The years when Otto von Bismarck was chancellor. Biography of Otto von Bismarck - the first Chancellor of the German Empire

Otto von Bismarck (Eduard Leopold von Schönhausen) was born on April 1, 1815 on the family estate of Schönhausen in Brandenburg northwest of Berlin, the third son of the Prussian landowner Ferdinand von Bismarck-Schönhausen and Wilhelmina Mencken, and was given the name Otto Eduard Leopold at birth.
The estate of Schönhausen was located in the heart of the province of Brandenburg, which occupied a special place in the history of early Germany. To the west of the estate, five miles away, flowed the Elbe River, the main water and transport artery of Northern Germany. The Schönhausen estate has been in the hands of the Bismarck family since 1562.
All generations of this family served the rulers of Brandenburg in peaceful and military fields.

The Bismarcks were considered Junkers, descendants of the conquering knights who founded the first German settlements in the vast lands east of the Elbe with a small Slavic population. The Junkers belonged to the nobility, but in terms of wealth, influence and social status, they could not be compared with the aristocrats of Western Europe and the Habsburg possessions. The Bismarcks, of course, were not among the land magnates; They were also pleased that they could boast of noble origin - their pedigree could be traced back to the reign of Charlemagne.
Wilhelmina, Otto's mother, was from a family of civil servants and belonged to the middle class. Such marriages became more and more common in the 19th century, as the educated middle classes and the old aristocracy began to merge into a new elite.
At the insistence of Wilhelmina, Bernhard, the elder brother, and Otto were sent to study at the Plaman school in Berlin, where Otto studied from 1822 to 1827. At the age of 12, Otto left school and moved to the Friedrich Wilhelm Gymnasium, where he studied for three years. In 1830, Otto moved to the gymnasium "At the Gray Monastery", where he felt freer than in previous educational institutions. Neither mathematics, nor the history of the ancient world, nor the achievements of the new German culture attracted the attention of the young cadet. Otto was most interested in the politics of past years, the history of military and peaceful rivalry between different countries.
After graduating from high school, Otto entered the university in Göttingen on May 10, 1832, at the age of 17, where he studied law. While a student, he gained a reputation as a reveler and brawler, and excelled in duels. Otto played cards for money and drank a lot. In September 1833, Otto moved to the New Metropolitan University in Berlin, where life turned out to be cheaper. To be more precise, Bismarck was only registered at the university, since he almost did not attend lectures, but used the services of tutors who visited him before exams. He received his diploma in 1835 and was soon hired to work at the Berlin Municipal Court. In 1837, Otto took the position of tax official in Aachen, and a year later - the same position in Potsdam. There he joined the Guards Jaeger Regiment. In the fall of 1838, Bismarck moved to Greifswald, where, in addition to performing his military duties, he studied animal breeding methods at the Elden Academy.

Bismarck is a landowner.

On January 1, 1839, Otto von Bismarck's mother, Wilhelmina, died. The death of his mother did not make a strong impression on Otto: only much later did he come to a true assessment of her qualities. However, this event resolved for some time the urgent problem of what he should do after finishing his military service. Otto helped his brother Bernhard manage the Pomeranian estates, and their father returned to Schönhausen. His father's financial losses, coupled with his innate distaste for the lifestyle of a Prussian official, forced Bismarck to resign in September 1839 and take over the leadership of the family estates in Pomerania. In private conversations, Otto explained this by saying that his temperament was not suitable for the position of a subordinate. He did not tolerate any authority over himself: “My pride requires me to command, and not to carry out other people’s orders.”. Otto von Bismarck, like his father, decided "live and die in the village" .
Otto von Bismarck himself studied accounting, chemistry, and agriculture. His brother, Bernhard, took almost no part in the management of the estates. Bismarck turned out to be a shrewd and practical landowner, winning the respect of his neighbors both with his theoretical knowledge of agriculture and practical success. The value of the estates increased by more than a third in the nine years that Otto ruled them, with three of the nine years experiencing widespread agricultural crisis. And yet Otto could not be just a landowner.

He shocked his Junker neighbors by riding through their meadows and forests on his huge stallion Caleb, not caring who owned these lands. He did the same thing towards the daughters of neighboring peasants. Later, in a fit of repentance, Bismarck admitted that in those years he “I did not shy away from any sin, making friends with bad company of any kind”. Sometimes in the course of an evening Otto would lose at cards everything that he had managed to save over months of painstaking management. Much of what he did was pointless. Thus, Bismarck used to notify his friends of his arrival by firing shots into the ceiling, and one day he appeared in a neighbor’s living room and brought with him a frightened fox on a leash, like a dog, and then released it amid loud hunting cries. His neighbors nicknamed him for his violent temper. "mad Bismarck".
At the estate, Bismarck continued his education, taking up the works of Hegel, Kant, Spinoza, David Friedrich Strauss and Feuerbach. Otto studied English literature very well, since England and its affairs occupied Bismarck more than any other country. Intellectually, the “mad Bismarck” was far superior to his neighbors, the Junkers.
In mid-1841, Otto von Bismarck wanted to marry Ottoline von Puttkamer, the daughter of a wealthy cadet. However, her mother refused him, and in order to unwind, Otto went traveling, visiting England and France. This vacation helped Bismarck to relieve the boredom of rural life in Pomerania. Bismarck became more sociable and made many friends.

Bismarck's entry into politics.

After his father's death in 1845, the family property was divided and Bismarck received the estates of Schönhausen and Kniephof in Pomerania. In 1847 he married Johanna von Puttkamer, a distant relative of the girl he had courted in 1841. Among his new friends in Pomerania were Ernst Leopold von Gerlach and his brother, who were not only at the head of the Pomeranian Pietists, but also part of a group of court advisers.

Bismarck, a student of Gerlach, became famous for his conservative position during the constitutional struggle in Prussia in 1848-1850. From a “mad cadet” Bismarck turned into a “mad deputy” of the Berlin Landtag. Opposing the liberals, Bismarck contributed to the creation of various political organizations and newspapers, including the Neue Preussische Zeitung (New Prussian Newspaper). He was a member of the lower house of the Prussian parliament in 1849 and the Erfurt parliament in 1850, when he opposed a federation of German states (with or without Austria), because he believed that this unification would strengthen the growing revolutionary movement. In his Olmütz speech, Bismarck spoke in defense of King Frederick William IV, who capitulated to Austria and Russia. The pleased monarch wrote about Bismarck: "Ardent reactionary. Use later" .
In May 1851, the king appointed Bismarck to represent Prussia in the Diet in Frankfurt am Main. There, Bismarck almost immediately came to the conclusion that Prussia’s goal could not be a German confederation with Austria in a dominant position and that war with Austria was inevitable if Prussia took a dominant position in a united Germany. As Bismarck improved in the study of diplomacy and the art of statecraft, he increasingly moved away from the views of the king and his camarilla. For his part, the king began to lose confidence in Bismarck. In 1859, the king's brother Wilhelm, who was regent at the time, relieved Bismarck of his duties and sent him as envoy to St. Petersburg. There Bismarck became close to the Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Prince A.M. Gorchakov, who assisted Bismarck in his efforts aimed at diplomatic isolation of first Austria and then France.

Otto von Bismarck - Minister-President of Prussia. His diplomacy.

In 1862, Bismarck was sent as envoy to France to the court of Napoleon III. He was soon recalled by King William I to resolve differences in the issue of military appropriations, which was heatedly discussed in the lower house of parliament.

In September of the same year he became head of government, and a little later - minister-president and minister of foreign affairs of Prussia.
A militant conservative, Bismarck announced to the liberal majority of parliament, consisting of representatives of the middle class, that the government would continue collecting taxes in accordance with the old budget, because parliament, due to internal contradictions, would not be able to pass a new budget. (This policy continued in 1863-1866, which allowed Bismarck to carry out military reform.) At a parliamentary committee meeting on September 29, Bismarck emphasized: “The great questions of the time will not be decided by speeches and majority resolutions - this was the blunder of 1848 and 1949 - but iron and blood." Since the upper and lower houses of parliament were unable to develop a unified strategy on the issue of national defense, the government, according to Bismarck, should have taken the initiative and forced parliament to agree with its decisions. By limiting the activities of the press, Bismarck took serious measures to suppress the opposition.
For their part, the liberals sharply criticized Bismarck for his proposal to support the Russian Emperor Alexander II in suppressing the Polish uprising of 1863-1864 (Alvensleben Convention of 1863). Over the next decade, Bismarck's policies led to three wars: the war with Denmark in 1864, after which Schleswig, Holstein (Holstein) and Lauenburg were annexed to Prussia; Austria in 1866; and France (Franco-Prussian War of 1870-1871).
On April 9, 1866, the day after Bismarck signed a secret agreement on a military alliance with Italy in the event of an attack on Austria, he presented to the Bundestag his project for a German parliament and universal secret suffrage for the country's male population. After the decisive battle of Kötiggrätz (Sadowa), in which German troops defeated the Austrian ones, Bismarck managed to achieve the abandonment of the annexationist claims of Wilhelm I and the Prussian generals who wanted to enter Vienna and demanded large territorial gains, and offered Austria an honorable peace (Prague Peace of 1866) . Bismarck did not allow Wilhelm I to “bring Austria to its knees” by occupying Vienna. The future chancellor insisted on relatively easy peace terms for Austria in order to ensure its neutrality in the future conflict between Prussia and France, which became inevitable from year to year. Austria was expelled from the German Confederation, Venice joined Italy, Hanover, Nassau, Hesse-Kassel, Frankfurt, Schleswig and Holstein went to Prussia.
One of the most important consequences of the Austro-Prussian War was the formation of the North German Confederation, which, along with Prussia, included about 30 other states. All of them, according to the constitution adopted in 1867, formed a single territory with laws and institutions common to all. The foreign and military policy of the union was actually transferred to the hands of the Prussian king, who was declared its president. A customs and military treaty was soon concluded with the South German states. These steps clearly showed that Germany was rapidly moving towards its unification under the leadership of Prussia.
The southern German states of Bavaria, Württemberg and Baden remained outside the North German Confederation. France did everything possible to prevent Bismarck from including these lands in the North German Confederation. Napoleon III did not want to see a united Germany on his eastern borders. Bismarck understood that this problem could not be solved without war. Over the next three years, Bismarck's secret diplomacy was directed against France. In Berlin, Bismarck introduced a bill to parliament exonerating him from liability for unconstitutional actions, which was approved by the liberals. French and Prussian interests clashed every now and then on various issues. Militant anti-German sentiment was strong in France at that time. Bismarck played on them.
Appearance "Ems dispatch" was caused by the scandalous events surrounding the nomination of Prince Leopold of Hohenzollern (nephew of William I) to the Spanish throne, which was vacated after the revolution in Spain in 1868. Bismarck correctly calculated that France would never agree to such an option and, in the event of Leopold’s accession to Spain, would begin to rattle sabers and make belligerent statements against the North German Union, which would sooner or later end in war. Therefore, he vigorously promoted Leopold’s candidacy, however, assuring Europe that the German government was completely uninvolved in the Hohenzollern claims to the Spanish throne. In his circulars, and later in his memoirs, Bismarck in every possible way denied his participation in this intrigue, arguing that the nomination of Prince Leopold to the Spanish throne was a “family” affair of the Hohenzollerns. In fact, Bismarck and War Minister Roon and Chief of the General Staff Moltke, who came to his aid, spent a lot of effort to convince the reluctant Wilhelm I to support Leopold’s candidacy.
As Bismarck had hoped, Leopold's bid for the Spanish throne caused a storm of indignation in Paris. On July 6, 1870, the French Foreign Minister, the Duke de Gramont, exclaimed: “This will not happen, we are sure of it... Otherwise, we would be able to fulfill our duty without showing any weakness or hesitation.” After this statement, Prince Leopold, without any consultation with the king or Bismarck, announced that he was renouncing his claims to the Spanish throne.
This step was not part of Bismarck's plans. Leopold's refusal destroyed his hopes that France would itself start a war against the North German Confederation. This was fundamentally important for Bismarck, who sought to ensure the neutrality of the leading European states in a future war, which he later succeeded in largely due to the fact that France was the attacking party. It is difficult to judge how sincere Bismarck was in his memoirs when he wrote that upon receiving the news of Leopold’s refusal to take the Spanish throne "My first thought was to resign"(Bismarck more than once submitted requests for resignation to Wilhelm I, using them as one of the means of putting pressure on the king, who without his chancellor meant nothing in politics), however, another of his memoirs, dating back to the same time, looks quite reliable: “At that time I already considered war a necessity, which we could not avoid with honor.” .
While Bismarck was wondering what other ways could be used to provoke France into declaring war, the French themselves gave an excellent reason for this. On July 13, 1870, the French ambassador Benedetti showed up to William I, who was vacationing on the Ems waters, in the morning and conveyed to him a rather impudent request from his minister Gramont - to assure France that he (the king) would never give his consent if Prince Leopold again put forward his candidacy for Spanish throne. The king, outraged by such an act that was truly daring for the diplomatic etiquette of those times, responded with a sharp refusal and interrupted Benedetti’s audience. A few minutes later, he received a letter from his ambassador in Paris, which stated that Gramont insisted that William, in a handwritten letter, assure Napoleon III that he had no intention of harming the interests and dignity of France. This news completely infuriated William I. When Benedetti asked for a new audience to talk on this topic, he refused to receive him and conveyed through his adjutant that he had said his last word.
Bismarck learned about these events from a dispatch sent in the afternoon from Ems by Councilor Abeken. The dispatch to Bismarck was delivered during lunch. Roon and Moltke dined with him. Bismarck read the dispatch to them. The dispatch made the most difficult impression on the two old soldiers. Bismarck recalled that Roon and Moltke were so upset that they “neglected food and drink.” Having finished reading, Bismarck some time later asked Moltke about the state of the army and its readiness for war. Moltke responded in the spirit that “the immediate start of war is more profitable than delaying it.” After this, Bismarck immediately edited the telegram at the dinner table and read it to the generals. Here is its text: “After the news of the abdication of the Crown Prince of Hohenzollern had been officially communicated to the French Imperial Government by the Spanish Royal Government, the French Ambassador at Ems presented to His Royal Majesty an additional demand: to authorize him to telegraph to Paris that His Majesty the King undertakes for all future times never give his consent if the Hohenzollerns return to their candidacy. His Majesty the King refused to receive the French ambassador again and ordered the adjutant on duty to tell him that His Majesty had nothing more to tell the ambassador.”
Even Bismarck's contemporaries suspected him of falsification "Ems dispatch". The German Social Democrats Liebknecht and Bebel were the first to talk about this. In 1891, Liebknecht even published the brochure “The Ems Dispatch, or How Wars Are Made.” Bismarck wrote in his memoirs that he only crossed out “something” from the dispatch, but did not add “not a word” to it. What did Bismarck delete from the Ems Dispatch? First of all, something that could indicate the true inspirer of the appearance of the king’s telegram in print. Bismarck crossed out the wish of William I to transfer “to the discretion of your Excellency, i.e. Bismarck, the question of whether we should inform both our representatives and the press about Benedetti’s new demand and the king’s refusal.” To strengthen the impression of the French envoy's disrespect for William I, Bismarck did not insert into the new text a mention of the fact that the king answered the ambassador "rather sharply." The remaining reductions were not significant. The new edition of the Ems dispatch brought Roon and Moltke, who dined with Bismarck, out of depression. The latter exclaimed: “It sounds different; before it sounded like a signal to retreat, now it sounds like a fanfare.” Bismarck began to develop his further plans for them: “We must fight if we do not want to take on the role of the defeated without a fight. But success depends largely on the impressions that the origin of the war will cause in us and others; it is important that we be those who were attacked, and Gallic arrogance and resentment will help us in this ... "
Further events unfolded in the direction most desirable for Bismarck. The publication of the "Ems dispatch" in many German newspapers caused a storm of indignation in France. Foreign Minister Gramon shouted indignantly in parliament that Prussia had slapped France. On July 15, 1870, the head of the French cabinet, Emile Olivier, demanded a loan of 50 million francs from parliament and announced the government’s decision to draft reservists into the army “in response to the call to war.” The future President of France, Adolphe Thiers, who in 1871 would make peace with Prussia and drown the Paris Commune in blood, was still a member of parliament in July 1870, and was perhaps the only sane politician in France in those days. He tried to convince the deputies to refuse Olivier a loan and to call up reservists, arguing that since Prince Leopold had renounced the Spanish crown, French diplomacy had achieved its goal and there was no need to quarrel with Prussia over words and bring the matter to a break on a purely formal issue. Olivier responded to this that he was “with a light heart” ready to bear the responsibility that now fell on him. In the end, the deputies approved all the government's proposals, and on July 19, France declared war on the North German Confederation.
Bismarck, meanwhile, communicated with the Reichstag deputies. It was important for him to carefully hide from the public his painstaking behind-the-scenes work to provoke France into declaring war. With his characteristic hypocrisy and resourcefulness, Bismarck convinced the deputies that the government and he personally did not participate in the whole story with Prince Leopold. He shamelessly lied when he told the deputies that he learned about Prince Leopold’s desire to take the Spanish throne not from the king, but from some “private individual”, that the North German ambassador left Paris on his own “for personal reasons”, and was not recalled by the government (in fact, Bismarck ordered the ambassador to leave France, irritated by his “softness” towards the French). Bismarck diluted this lie with a dose of truth. He did not lie when he said that the decision to publish a dispatch about the negotiations in Ems between William I and Benedetti was made by the government at the request of the king himself.
William I himself did not expect that the publication of the “Ems Dispatch” would lead to such a quick war with France. After reading Bismarck's edited text in the newspapers, he exclaimed: "This is war!" The king was afraid of this war. Bismarck later wrote in his memoirs that William I should not have negotiated with Benedetti at all, but he "subjected his person as monarch to the unscrupulous treatment of this foreign agent" largely because he yielded to pressure from his wife Queen Augusta with "her femininely justified by timidity and the national feeling she lacked.” Thus, Bismarck used William I as a cover for his behind-the-scenes intrigues against France.
When the Prussian generals began to win victory after victory over the French, not a single major European power stood up for France. This was the result of the preliminary diplomatic activities of Bismarck, who managed to achieve the neutrality of Russia and England. He promised Russia neutrality if it withdraws from the humiliating Treaty of Paris, which prohibited it from having its own fleet in the Black Sea; the British were outraged by the draft treaty published on Bismarck’s instructions on the annexation of Belgium by France. But the most important thing was that it was France that attacked the North German Confederation, contrary to the repeated peace-loving intentions and minor concessions that Bismarck made towards her (the withdrawal of Prussian troops from Luxembourg in 1867, statements about his readiness to abandon Bavaria and create from it to a neutral country, etc.). When editing the Ems Dispatch, Bismarck did not impulsively improvise, but was guided by the real achievements of his diplomacy and therefore emerged victorious. And, as you know, the winners are not judged. The authority of Bismarck, even in retirement, was so high in Germany that no one (except the Social Democrats) thought of pouring buckets of mud on him when in 1892 the true text of the “Ems Dispatch” was made public from the rostrum of the Reichstag.

Otto von Bismarck - Chancellor of the German Empire.

Exactly a month after the start of hostilities, a significant part of the French army was surrounded by German troops near Sedan and capitulated. Napoleon III himself surrendered to William I.
In November 1870, the South German states joined the United German Confederation, which was transformed from the North. In December 1870, the Bavarian king proposed to restore the German Empire and German imperial dignity, destroyed at one time by Napoleon. This proposal was accepted, and the Reichstag turned to Wilhelm I with a request to accept the imperial crown. In 1871, at Versailles, William I wrote on the envelope the address - "Chancellor of the German Empire", thereby confirming Bismarck's right to rule the empire that he created, and which was proclaimed on January 18 in the hall of mirrors at Versailles. On March 2, 1871, the Treaty of Paris was concluded - difficult and humiliating for France. The border regions of Alsace and Lorraine went to Germany. France had to pay 5 billion indemnities. Wilhelm I returned to Berlin as a triumphant man, although all the credit belonged to the chancellor.
The "Iron Chancellor", representing the interests of the minority and absolute power, ruled this empire in 1871-1890, relying on the consent of the Reichstag, where from 1866 to 1878 he was supported by the National Liberal Party. Bismarck carried out reforms of German law, government and finance. His educational reforms in 1873 led to conflict with the Roman Catholic Church, but the main cause of the conflict was the growing distrust of German Catholics (who made up about a third of the country's population) towards Protestant Prussia. When these contradictions manifested themselves in the activities of the Catholic Center Party in the Reichstag in the early 1870s, Bismarck was forced to take action. The struggle against the dominance of the Catholic Church was called "Kulturkampf"(Kulturkampf, struggle for culture). During it, many bishops and priests were arrested, hundreds of dioceses were left without leaders. Church appointments now had to be coordinated with the state; Church officials could not serve in the state apparatus. Schools were separated from the church, civil marriage was introduced, and the Jesuits were expelled from Germany.
Bismarck built his foreign policy based on the situation that developed in 1871 after the defeat of France in the Franco-Prussian War and the seizure of Alsace and Lorraine by Germany, which became a source of constant tension. With the help of a complex system of alliances that ensured the isolation of France, the rapprochement of Germany with Austria-Hungary and the maintenance of good relations with Russia (the alliance of the three emperors - Germany, Austria-Hungary and Russia in 1873 and 1881; the Austro-German alliance in 1879; "Triple Alliance" between Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy in 1882; The "Mediterranean Agreement" of 1887 between Austria-Hungary, Italy and England and the "Reinsurance Treaty" with Russia of 1887) Bismarck managed to maintain peace in Europe. The German Empire under Chancellor Bismarck became one of the leaders in international politics.
In the field of foreign policy, Bismarck made every effort to consolidate the gains of the Frankfurt Peace of 1871, promoted the diplomatic isolation of the French Republic, and sought to prevent the formation of any coalition that threatened German hegemony. He chose not to participate in the discussion of claims against the weakened Ottoman Empire. When at the Berlin Congress of 1878, under the chairmanship of Bismarck, the next phase of the discussion of the “Eastern Question” ended, he played the role of an “honest broker” in the dispute between the rival parties. Although the Triple Alliance was directed against Russia and France, Otto von Bismarck believed that a war with Russia would be extremely dangerous for Germany. The secret treaty with Russia in 1887 - the "reinsurance treaty" - showed Bismarck's ability to act behind the backs of his allies, Austria and Italy, to maintain the status quo in the Balkans and the Middle East.
Until 1884, Bismarck did not give clear definitions of the course of colonial policy, mainly due to friendly relations with England. Other reasons were the desire to preserve German capital and minimize government spending. Bismarck's first expansionist plans aroused vigorous protests from all parties - Catholics, statists, socialists and even representatives of his own class - the Junkers. Despite this, under Bismarck Germany began to transform into a colonial empire.
In 1879, Bismarck broke with the liberals and subsequently relied on a coalition of large landowners, industrialists, and senior military and government officials.

In 1879, Chancellor Bismarck achieved the adoption of a protective customs tariff by the Reichstag. Liberals were forced out of big politics. The new course of German economic and financial policy corresponded to the interests of large industrialists and large farmers. Their union took a dominant position in political life and government. Otto von Bismarck gradually moved from the Kulturkampf policy to persecution of socialists. In 1878, after an attempt on the life of the Emperor, Bismarck led through the Reichstag "exceptional law" against the socialists, prohibiting the activities of social democratic organizations. On the basis of this law, many newspapers and societies, often far from socialism, were closed. The constructive side of his negative prohibitive position was the introduction of state insurance for sickness in 1883, in case of injury in 1884 and old-age pensions in 1889. However, these measures could not isolate German workers from the Social Democratic Party, although they distracted them from revolutionary methods of solving social problems. At the same time, Bismarck opposed any legislation regulating the working conditions of workers.

Conflict with Wilhelm II and Bismarck's resignation.

With the accession of Wilhelm II in 1888, Bismarck lost control of the government.

Under Wilhelm I and Frederick III, who ruled for less than six months, none of the opposition groups could shake Bismarck's position. The self-confident and ambitious Kaiser refused to play a secondary role, declaring at one of the banquets in 1891: "There is only one master in the country - that is me, and I will not tolerate another"; and his strained relations with the Reich Chancellor became increasingly strained. The most serious differences emerged on the issue of amending the “Exceptional Law against Socialists” (in force in 1878-1890) and on the right of ministers subordinate to the Chancellor to have a personal audience with the Emperor. Wilhelm II hinted to Bismarck that his resignation was desirable and received his resignation from Bismarck on March 18, 1890. The resignation was accepted two days later, Bismarck received the title of Duke of Lauenburg, and he was also awarded the rank of Colonel General of the Cavalry.
Bismarck's removal to Friedrichsruhe was not the end of his interest in political life. He was especially eloquent in his criticism of the newly appointed Reich Chancellor and Minister-President Count Leo von Caprivi. In 1891, Bismarck was elected to the Reichstag from Hanover, but never took his seat there, and two years later he refused to stand for re-election. In 1894, the emperor and the already aging Bismarck met again in Berlin - at the suggestion of Clovis of Hohenlohe, Prince of Schillingfürst, Caprivi's successor. In 1895, all of Germany celebrated the 80th anniversary of the “Iron Chancellor”. In June 1896, Prince Otto von Bismarck took part in the coronation of Russian Tsar Nicholas II. Bismarck died in Friedrichsruhe on July 30, 1898. The “Iron Chancellor” was buried at his own request on his estate Friedrichsruhe, and the inscription was engraved on the tombstone of his tomb: "Loyal servant of the German Kaiser Wilhelm I". In April 1945, the house in Schönhausen where Otto von Bismarck was born in 1815 was burned down by Soviet troops.
Bismarck's literary monument is his "Thoughts and Memories"(Gedanken und Erinnerungen), and "The Big Politics of European Cabinets"(Die grosse Politik der europaischen Kabinette, 1871-1914, 1924-1928) in 47 volumes serves as a monument to his diplomatic art.

Literature used.

1. Emil Ludwig. Bismarck. - M.: Zakharov-AST, 1999.
2. Alan Palmer. Bismarck. - Smolensk: Rusich, 1998.
3. Encyclopedia "The World Around Us" (cd)

Monuments to Bismarck stand in all major cities of Germany; hundreds of streets and squares are named after him. He was called the Iron Chancellor, he was called Reichsmaher, but if this is translated into Russian, it will turn out to be very fascist - “Creator of the Reich.” It sounds better - “Creator of an Empire”, or “Creator of a Nation”. After all, everything German that is in the Germans comes from Bismarck. Even Bismarck's unscrupulousness influenced the moral standards of Germany.

Bismarck 21 years old 1836

They never lie so much as during the war, after the hunt and before the elections

“Bismarck is happiness for Germany, although he is not a benefactor of humanity,” wrote the historian Brandes. “For the Germans, he is the same as for a short-sighted person - a pair of excellent, unusually strong glasses: happiness for the patient, but a great misfortune that he needs them.” .
Otto von Bismarck was born in 1815, the year of Napoleon's final defeat. The future winner of three wars grew up in a family of landowners. His father left military service at the age of 23, which angered the king so much that he took away the rank of captain and uniform from him. At the Berlin gymnasium, he encountered the hatred of the educated burghers towards the nobles. “With my antics and insults, I want to gain access to the most sophisticated corporations, but all this is child’s play. I have time, I want to lead my comrades here, and in the future, people in general.” And Otto chooses the profession not of a military man, but of a diplomat. But the career is not working out. “I will never be able to stand being in charge,” the boredom of an official’s life forces young Bismarck to commit extravagant acts. Biographies of Bismarck describe the story of how the young future Chancellor of Germany got into debt, decided to win back at the gambling table, but lost terribly. In despair, he even thought about suicide, but in the end he confessed everything to his father, who helped him. However, the failed social dandy had to return home to the Prussian outback and start running affairs on the family estate. Although he turned out to be a talented manager, through reasonable savings he managed to increase the income of his parents' estate and soon fully paid off all creditors. Not a trace remained of his former extravagance: he never borrowed money again, did everything to be completely independent financially, and in his old age was the largest private landowner in Germany.

Even a victorious war is an evil that must be prevented by the wisdom of nations

“I initially dislike, by their very nature, trade deals and official positions, and I do not at all consider it an absolute success for myself to even become a minister,” Bismarck wrote at the time. “It seems to me more respectable, and in some circumstances, more useful, to cultivate rye.” rather than writing administrative orders. My ambition is not to obey, but rather to command."
“It’s time to fight,” Bismarck decided at the age of thirty-two, when he, a middle-class landowner, was elected as a deputy of the Prussian Landtag. “They never lie so much as during the war, after the hunt and elections,” he will say later. The debates in the Diet capture him: “It is amazing how much impudence - compared to their abilities - the speakers express in their speeches and with what shameless complacency they dare to impose their empty phrases on such a large meeting.” Bismarck crushes his political opponents so much that when he was recommended for minister, the king, deciding that Bismarck was too bloodthirsty, drew up a resolution: “Fit only when the bayonet reigns supreme.” But Bismarck soon found himself in demand. Parliament, taking advantage of the old age and inertia of its king, demanded a reduction in spending on the army. And a “bloodthirsty” Bismarck was needed, who could put the presumptuous parliamentarians in their place: the Prussian king should dictate his will to parliament, and not vice versa. In 1862, Bismarck became the head of the Prussian government, nine years later, the first Chancellor of the German Empire. Over the course of thirty years, with “iron and blood” he created a state that was to play a central role in the history of the 20th century.

Bismarck in his office

It was Bismarck who drew up the map of modern Germany. Since the Middle Ages, the German nation has been split. At the beginning of the 19th century, residents of Munich considered themselves primarily Bavarians, subjects of the Wittelsbach dynasty, Berliners identified themselves with Prussia and the Hohenzollerns, and Germans from Cologne and Munster lived in the Kingdom of Westphalia. The only thing that united them all was language; even their faith was different: Catholics predominated in the south and southwest, while the north was traditionally Protestant.

The French invasion, the shame of a swift and complete military defeat, the enslaving Peace of Tilsit, and then, after 1815, life under dictation from St. Petersburg and Vienna provoked a powerful response. The Germans are tired of humiliating themselves, begging, trading in mercenaries and tutors, and dancing to someone else's tune. National unity became everyone's dream. Everyone spoke about the need for reunification - from the Prussian king Friedrich Wilhelm and church hierarchs to the poet Heine and the political emigrant Marx. Prussia seemed to be the most likely collector of German lands - aggressive, rapidly developing and, unlike Austria, nationally homogeneous.

Bismarck became chancellor in 1862 and immediately declared that he intended to create a united German Reich: “The great questions of the era are decided not by majority opinion and liberal chatter in parliament, but by iron and blood.” First of all Reich, then Deutschland. National unity from above, through total submission. In 1864, having concluded an alliance with the Austrian emperor, Bismarck attacked Denmark and, as a result of a brilliant blitzkrieg, annexed two provinces populated by ethnic Germans from Copenhagen - Schleswig and Holstein. Two years later, the Prussian-Austrian conflict for hegemony over the German principalities began. Bismarck determined Prussia's strategy: no (yet) conflicts with France and a quick victory over Austria. But at the same time, Bismarck did not want a humiliating defeat for Austria. Bearing in mind the imminent war with Napoleon III, he was afraid of having a defeated but potentially dangerous enemy at his side. Bismarck's main doctrine was to avoid a war on two fronts. Germany forgot its history both in 1914 and 1939

Bismarck and Napoleon III


On June 3, 1866, in the battle of Sadova (Czech Republic), the Prussians completely defeated the Austrian army thanks to the crown prince's army arriving in time. After the battle, one of the Prussian generals said to Bismarck:
- Your Excellency, now you are a great man. However, if the crown prince had been a little longer late, you would have been a great villain.
“Yes,” agreed Bismarck, “it passed, but it could have been worse.”
In the rapture of victory, Prussia wants to pursue the now harmless Austrian army, to go further - to Vienna, to Hungary. Bismarck makes every effort to stop the war. At the Council of War, he mockingly, in the presence of the king, invites the generals to pursue the Austrian army beyond the Danube. And when the army finds itself on the right bank and loses contact with those behind, “the most reasonable solution would be to march on Constantinople and found a new Byzantine Empire, and leave Prussia to its fate.” The generals and the king, convinced by them, dream of a parade in defeated Vienna, but Bismarck does not need Vienna. Bismarck threatens his resignation, convinces the king with political arguments, even military-hygienic ones (the cholera epidemic was gaining strength in the army), but the king wants to enjoy the victory.
- The main culprit can go unpunished! - exclaims the king.
- Our business is not to administer justice, but to engage in German politics. Austria's struggle with us is no more worthy of punishment than our struggle with Austria. Our task is to establish German national unity under the leadership of the King of Prussia

Bismarck's speech with the words "Since the state machine cannot stand, legal conflicts easily turn into issues of power; whoever has power in his hands acts according to his own understanding" caused a protest. Liberals accused him of pursuing a policy under the slogan “Might is before right.” “I did not proclaim this slogan,” Bismarck grinned. “I simply stated a fact.”
The author of the book "The German Demon Bismarck" Johannes Wilms describes the Iron Chancellor as a very ambitious and cynical person: There really was something bewitching, seductive, demonic about him. Well, the “Bismarck myth” began to be created after his death, partly because the politicians who replaced him were much weaker. Admiring followers came up with a patriot who thought only of Germany, a super-astute politician."
Emil Ludwig believed that "Bismarck always loved power more than freedom; and in this he was also a German."
“Beware of this man, he says what he thinks,” warned Disraeli.
And in fact, the politician and diplomat Otto von Bismarck did not hide his vision: “Politics is the art of adapting to circumstances and extracting benefit from everything, even from what is disgusting.” And having learned about the saying on the coat of arms of one of the officers: “Never repent, never forgive!”, Bismarck declared that he had been applying this principle in life for a long time.
He believed that with the help of diplomatic dialectics and human wisdom one could fool anyone. Bismarck spoke conservatively with conservatives, and liberally with liberals. Bismarck told one Stuttgart democratic politician how he, a spoiled mama's boy, marched in the army with a gun and slept on straw. He was never a mama's boy, he slept on straw only when hunting, and he always hated drill training

The main people in the unification of Germany. Chancellor Otto von Bismarck (left), Prussian Minister of War A. Roon (center), Chief of the General Staff G. Moltke (right)

Hayek wrote: “When the Prussian parliament was engaged in one of the fiercest battles over legislation in German history with Bismarck, Bismarck defeated the law with the help of an army that defeated Austria and France. If then only it was suspected that his policy was completely duplicitous, now this cannot be true. to be in doubt. Reading the intercepted report of one of the foreign ambassadors he had fooled, in which the latter reported on the official assurances he had just received from Bismarck himself, and this man was able to write in the margin: “He really believed it!” - this master. bribery, who corrupted the German press for many decades with the help of secret funds, deserves everything that was said about him. It is now almost forgotten that Bismarck almost surpassed the Nazis when he threatened to shoot innocent hostages in Bohemia. The wild incident with democratic Frankfurt is forgotten. when he, threatening bombardment, siege and robbery, forced the payment of a colossal indemnity on a German city that had never taken up arms. It is only recently that the story of how he provoked a conflict with France - just to make South Germany forget its disgust with the Prussian military dictatorship - has been fully understood."
Bismarck answered all his future critics in advance: “Whoever calls me an unscrupulous politician, let him first test his own conscience on this springboard.” But indeed, Bismarck provoked the French as best he could. With cunning diplomatic moves, he completely confused Napoleon III, angered the French Foreign Minister Gramont, calling him a fool (Gramon promised revenge). The “showdown” over the Spanish inheritance came at the right time: Bismarck, secretly not only from France, but also practically behind the back of King William, offers Prince Leopold of Hohenzollern to Madrid. Paris is furious, French newspapers are raising hysterics about “the German election of the Spanish king, which took France by surprise.” Gramon begins to threaten: “We do not think that respect for the rights of a neighboring state obliges us to allow a foreign power to place one of its princes on the throne of Charles V and thus, to our detriment, upset the present balance in Europe and endanger the interests of and the honor of France. If this had happened, we would have been able to fulfill our duty without hesitation or flinching!” Bismarck chuckles: “It’s like war!”
But he did not triumph for long: a message arrived that the applicant refused. 73-year-old King William did not want to quarrel with the French, and the jubilant Gramont demands a written statement from William about the prince’s abdication. During lunch, Bismarck receives this encrypted dispatch, confused and incomprehensible, he is furious. Then he takes another look at the dispatch, asks General Moltke about the combat readiness of the army and, in the presence of the guests, quickly shortens the text: “After the Imperial Government of France received from the Royal Government of Spain official notification of the refusal of the Prince of Hohenzollern, the French Ambassador still presented in Ems to His Majesty the King demand that he authorize him to telegraph to Paris that His Majesty the King undertakes at all times never to give consent if the Hohenzollerns renewed their candidacy. Then His Majesty decided not to receive the French ambassador a second time and notified him through the aide-de-camp that His Majesty. there is nothing more to tell the ambassador." Bismarck did not write anything in, did not distort anything in the original text, he only crossed out what was unnecessary. Moltke, having heard the new text of the dispatch, noted admiringly that before it sounded like a signal for retreat, but now it sounded like a fanfare for battle. Liebknecht called such editing “a crime the like of which history has never seen.”


“He led the French absolutely wonderfully,” writes Bismarck’s contemporary Bennigsen. “Diplomacy is one of the most deceitful activities, but when it is conducted in German interests and in such a magnificent way, with cunning and energy, as Bismarck does, it cannot be denied a share of admiration.” .
A week later, on July 19, 1870, France declared war. Bismarck achieved his goal: both the Francophile Bavarian and the Prussian Wurtenberger united in defending their old peace-loving king against the French aggressor. In six weeks, the Germans occupied all of Northern France, and at the Battle of Sedan, the emperor, along with an army of one hundred thousand, was captured by the Prussians. In 1807, Napoleonic grenadiers staged parades in Berlin, and in 1870, cadets marched along the Champs Elysees for the first time. On January 18, 1871, the Second Reich was proclaimed at the Palace of Versailles (the first was the empire of Charlemagne), which included four kingdoms, six great duchies, seven principalities and three free cities. Raising their bare checkers up, the winners proclaimed Wilhelm of Prussia Kaiser, with Bismarck standing next to the emperor. Now “Germany from the Meuse to Memel” existed not only in the poetic lines of “Deutschland uber alles”.
Wilhelm loved Prussia too much and wanted to remain its king. But Bismarck fulfilled his dream - almost by force, he forced Wilhelm to become emperor.


Bismarck introduced favorable domestic tariffs and skillfully regulated taxes. German engineers became the best in Europe, German craftsmen worked all over the world. The French grumbled that Bismarck wanted to make Europe “a complete gamble.” The British pumped out their colonies, the Germans worked to provide for them. Bismarck was looking for foreign markets; industry was developing at such a pace that it was cramped in Germany alone. By the beginning of the 20th century, Germany overtook France, Russia and the USA in terms of economic growth. Only England was ahead.


Bismarck demanded clarity from his subordinates: brevity in oral reports, simplicity in written reports. Pathos and superlatives are prohibited. Bismarck came up with two rules for his advisers: “The simpler the word, the stronger it is,” and: “There is no matter so complicated that its core cannot be exhumed in a few words.”
The Chancellor said that no Germany would be better than a Germany governed by parliament. He hated liberals with all his soul: “These talkers cannot govern... I must resist them, they have too little intelligence and too much contentment, they are stupid and impudent. The expression “stupid” is too general and therefore inaccurate: among these people there are and intelligent, most of them are educated, they have a real German education, but they understand as little in politics as we did when we were students, even less, in foreign policy they are just children.” He despised socialists a little less: in them he found something of the Prussians, at least some desire for order and system. But from the rostrum he shouts at them: “If you give people tempting promises, with mockery and ridicule, declare everything that has been sacred to them until now is a lie, but faith in God, faith in our kingdom, attachment to the fatherland, to family , to property, to the transfer of what was acquired by inheritance - if you take all this away from them, then it will not be at all difficult to bring a person with a low level of education to the point where he finally, shaking his fist, says: hope be damned, faith be damned and above all, patience be damned! And if we have to live under the yoke of bandits, then all life will lose its meaning! And Bismarck expels the socialists from Berlin and closes their circles and newspapers.


He transferred the military system of total subordination to civilian soil. The vertical Kaiser - Chancellor - Ministers - Officials seemed to him ideal for the state structure of Germany. Parliament became, in essence, a clownish advisory body; little depended on the deputies. Everything was decided in Potsdam. Any opposition was crushed into powder. “Freedom is a luxury that not everyone can afford,” said the Iron Chancellor. In 1878, Bismarck introduced an “exceptional” legal act against the socialists, effectively outlawing the adherents of Lassalle, Bebel and Marx. He calmed the Poles with a wave of repressions; in cruelty they were not inferior to those of the Tsar. The Bavarian separatists were defeated. With the Catholic Church, Bismarck led the Kulturkampf - the struggle for free marriage; the Jesuits were expelled from the country. Only secular power can exist in Germany. Any rise of one of the faiths threatens a national split.
Great continental power.

Bismarck never rushed beyond the European continent. He said to one foreigner: “I like your map of Africa! But look at mine - This is France, this is Russia, this is England, this is us. Our map of Africa lies in Europe.” Another time he said that if Germany were chasing colonies, it would become like a Polish nobleman who boasts of a sable fur coat without having a nightgown. Bismarck skillfully maneuvered the European diplomatic theater. "Never fight on two fronts!" - he warned the German military and politicians. As we know, the calls were not heeded.
“Even the most favorable outcome of the war will never lead to the disintegration of the main strength of Russia, which is based on millions of Russians themselves... These latter, even if they are dismembered by international treaties, are just as quickly reunited with each other, like particles of a cut piece of mercury. This is an indestructible state the Russian nation, strong with its climate, its spaces and limited needs,” wrote Bismarck about Russia, which the chancellor always liked with its despotism and became an ally of the Reich. Friendship with the Tsar, however, did not prevent Bismarck from intriguing against the Russians in the Balkans.


Decrepit by leaps and bounds, Austria became a faithful and eternal ally, or rather even a servant. England anxiously watched the new superpower, preparing for a world war. France could only dream of revenge. In the middle of Europe, Germany, created by Bismarck, stood like an iron horse. They said about him that he made Germany big and the Germans small. He really didn't like people.
Emperor Wilhelm died in 1888. The new Kaiser grew up an ardent admirer of the Iron Chancellor, but now the boastful Wilhelm II considered Bismarck's policies too old-fashioned. Why stand aside while others share the world? In addition, the young emperor was jealous of other people's glory. Wilhelm considered himself a great geopolitician and statesman. In 1890, the elderly Otto von Bismarck received his resignation. The Kaiser wanted to rule himself. It took twenty-eight years to lose everything.

Otto von Bismarck short biography the first Chancellor of the German Empire is outlined in this article. Bismarck carried out a plan for the unification of Germany along the Little German path.

Otto von Bismarck biography briefly

Otto Eduard Leopold von Bismarck-Schönhausen was born into the family of a landowner on April 1, 1815 in Prussia. At the age of 6, his mother sent the boy to the Berlin Plaman School, where children from aristocratic families studied.

At the age of 17 he entered the University of Gettingham. Due to his character and love of argument, the young man participated in duels 25 times. Constantly winning, Bismarck gained respect and authority from his fellow students. During his student years, he did not even think about political activity. At first, the future chancellor worked as an official in the Berlin Court of Appeal, but he quickly got tired of the endless writing of protocols, and he transferred to an administrative position.

Having fallen in love with Isabella Lorraine-Smith, the daughter of a parish priest, Bismarck becomes engaged to her and stops going to work, returning to the family estate. There he leads a wild, cheerful life, for which the local population nicknamed him “wild Bismarck.”

The revolutionary wave of 1848–1849 in Germany marked the beginning of his dizzying career as a politician. Already in 1847, as a reserve deputy of the United Landtag, he made his first public appearance. He developed a forceful method of resolving political issues. Bismarck was confident that Germany, divided by Austria and Prussia, could only be united with “iron and blood.” Also in politics he adhered to conservative policies, being in opposition to the liberals. Thanks to his assistance, political organizations and newspapers were created, the most influential of which was the New Prussian Newspaper. Otto von Bismarck as a politician was one of the founders of the Conservative Party.

In 1849 and 1850 he was appointed to the lower houses of Prussia and Erfurt, respectively. For eight years (1851 - 1859) he was the representative of Prussia in the Diet in Frankfurt am Main.

In the period 1857 - 1861 he was appointed Prussian ambassador to Russia. While in a foreign country, he learned Russian. It was also here that the 47-year-old politician met 22-year-old Princess Katerina Orlova-Trubetskaya, with whom he began an affair. And he wasn’t even too lazy to tell his wife about it in letters.

He went home in 1862 and was then elected prime minister. From that moment on, the politician decided to firmly move towards his goal - the unification of Germany. In 1864, Bismarck, with the support of Austria, leads the war against Denmark. He managed to capture Holstein and Silesia. After Otto, von Bismarck made a knight's move, opposing Austria in the Seven Weeks War and winning a great victory in 1866. Austria was forced to recognize Prussia's right to create a North German Union with 21 states in its composition. The final unification of Germany was completed in 1871, when the Prussian army defeated the French forces. King Wilhelm I was proclaimed German Emperor on January 18, 1871, and Bismarck was proclaimed Chancellor. They began to call him “Iron Chancellor Otto von Bismarck.”

For 19 years, the leader ruled the country with iron and blood. During this time, he annexed a large number of overseas territories to Germany. Thanks to his powerful and strong-willed character, the politician managed to achieve the rise of Germany. That's why Otto von Bismarck was called the Iron Chancellor.

After the death of Wilhelm I, the post of emperor was taken by Wilhelm II, who, fearing Bismarck's popularity, issued a decree on his resignation. What did Otto von Bismarck do? He himself submitted his resignation on March 20, 1890. The former chancellor began writing Thoughts and Memories. In 1894 his wife died and Bismarck's health began to deteriorate. He died on July 30, 1898.

On the topic "Otto von Bismarck"

Student 9 "D" class

Secondary school No. 15

Moldasheva Taira

Otto Eduard Leopold von Schönhausen Bismarck

Otto von Schönhausen Bismarck came from a noble but impoverished Prussian noble family. He was born on the small estate of Schönhausen, near Berlin. Following family tradition, he was supposed to become a military man, but his mother dreamed of seeing her son as a diplomat and Otto entered the law faculty of the University of Göttingen.

The future chancellor did not bother himself with science, devoting most of his time to fencing and beer. Subsequently, he repeatedly boasted of victories in 27 duels. After graduating from the University of Berlin, Bismarck tried to enter the diplomatic service, but was unable to do so due to lack of connections and became an official in the judicial department. However, this service did not last long, because Bismarck soon left his position and went to the village, where he began to manage his father’s two estates. He soon became a successful landowner, famous for his hunting and other victories.

Bismarck was an unusually strong-willed and physically resilient person. In secular circles he was called a “mad cadet.” In his political views, Bismarck was an ardent monarchist. Subsequently, one of his associates formulated his political credo as follows: “Force prevails over right!”

During the revolution of 1848, Bismarck came to Berlin to suppress the rioters at the head of an armed detachment of his peasants. Bismarck's actions were noticed by the authorities, and a few years later it was he who was entrusted with the post of head of German foreign policy.

Bismarck's political career began with the post of Prussian envoy to the Allied Diet in Frankfurt. There he studied all the intricacies of Austrian politics and realized that Austria wanted to weaken the influence of Prussia and play a major role in the political arena. In order to counter Austria in this endeavor, it was necessary to acquire a strong ally.

Bismarck visited St. Petersburg and Paris as ambassador and realized that the best allies for Germany were Russia and France. In 1862 he went home and at the same time became prime minister. On September 30, 1862, he made a famous speech in the Landtag: “The great questions of the time are decided not by speeches or decisions of the majority, but by iron and blood.” Ignoring the liberal opposition, Bismarck completed military reform and strengthened the German army.

From that time on, Bismarck firmly and decisively began to move towards his intended goal - the unification of Germany. In 1864 he led the war against Denmark and, with Austrian support, captured Silesia and Holstein. The Prussian army then marched against Austria and defeated it in the Seven Weeks' War of 1866. As a result of the defeat, Austria recognized Prussia's right to create the North German Confederation, which united 21 states.

The unification of Germany was completed in 1871 when Prussian troops defeated France. Thus, Bismarck's plan to transform Germany into the German Reich was realized. On January 18, 1871, the Prussian king was proclaimed German emperor, and Bismarck became his chancellor.

However, Bismarck's career ended soon after the death of Wilhelm I (1797 - 1888). His successor, Wilhelm II, feared Bismarck's increasing influence. Bismarck's request for resignation was submitted and accepted on March 20, 1890. He left Berlin, with crowds of people noisily cheering for his services to Germany. Already during his lifetime, he became the subject of worship and imitation, and after Bismarck’s death, monuments were even erected to him in different places of the empire.

Bismarck - biography Bismarck - biography

(Bismarck-Schonhausen) Bismarck Otto Eduard Leopold von Schönhausen
(Bismarck Otto Eduard Leopold von Schonhausen) (1815 - 1898)
Bismarck-Schonhausen
Biography
Prince, from 1890 - Duke of Lauenburg. Born April 1, 1815, Schönhausen. German politician who unified the German Empire and became its chancellor. Advocate of the "iron and blood" policy. A native of the Pomeranian Junkers. He studied jurisprudence in Göttingen and Berlin. He was an opponent of German unity and a supporter of Austria. In 1847 - 1848 - one of the most reactionary deputies of the 1st and 2nd United Landtags of Prussia, a supporter of the use of armed force to suppress the revolution. from 1849 - member of the Prussian Chamber of Deputies, from 1850 - member of the Erfurt Parliament. 1851 - 1859 - Prussian representative in the Bundestag in Frankfurt am Main, after which he turned into an enemy of Austria and a supporter of German unity under Prussian hegemony. 1859 - 1862 - Prussian envoy to Russia, in 1862 - to France. Since 1862, Minister-President and Minister of Foreign Affairs of Prussia. 1865 - elevated to the dignity of count. After the creation of the North German Confederation in 1867, he became Chancellor. After the war of 1870 - 1871, the formation of a new German Empire followed, Bismarck became its chancellor (while retaining the post of Prussian Minister of the President) and was elevated to princely dignity. 1871 - 1890 - Reich Chancellor of the German Empire. In 1872 - 1875, he carried out the activities of the so-called "Kulturkampf": on the initiative and under pressure from Bismarck, laws were adopted directed against the Catholic Church on depriving the clergy of the right to supervise schools, on the prohibition of the Jesuit order in Germany, on compulsory civil marriage, on the abolition of articles of the constitution, providing for the autonomy of the church, etc. 1878 - passed through the Reichstag an “exceptional law” against socialists, prohibiting the activities of social democratic organizations. 1879 Bismarck achieved the adoption of a protective customs tariff by the Reichstag. In 1879 - 1883, with his participation, the Triple Alliance of Germany with Austria and Italy was created. From 1879 he took the path of increased protectionism. 1881-1889 passed “social laws” (on insurance of workers in case of illness and injury, on old-age and disability pensions), which laid the foundations for social insurance of workers. At the same time, he demanded a tightening of anti-worker policies during the 80s. successfully sought an extension of the “exceptional law.” In March 1890, due to political disagreements with Emperor Wilhelm II, he was dismissed from all posts and elevated to the dignity of duke. Having settled on his estate Friedrichsruhe (near Hamburg), where he spent the last 8 years of his life, he sharply criticized the activities of the government. 1892 - was elected to the German Diet, but never appeared in it. There were two attempts on Bismarck's life: by Blind in 1866 and by Kuhlmann in 1874. He died on July 30, 1898 in Friedrichsruh. Thanks to him, the German regions of Austria were excluded from Germany and the non-German regions of Alsace-Lorraine and part of Schleswig were included.
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Sources of information:
Encyclopedic resource www.rubricon.com (Great Soviet Encyclopedia, Encyclopedic Dictionary "World History")
Project "Russia Congratulates!", biography of O. Bismarck

(Source: “Aphorisms from around the world. Encyclopedia of wisdom.” www.foxdesign.ru)


Consolidated encyclopedia of aphorisms. Academician 2011.

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Books

  • O. Bismarck. Thoughts and memories. In three volumes. Volume 1, O. Bismarck. Bibliographic rarity. Moscow, 1940, State Socio-Economic Publishing House. Publisher's binding. The rarity is in good condition. Bismarck's "Thoughts and Memories" is...


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