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Deutsche Friedensgesellschaft Collected Records

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Held at: Swarthmore College Peace Collection [Contact Us]500 College Avenue, Swarthmore 19081-1399

This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the Swarthmore College Peace Collection. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in their reading room, and not digitally available through the web.

Overview and metadata sections

The Deutsche Friedensgesellschaft (German Peace Society) was founded in 1892 by the journalist Alfred Fried and the renowned pedagogue Wilhelm Foerster. In 1914 Ludwig Quidde, chairman of the society's Bavarian branch, became national president; he retained the position until 1929. By the eve of World War I there were about 10,000 members in 98 sections; many of these dissolved during the war, but the society did not disband. A Historical Dictionary of Germany's Weimar Republic, 1918-1933 by C. Paul Vincent states: "Defeat fortified the movement. But while Quidde continued to lead the society and the new Friedenskartell (Peace Cartel), the movement assumed two personalities: the prewar pacifists trusted in international arbitration and the League of Nations; the young pacifists, often from the USPD, believed that war must be prevented by conscientious objection and revolution. Portrayed by Carl von Ossietzky, who joined the society in 1912, as unrealistic and dogmatic, Germany's young pacifists never proved as popular as their Western European counterparts. Yet the authorities feared and respected them. Although members were terrorized and murdered, the society consistently worked to combat militarism. Through its Bund Neues Vaterland—renamed the Deutsche Liga fur Menschenrechte (German League for Human Rights) in January 1922—it aided unjustly accused or imprisoned leftists, exposed the assassinations that claimed such victims as Matthias Erzberger and Walther Rathenau, and published information on Germany's illegal rearmament. The pacifists seemed to lose their raison d'etre after the 1925 Locarno Treaties. Exhibitions and protests were abandoned for lack of public support, and as belief in the reality of peace grew among the old pacifists, many resigned from a crusade deemed unnecessary. The younger radicals encroached upon Quidde's authority in 1927 when they forced a triumvirate upon the society in which the president shared power with Paul von Schoenaich, a retired general, and Friedrich Küster, editor of Das andere Deutschland. At an extraordinary congress in the spring of 1929, Küster's triumph over Quidde was complete: faced with the radicalization of the organization, Quidde and his friends Hellmut von Gerlach and Harry Kessler resigned. The new leaders were so extreme that even Kurt Hiller, an erstwhile radical, was expelled in 1930 for attacking various members as "agents" of French and Russian imperialism. When the society began supporting radical socialist organizations, it forfeited its traditional support with the SPD and the DStP (formerly the DDP) and lost the backing of the liberal press. By January 1933 it retained fewer than five thousand members."

Suppressed by the Nazis, the organization was refounded in November 1945. in 1968, it merged with Internationale der Kriegsdienstgegner (IdK, War Resisters' International). It still exists and is known as the Deutsche Friedensgesellschaft - Vereinigte Kriegsdienstgegnerinnen (German Peace Society - United War Resisters), or DFG-VK.

Das Andere Deutschland was the publication organ of the German Peace Society. During the Weimar Republic, Kurt Tucholsky, Erich Kästner, Heinrich Ströbel, Berthold Jacob, Carl Mertens, and Friedrich William Foerster, among others, wrote for the newspaper. It was shut down on March 11, 1933; although it was initially supposed to be banned for three months, the Nazis' subsequent abrogation of remaining civil liberties kept it shuttered for the rest of the Nazi era. Küster was arrested and held in concentration camps from 1933 to 1938. At the end of World War II, Küster resumed publication of the paper. In 1969, three years after Küster's death, the newspaper ran its final issue.

Most of this collection consists of photocopies of pamphlets and other published items, with a few originals mixed in.

Records are arranged chronologically.

The Swarthmore College Peace Collection is not the official repository for the archives of the Deutsche Friedensgesellschaft.

Acquisition information is unknown.

For the catalog record for this collection, and to find materials on similar topics, search the library's online catalog.

Finding aid produced by Anne M. Yoder, Archivist, May 2014.

  1. Das Andere Deutschland (1925-1969) and other newsletters removed to the Periodical Collection.
  2. Seal "Para Pacem...." removed to the Stamp/Sticker/Seal/Envelope Collection (#0355).
  3. Sticker "Deutsche Friedensgesellschaft - Vereinigte Kriegsdienstgegner" removed to the Stamp/Sticker/Seal/Envelope Collection (#0353).
  4. Pin "Pax...." removed to the Button/Pin/Ribbon Collection (#00623)
  5. Photo/s removed to the Photograph Collection (5" x 8" size).
  6. Postcards removed to Subject File #1: Art in War and Peace.
  7. Posters (23), circa 1932-1948, undated, removed to the Poster Collection.

Publisher
Swarthmore College Peace Collection
Access Restrictions

Collection is open for research without restrictions.

Copyright may have been transferred to the Swarthmore College Peace Collection or may have been retained by the creators/authors (or their descendants), in this collection, as stipulated by United States copyright law. Please contact the SCPC Curator for further information.
Use Restrictions

None.

Collection Inventory

"Friede auf Erden", 1897.
Box 1
"Die Erzichung(?) zum Frieden - eine Aufgabe fur die Deutsche Lehrerschaft", 1898.
Box 1
"Die Einwdendungen gegen die Friedensbewegung" by Dr. Adolf Richter, 1902.
Box 1
"Kulture und Machtpolitik" by Hans Schwann-Schneider, between 1897-1908.
Box 1
"Grundzuge des Unterrichts in der Lehre vom Volkerfrieden", between 1897-1908.
Box 1
"Schriften des Frakfurter Friedensvereins. Heft 2", between 1897-1908.
Box 1
"Krief und Christentum" by Pfarrer Bohme, 1906?.
Box 1
"Der deutsche Friedens-Kongress in Jena(?)", 1908.
Box 1
"Vom internationalen Pazifismus", between 1897-1908.
Box 1
"Der deutsche Friedens-Kongress in Stuttgart", 1909.
Box 1
"Der Zufunftsfrieg(?): Nach den Theorien des Staatsrats Johann von Bloch", 1909.
Box 1
"Der deutsche Friedens-Kongress in Wiesbaden", 1910.
Box 1
"Der Christ und der Volterfriede", 1910.
Box 1
"Arbeit oder Kampf....", 1911.
Box 1
"Volkerfriede? Ein Streit-Gesprach" by Walther Nithack-Stahn, 1911.
Box 1
"Nationale Lebens - und Ehrenfragen" by Professor Dr. Ludwig Quidde; "Diplomatie und Volkerfriede" by Jusizrat Heilberg, 1910.
Box 1
"Internationale Friedensliga", between 1909-1912.
Box 1
"Die Weltpetition zur Verhutung des Krieges zwischen den Staaten", between 1913-1915.
Box 1
"Das Fridens-Jahrbuch", 1913.
Box 1
"Die Friedensarbeit der Frau" by Marie Springer, between 1913-1915.
Box 1
"Warum muss(?) der Lehrer Stellung zur heutigen Fridensbewegung nehmen?" by Ludwig Wagner, 1914.
Box 1
"Krieg und Schule" by Anna Blos, 1915.
Box 1
Memorandum/release, between 1913-1915.
Box 1
"Pazifismus und Belagerungszustand", 1917.
Box 1
"Deutsche Pacifisten: Eine Sammlung von Vorkampfern der Friedensbegwegung in Deutschland" by Dr. Adolf Richter-Pforzheim, between 1917-1919.
Box 1
"Programm", 1919.
Box 1
"Satzung....", between 1917-1919.
Box 1
"Unseres Gluckes Totengraber", 1919.
Box 1
"Achter deutscher Pazifistenkongress", 1919.
Box 1
"Aufruf [Ausrus?]...." by Ludwig Quidde, between 1917-1919.
Box 1
"Wie organisieren wir Versammlungen?", 1920.
Box 1
"Reden uber die Welt-Arustung..." by Dr. Kurt Hiller, 1924.
Box 1
"Die Schriften des Verlages 'Friede durch Recht'", between 1920-1924.
Box 1
Miscellaneous newsclippings and memoranda/releases, between 1920-1924.
Box 1
"Jahreshauptversammlung", 1925.
Box 1
"Studentische Volkerbundsarbeit", between 1925-1933.
Box 1
"Kritische Bemerkungen zum Heeres-Etat", 1930.
Box 1
"Die Marine, Ihr Etat und der Panzerkreuzer B" by E. Alboldt, between 1925-1933.
Box 1
"Europaische Kriegsgefahr", between 1925-1933.
Box 1
Release "The Peace Movement in Germany, Czechoslovakia and Austria: Extracts from Letter of Frederick J. Libby", 1930.
Box 1
Miscellaneous leaflets and memoranda/releases, between 1925-1933.
Box 1
"Programm und Aufgaben", 1946.
Box 1
"Abkehr vom Militarismus" by Erich Luth, 1946.
Box 1
Release "War das Scheitern der Generalsrevolts ein Unguck fur Deutschland? Eine politische Studie von Karl Friedemann", 1946.
Box 1
Miscellaneous leaflets and memoranda/releases, 1945-1946.
Box 1
"Deutschland Zwischen Washington und Moskau" by Heinz Kuhn, 1947.
Box 1
"Der Sturz in den Abrund" by J. Scherer, 1947.
Box 1
"Zwischen Krieg und Frieden", 1948.
Box 1
Release "Easy War - Difficult Truce" [English translation], 1948.
Box 1
Miscellaneous leaflets and memoranda/releases, [sticker and 10 postcards removed], 1947-1948.
Box 1
Pages from book?, approximately 1947.
Box 2
Scope and Contents

incomplete set

Miscellaneous item, approximately 1947.
Box 2
Miscellaneous leaflets and memoranda/releases, 1949-1957.
Box 2
Pamphlet "Entspannung in Mitteleuropa..." by Dr. J. Georgi, 1962.
Box 2
Pamphlet "Zur Geschichte des Ostermarsches der Atomwaffengegner" by Guido Grunewald, 1982.
Box 2
Miscellaneous leaflets and memoranda/releases, 1985-1991.
Box 2
Scope and Contents

sticker and 10 postcards removed

"Mitteilungsblatt des Sachsischen Friedenskartells" 5:2, May 4, 1926.
Box 2
"Die Mittelstelle pazifistischer Jugend der Westzonen Informationsdienst", December 1947.
Box 2
"Die Zentralsstelle fur internationale Zusammenarbeit in der Jugendpflege", 1948.
Box 2
Items by/about Ernst and Hans Oelschlager.
Box 2

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