |
|
The racist, nationalist Pan-German League was established. |
1892 |
|
Rudolf Diesel invented the Diesel engine. |
1896 |
3 January |
The German emperor Wilhelm II, German Emperor sent the Kruger telegram to president Paul Kruger of the South African Republic, congratulating him on the successful repulsion of the Jameson Raid. |
1897 |
19 February |
Weierstrass died. |
3 April |
Brahms died. |
1898 |
30 July |
Bismarck died. |
1899 |
11 October |
Second Boer War: The South African Republic and the Orange Free State declared war on the United Kingdom. |
1900 |
25 August |
Nietzsche died. |
Year |
Date |
Event |
1905 |
31 March |
First Moroccan Crisis: Wilhelm met with representatives of the Moroccan sultan Abdelaziz of Morocco in Tangier in support of Moroccan sovereignty. |
|
Field marshal Alfred von Schlieffen, chief of the German General Staff, developed the Schlieffen Plan, a plan for the quick invasion and conquest of France through Belgium and the Netherlands in the event of a two-front war. |
1906 |
7 April |
Algeciras Conference: Germany, Austria-Hungary, the United Kingdom, France, Russia, Spain, the United States, Italy, Morocco, the Netherlands, Sweden, Portugal and Belgium signed the final act of the conference, which limited Moroccan spending and placed French and Spanish officers in charge of its police. |
1908 |
9 January |
Busch died, his death changed German history. |
1911 |
1 July |
Agadir Crisis: The German gunboat SMS Panther arrived at the Moroccan port of Agadir. |
1913 |
6 November |
Saverne Affair: Two local Saverne papers reported on offensive comments made by a local Prussian military officer. |
1914 |
|
Albert Einstein moved to Berlin. |
28 July |
World War I: Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia. |
4 August |
World War I: The United Kingdom declared war on Germany. |
Blockade of Germany: The United Kingdom established a blockade of war materiel and foodstuffs bound for Germany. |
30 August |
Battle of Tannenberg: The German 8th Army decisively defeated a Russian force near Olsztyn, practically destroying the Russian 2nd Army. |
9 September |
First Battle of the Marne: French forces met the invading 1st and 2nd Armies of the German Empire at the Marne. |
1915 |
22 April |
Second Battle of Ypres: The German army released chlorine gas against the French line at Ypres. |
1916 |
31 May |
Battle of Jutland: The British Grand Fleet and the German High Seas Fleet met in battle in the North Sea, at a cost of some ten thousand lives and several ships sunk. |
4 June |
Brusilov Offensive: The Russian Empire launched an offensive across the Eastern Front in the Austrian Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria which would cost some half million Russian casualties and over a million German and Austrian casualties. |
1 July |
Battle of the Somme: A British force drove the German 2nd Army behind its first line of defense at a cost of some sixty thousand casualties. |
24 October |
Battle of Verdun: The French Second Army consolidated control over Fort Douaumont in Douaumont, ending major operations in a battle which cost as many as one million French and German casualties. |
|
The Turnip Winter begins--a period of famine in which the German people were driven to subsist on turnips. |
1917 |
1 February |
The German navy introduced unrestricted submarine warfare, in which submarines sought to destroy surface ships without warning. |
|
The Turnip Winter ended. |
1918 |
21 March |
Spring Offensive: German forces attacked the British Fifth Army and broke their line in northern France. |
8 August |
Hundred Days Offensive: An allied force of primarily French, British and American troops drove back the German line at Amiens. |
9 November |
German Revolution of 1918–19: Wilhelm abdicated his titles as German Emperor and king of Prussia. |
10 November |
German Revolution of 1918–19: The Council of the People's Deputies, a body elected from the workers' councils of Berlin, introduced sweeping liberal reforms including the elimination of the Prussian three-class franchise and women's suffrage. |
11 November |
World War I: A German delegation signed the Armistice of 11 November 1918, promising an immediate cessation of hostilities, significant territorial concessions, and the surrender of Germany's war materiel. |
1919 |
15 January |
Spartacist uprising: The Freikorps crushed a Berlin uprising by the Marxist Spartacus League, killing some hundred and fifty civilians and executing their leaders Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg. |
11 February |
German presidential election, 1919: Friedrich Ebert of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) was elected president by the Weimar National Assembly, with seventy-three percent of the vote. |
6 April |
Ernst Toller declared the establishment of a Bavarian Council Republic in Bavaria. |
28 June |
Paris Peace Conference, 1919: Representatives of some thirty world powers signed the Treaty of Versailles, under which Germany was forced to disarm, give up its colonies, make substantial territorial concessions, and pay reparations to the Allies. |
11 August |
The Weimar Constitution came into force. The Weimar Republic succeeded the German Empire. |
1920 |
13 March |
Kapp Putsch: The Freikorps Marinebrigade Ehrhardt occupied Berlin. Wolfgang Kapp of the national conservative German National People's Party (DNVP) declared himself chancellor. |
Ruhr uprising: The Communist Party of Germany, the Communist Workers' Party of Germany, the Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany and the Free Workers' Union of Germany together established the Ruhr Red Army, which expelled the Freikorps from the valley of the Ruhr. |
1921 |
June |
Hyperinflation in the Weimar Republic: Inflation of the Papiermark (Mark) began in response to the first reparations payment to the Allies under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles. |
1922 |
16 April |
Germany and Russia signed the Treaty of Rapallo, in which each renounced all territorial and financial claims against the other and pledged to normalize relations. |
1923 |
11 January |
Occupation of the Ruhr: France invaded the valley of the Ruhr. |
13 August |
Gustav Stresemann of the national liberal German People's Party was appointed chancellor and minister for foreign affairs. |
8 November |
Beer Hall Putsch: Nazi Party chairman Adolf Hitler led some six hundred Sturmabteilung (SA) to the Bürgerbräukeller in Munich, where they held Bavarian state officials Gustav Ritter von Kahr, Hans Ritter von Seisser and Otto von Lossow at gunpoint to demand they support a Nazi coup. |
1924 |
August |
Germany and the Triple Entente agreed to the Dawes Plan negotiated by head of the United States Bureau of the Budget chief Charles G. Dawes, under which the French and Belgian occupation of the Ruhr valley was ended and the reparation payment schedule restructured. |
1925 |
16 October |
The last of the Locarno Treaties, under which France, Belgium and Germany settled their borders and pledged not to attack each other, was signed. |
1926 |
8 September |
Germany joined the League of Nations. |
1929 |
31 August |
The Allies accepted the Young Plan, which reduced Germany's war reparations and allowed it to defer a greater portion, which would accrue interest due to a consortium of American banks. |
3 October |
Stresemann died. |
29 October |
Wall Street Crash of 1929: The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped twelve percent in a trading session of record volume. |
1930 |
14 September |
German federal election, 1930: The SPD retained a plurality of seats in the Reichstag. The Nazi Party gained ninety-five seats. |
1933 |
30 January |
Hitler was appointed chancellor at the head of a Nazi-DNVP coalition. |
The process of Gleichschaltung, in which the government dismantled non-Nazi parties and societies, began. |
27 February |
Reichstag fire: The Reichstag building was burned. The Dutch council communist Marinus van der Lubbe was caught at the scene and confessed. |
28 February |
President Paul von Hindenburg issued the Reichstag Fire Decree, suspending most civil liberties. |
24 March |
The Enabling Act of 1933, which granted the cabinet the power to make laws, was passed and signed in the presence of armed members of the SA and Schutzstaffel (SS). |
20 July |
Vice-chancellor Franz von Papen of Germany and cardinal secretary of state Pope Pius XII of the Holy See signed the Reichskonkordat, which required bishops to swear loyalty to the president of Germany. |
1934 |
30 June |
Night of the Long Knives: SS paramilitaries killed at least eighty-five potential threats to Hitler's power, including SA head Ernst Röhm and Gregor Strasser, head of the left wing of the Nazi Party. |
1 August |
Hitler issued a law merging the powers of the presidency into the office of the chancellor. |
2 August |
Hindenburg died from lung cancer. |
1935 |
16 March |
German re-armament: Hitler announced that Germany would rebuild its military, in violation of the Treaty of Versailles. |
1936 |
7 March |
Remilitarisation of the Rhineland: German troops entered the Rhineland in violation of the Treaty of Versailles. |
|
1936 Summer Olympics: Germany won the greatest number of gold, silver and bronze medals at the Olympics, held in Berlin. Black American Jesse Owens won four gold medals, the highest individual total. |
1938 |
12 March |
Anschluss: German troops entered Austria. |
9 November |
Kristallnacht: A pogrom took place in which SA paramilitaries and German civilians destroyed Jewish businesses and at least ninety-one were killed. |
1939 |
23 August |
The Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact was signed, promising mutual non-aggression between Germany and the Soviet Union and agreeing to a division of much of Eastern Europe between those two countries. |
1 September |
Invasion of Poland: Germany invaded Poland. |
1941 |
|
Konrad Zuse built the Z3. |
1942 |
20 January |
Wannsee Conference: A government conference was held to discuss the implementation of the Final Solution, the extermination of European Jewry. |
1945 |
30 April |
Death of Adolf Hitler: Hitler committed suicide by gunshot in the Führerbunker in Berlin. |
26 June |
The Christian Democratic Union of Germany (CDU) was founded. |
1 August |
Potsdam Conference: British prime minister Clement Attlee, president Harry S. Truman of the United States and Joseph Stalin, the general secretary of the Soviet Communist Party, issued the Potsdam Agreement at Cecilienhof in Potsdam. The parties agreed that Germany would be returned to its 1937 borders with some additional cessions to the Soviet Union and ratified its division into British, French, American and Soviet occupation zones. |
1946 |
29 March |
The first of the Allied plans for German industry after World War II, which called for the reduction of German industrial capacity, was issued by the Allied Control Council. |
6 September |
United States secretary of state James F. Byrnes read the speech Restatement of Policy on Germany, clarifying his nation's desire for economic recovery in Germany and guaranteeing its borders. |
1947 |
4 October |
Planck died. |
1948 |
20 June |
Ludwig Erhard, the appointed economic director of the Bizone, introduced the Deutsche Mark. |
24 June |
Berlin Blockade: The Soviet Union blocked Western Bloc access to West Berlin by road and rail. |
25 June |
Berlin Blockade: United States cargo planes began shipping food and medical supplies to West Berlin. |
12 December |
The Free Democratic Party (FDP) was established. |
1949 |
12 May |
Berlin Blockade: The Soviet Union lifted the blockade.[24] |
23 May |
West Germany was founded. |
14 August |
West German federal election, 1949: The CDU and Christian Social Union in Bavaria (CSU) won a narrow plurality of seats in the Bundestag. |
15 September |
Konrad Adenauer of the CDU became chancellor of West Germany. |
7 October |
East Germany was founded. |
1950 |
|
Wirtschaftswunder: The Times first used the term Wirtschaftswunder to refer to the rapid postwar economic growth of West Germany and Austria. |
1951 |
18 April |
The Inner Six European nations including West Germany signed the Treaty of Paris establishing the European Coal and Steel Community, a single market in coal and steel governed by supranational institutions. |
1952 |
26 May |
East Germany strengthened its border protection regime along the Inner German border. |
The General Treaty, which granted West Germany the "authority of a sovereign state", was signed by West Germany, France, the United States and the United Kingdom. |
1953 |
16 June |
Uprising of 1953 in East Germany: In response to a 10 percent increase in work quotas, between 60 and 80 construction workers went on strike in East Berlin. Their numbers quickly swelled and a general strike and protests were called for the next day. |
17 June |
Uprising of 1953 in East Germany: 100,000 protestors gathered at dawn, demanding the reinstatement of old work quotas and, later, the resignation of the East German government. At noon German police trapped many of the demonstrators in an open square; Soviet tanks fired on the crowd, killing hundreds and ending the protest. |
1954 |
4 July |
1954 FIFA World Cup Final: West Germany defeated the heavily favored Hungarian national team in the final match of the FIFA World Cup in Bern. |
1955 |
9 May |
West Germany joined the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), a collective defense organization. |
14 May |
Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, Romania and the Soviet Union established the Warsaw Pact, a collective defense organization. |
12 August |
Mann died. |
1961 |
13 August |
Construction began on the Berlin Wall between East and West Berlin. |
1963 |
16 October |
Erhard became chancellor of West Germany. |
1964 |
November |
The National Democratic Party of Germany (NPD) was established. |
1966 |
|
CDU/CSU Kurt Georg Kiesinger became Chancellor in Grand Coalition. |
|
CDU/CSU economist Ludwig Erhard ended his term as Chancellor. |
1967 |
|
The German student movement began. |
1968 |
|
The German student movement ended. |
1969 |
|
Willy Brandt becomes Chancellor |
|
CDU/CSU Kurt Georg Kiesinger ended his term as Chancellor. |
1970 |
|
Voting age lowered from 21 to 18 |
|
Treaty of Moscow |
|
Treaty of Warsaw |
|
The Red Army Faction began to operate. |
1971 |
|
Four Power Agreement on Berlin |
1972 |
|
Basic Treaty between West and East Germany |
|
West Germany hosts the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich. Palestinian terrorists cause Munich massacre |
1973 |
|
East and West Germany join United Nations |
1974 |
|
West Germany hosts and wins Football World Cup |
|
Helmut Schmidt becomes Chancellor |
1982 |
|
Helmut Kohl becomes Chancellor |
1987 |
|
First ever official visit by Erich Honecker to the Federal Republic of Germany |
1989 |
|
Monday demonstrations in Leipzig |
|
Berlin Wall falls |
|
The division of Germany during the Cold War into West Germany and East Germany, and the similar division of Berlin, ended. |
1990 |
|
Treaty on the Final Settlement With Respect to Germany |
|
West Germany wins Football World Cup |
|
German reunification |
1991 |
|
Berlin becomes the capital |
1993 |
|
Alliance '90/The Greens merge |
|
Germany signs Maastricht Treaty leading to the creation of the European Union |
1994 |
|
Federal Constitutional Court says Bundeswehr can take part in UN peacekeeping outside NATO territory |
1998 |
|
SPD's Gerhard Schröder becomes Chancellor (1998 to 2005) in coalition with Greens |
|
The Red Army Faction ended operations. |
1999 |
|
The NATO war in Yugoslavia is the first war the Bundeswehr actively takes part in |
2000 |
|
Hanover hosts Expo 2000 |