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A young and unknown communist facing his execution. Munich 1918 or 1919
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A young and unknown communist facing his execution. Munich 1918 or 1919
“Zum ewigen Andenken an den Spartakisten Krieg in München Bayern”. English: “As an eternal memento of the Spartacist War in Munich, Bavaria”.
According to some sources, this is a real situation, other sources claim that this is a staged photograph. It’s most likely to be a staged event due to the various discrepancies in the photo. First, this does not look like an actual execution. They are too close to the wall to shoot without ricocheting and they’re not aiming or shouldering their guns in such a way that would indicate a readiness to fire.
The guy on the far right is the biggest giveaway. His stance is all wrong for shooting, his grip on the rifle is incorrect, and he’s looking at the camera. Also, the officer is looking directly into the camera. Two of the guys in the back rank appear to be unfamiliar with their Mauser 98’s.
Take a look at the guy who’s supposed to be executed, he got: defiant attitude, stylish clothing great hair, and he’s looking way too nonchalant. German photojournalists of the early 20th century would frequently stage their photographs (sometimes for propaganda purposes). In their eyes it wasn’t that they were faking, it was just that they wanted to tell a true story in the most visually compelling way.
Judging by the uniform the guys from the firing squad are Freikoprs (Free Corps), not regular army troops per se. Freikorps were paramilitary groups that first appeared in December 1918 in the wake of Germany’s defeat in World War I.
Composed of ex-soldiers, unemployed youth, and other discontents and led by ex-officers and other former military personnel they proliferated all over Germany in the spring and summer of 1919. The Freikorps were used to put down the German Revolution of 1918-1919 and to crush the Bavarian Soviet Republic in May 1919.
They officially disbanded in 1920 but many members joined the fledgling Nazi Party and became the party’s original enforcers – what was later to become the SA. A former member of the Freikorps, Ernst Roehm, became head of the SA.
The German Revolution:
The German Revolution, or November Revolution (German: Novemberrevolution) was the politically driven civil conflict in the German Empire at the end of the First World War, which resulted in the replacement of Germany's imperial government with a republic. The revolutionary period lasted from November 1918 until the establishment in August 1919 of a republic (which later became
known as the Weimar Republic). The roots of the revolution lay in the German Empire's fate in the First World War and the social tensions which came to a head shortly thereafter.
The first acts of revolution were triggered by the policy of the Supreme Command and its lack of coordination with the Naval Command which, in the face of defeat, nevertheless insisted on ordering a climactic battle with the British Royal
Navy which never took place. The Wilhelmshaven mutiny (a sailors' revolt) ensued in the naval
ports of Wilhelmshaven and Kiel, and the spirit of rebellion spread across the country and led to the
proclamation of a republic on 9 November 1918.
Shortly thereafter Emperor Wilhelm Il abdicated. The revolutionaries, inspired by socialist ideas,
failed to hand power to soviets to quell the.Spartacist uprising by force. This fragmentation of the left was a significant factor in its failure to seize
power. The revolution ended on 11 August 1919, when the Weimar Constitution was adopted.
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