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The German Revolutionary Student Movement, 1819–1833
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 December 2008
Extract
The archetype of the modern student movement is the German Burschenschaft of the Restoration era. Some events in the history of the Burschenschaft are well known: the Wartburgfest of 1817; the national federation of Burschenschaften in 1818; the assassination of August von Kotzebue by Karl Sand; and the resultant Karlsbad Decrees of 1819. Relatively little attention, however, has been devoted to the post-Karlsbad history of the Burschenschaft, which is the concern of this article. Emphasis will be given to the role which a network of secret, inner circles played in both the survival of the Burschenschaft and its continued involvement in revolutionary conspiracy. These inner circles contained not merely representatives of the normal four-year student classes, but also permanently radicalized Burschenschafter. In some cases such “old boys” did not participate directly but maintained informal ties with key members of the inner circles. Since many of the radical alumni became secondary school teachers, they became the source of a continuous supply of indoctrinated recruits. The Burschenschaft of the Restoration era owed both its survival and the continuity of its traditions to an exclusive, self-perpetuating group of radicals dominated by veteran revolutionaries.
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References
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14. Ibid., pp. 177–79.
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17. The original attendance document of the Wartburg fest of 1817 has been published verbatim by Steiger, Günter, together with editorial analyses and supplementary data, in “Die Teilnehmerliste des Wartburgfestes von 1817: Erste kritische Ausgabe der sog. ‘Präsenzliste,’” Darstellungen und Quellen zur Geschichte der deutschen Einheitsbewegung, ed. Paul, Wentzcke, Stephenson, Kurt et al. (Heidelberg, 1957ff.), IV (1963), 65–133.Google Scholar This series is, essentially, a revival of Wentzcke's Quellen und Darstellungen, after a lapse of 17 years, and is likewise commissioned by the Gesellschaft für burschenschaftliche Geschichtsforschung. It is fortunate that the series survived Wentzcke's death in 1960. Steiger identifies Wesselhöft as “the leading representative of the Burschenschaft” and reveals that he was speaker of the Jena chapter in 1819 (p. 69), doubtless one of the results of the election described by Leo, . In Darstellungen und Quellen, II (1959), 67–100, Walter Nissen has published a part of the diary of the Kiel Burschenschafter Wilhelm Olshausen, together with editorial comments, under the title, “Eine Wanderfahrt zum ersten Wartburgfest.” The diary reveals that Olshausen associated with Wesselhöft and regarded him as an important Burschenschafter; see p. 94. A facsimile of a handwritten document signed by Wesselhöft is reproduced on p. 73.Google Scholar
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42. Ibid.; Heer, Demagogenzeit, pp. 16–18.
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58. Ibid., pp. 113, 117–18.
59. Ibid., p. 118. Among the distinctions which Günter Steiger lists after Wesselhöft's name in “ Die Teilnehmerliste des Wartburgfestes,” p. 69, is “Vorsitzender Jünglings-bund.”
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96. Ibid., pp. 119–20.
97. Ibid. Heer, Demagogenzeit, p. 160, says that the members of the outer circle were “völlig rechtlos,” and that the only part of the uniform they were permitted to wear was the cap.
98. Rüder, p. 120.
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101. Ibid.
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109. Rüder, p. 127.
110. Ibid.
111. On Köhler's capture, see Barton, in Rüder, p. 127; on Bunsen's capture, see Körner, Gustav, Das deutsche Element den Vereinigten Staaten Staaten von Nordamerika, 1818–1848 (New York, 1884), p. 252.Google Scholar
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113. See the packet of correspondence between Gustav Bunsen and Poles, in Frankfurt, Peinliches Verhörs-Amt, “1833 Acta Criminalia Nr. 38 des peinlichen Verhörs-Amtes der freien Stadt Frankfurt de Anno 1833 in Untersuchungs-Sachen gegen Dr. med. Gustav Bunsen aus Frankfurt a/u fasc.: hft: 37 betreffend den am 3ten April 1833 zur Frankfurt im Stadt gehaltene Aufruhr,” in Stadtarchiv, Frankfurt. The letters and notes are written mostly in French. One signed “Louis” reads, “Nous ferrons [sic] un grand plaisir en s'occupant de cette affaire à votre [sic].”
114. Heer, Demagogenzeit, pp. 243, 292.
115. Ibid., pp. 247–48.
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119. Heer, Demagogenzeit, pp. 275, 278.
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124. Ibid., pp. 376–78.
125. Ibid., p. 377.
126. Eimer, in Treitschke, V, 632; Treitschke, v, 363.
127. Eimer, in Treitschke, v, 632.
128. Ibid.
129. Heer, Demagogenzeit, pp. 291–92.
130. Heer, Demagogenzeit, pp. 296–97; Eimer, in Treitschke, v, 633–34. Heer furnishes the names and Burschenschaft affiliation of 24 students; the names and former Burschenschaft affiliation of nine adults; and the names of six adults not connected with the Burschenschaft. Among the latter are two Poles. Treitschke, v, 366, notes the presence of Poles and speculates that the Polish revolutionaries may have been the instigators of the uprising.
131. Eimer, in Treitschke, v, 634; Heer, Demagogenzeit, pp. 299–300; Treitschke, v, 363–66.
132. Heer, Demagogenzeit, p. 301; Tretischke, v, 366, VI, 142.
133. Eimer, in Treitschke, v, 636–37.
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135. Treitschke, VI, 145.
136. Heer, Demagogenzeit, p. 324.
137. Ibid., p. 330.
138. Rüder, pp. 130–31.
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