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Abdication and Armistice

After the Kaiser abdicated, the next step was for Germany to withdraw from the war.

The Kiel Mutiny

The Kiel Mutiny

  • By September 1918 it was clear that Germany would not be able to win the war.
  • In October, the Kaiser lost the support of his military.
    • Sailors in the navy refused to follow the Kaiser’s orders.
    • This was called the Kiel Mutiny.
Abdication

Abdication

  • In November 1918 the Kaiser lost the support of his advisors and was forced to abdicate. He then fled to Holland.
  • 10 November 1918: the German Republic was born.
    • Friedrich Ebert became the leader.
The Armistice (peace agreement)

The Armistice (peace agreement)

  • On 11 November 1918, Friedrich Ebert (the new leader of Germany) admitted defeat and signed the armistice (peace agreement) with the Allies.
  • Some Germans felt that Germany could have won the war and so were ‘stabbed in the back’ by Ebert and his government.
Friedrich Ebert's legacy

Friedrich Ebert's legacy

  • Ebert and the politicians who negotiated peace became known as the ‘November Criminals’.
  • This event was exploited by the Nazi Party in their rise to power in the 1930s.
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