Carpathian German Party Karpatendeutsche Partei | |
---|---|
Chairperson | Roland Steinacker (1928–1933) Desider Alexy (1933–1935) Franz Karmasin (1935–1938) |
Founded | July 1928 |
Dissolved | 1938 |
Preceded by | Karpatendeutsche Volksgemeinschaft |
Succeeded by | German Party |
Newspaper | Deutsche Stimmen (1934–1938) |
Ideology | German nationalism Christian democracy (1920s) Nazism (1930s) |
Political position | Centre-right (1920s) Far-right (1930s) |
National affiliation | German Electoral Coalition (1929) Sudeten German Party (1935–1938) |
Chamber of Deputies of Czechoslovakia (1935) | 1 / 300 |
Senate of Czechoslovakia (1935) | 1 / 150 |
The Carpathian German Party (German : Karpatendeutsche Partei, abbreviated KdP) was a political party in Czechoslovakia, active amongst the Carpathian German minority of Slovakia and Subcarpathian Rus'. [1] [2] It began as a bourgeois centrist party, but after teaming up with the Sudeten German Party in 1933 it developed in a National Socialist orientation. [3]
The KdP originated in 1927 as the Karpathendeutsche Volksgemeinschaft (KDV, 'Carpathian German Ethnic Community'), founded by men like Dr. Roland Steinacker (a professor in Theology from Bratislava), the Sudeten German industrialist Karl Manouschek, Dr. Samuel Früwirt, Carl Eugen Schmidt (a Protestant pastor) and the engineer Franz Karmasin. [3] [4] [5] [6] [2] [7] The KDV was based mainly in Bratislava and surroundings, and gathered its members from the German bourgeoisie and sympathizers of various political parties (like the Farmers' League, the German National Party and the German Democratic Progressive Party). [8] It also organized Sudeten Germans living in Slovakia. [8]
The KdP was constituted as a political party in July 1928 in Nálepkovo/Wagendrüssel, with their eyes on the upcoming parliamentary election. [3] [5] [9] [10] The KdP was chaired by Dr. Roland Steinacker until 1933. [3]
The party had a Christian and anti-Marxist outlook, and positioned itself as a party loyal to the Czechoslovak state. [10] [11] A key concern of the founders of the KdP was to steer Germans in Slovakia away from Magyar-dominated parties. [6] The new party hoped to break the political hegemony of the Zipser German Party. [12] In terms of identity, the KdP put forward the notion of a 'Carpathian German' identity as opposed to the 'Zipser German' identity traditionally linked to the Hungarian monarchy. [9]
KdP contested the 1929 parliamentary election as part of the German Electoral Coalition, in alliance with the Farmers' League (BdL) and the German Labour and Economic Community (DAWG). [3] Whilst the alliance won 16 seats in the Chamber of Deputies and nine seats in the Senate, no KdP candidates were elected. [3] The alliance obtained 16,922 votes in the areas of the Carpathian Germans (Slovakia and Subcarpathian Rus'). [13]
Desider Alexy became the KdP chairman in 1933. [3] With the National Socialist seizure of power in Germany, KdP gradually moved closer to the Sudeten German Heimatsfront (which later evolved into the Sudeten German Party). [14] [15] The party founded the weekly newspaper Deutsche Stimmen ('German Voices') as its organ in 1934. [16] [17] [18]
In the 1935 parliamentary election KdP contested together with the Sudeten German Party. [3] The agreement between the two parties was reached on March 28, 1935. [19] One KdP candidate was elected, Siegmund Keil who contested a Senate seat in the Nové Zámky 11th electoral district. [3] Moreover, Karmasin was elected to the Chamber of Deputies as a SdP candidate from the Jihlava 10th electoral district. [3] In the Czechoslovak National Assembly SdP and KdP formed joint factions in the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate. [3] All in all, KdP had polled around 30,000 votes (compared to a total number of around 150,000 Carpathian Germans). [6] Effectively KdP did not become as dominant a force in the Carpathian German community that the SdP had done in the Sudetenland. [6]
In November 1935 KdP entered into an organic union with SdP, in line with the Führer principle. [6] [12] The official name of SdP became the 'Sudeten German and Carpathian German Party' (Sudetendeutsche und Karpatendeutsche Partei). [12] [20] KdP organization was remodelled after that of SdP. [6] Karmasin was named by SdP leader Konrad Henlein as his deputy for the Carpathian region. [3] [6] [21] The symbol of KdP was modelled after that of the SdP, an elongated red shield which carried the letters "KdP". [22]
As the alliance with the Sudeten German Party being cemented, KdP began to expand its reach among a younger generation of Germans in Slovakia. [6] Many of the new adherents of KdP had returned from German-language technical schools in Bohemia and Moravia-Silesia or the German University in Prague. [6] KdP was able to build a relatively strong presence in central Slovakia and managed to gain a role amongst younger generation in Zips as well. [12] However the older generation of Zipser Germans and communists sympathizers remained sceptical of Karmasin and his party. [9] [12]
Henlein visited Bratislava on April 27, 1936. [9] During his visit he appealed to the leaders of the Magyar parties to form an alliance. [9] Such an alliance, which became a reality in the 1937 local elections, meant that the United Magyar Party broke its links to the Zipser German Party. [9] The Zipser German Party was routed in the 1937 polls. [9]
The KdP and SdP were banned by the Czechoslovak government in the midst of the Sudeten Crisis in September 1938. [3] [6] On 8 October 1938 the German Party was set up as a successor organization for the KdP. [23] Karmasin would later become the Slovak Secretary of State for German Affairs and then a Waffen-SS Sturmbannführer . [24]
Konrad Ernst Eduard Henlein was a Sudeten German politician in Czechoslovakia before World War II. After Germany invaded Czechoslovakia he became the Gauleiter and Reichsstatthalter of Reichsgau Sudetenland under the occupation of Nazi Germany.
The Sudeten German Party was created by Konrad Henlein under the name Sudetendeutsche Heimatfront on 1 October 1933, some months after the First Czechoslovak Republic had outlawed the German National Socialist Workers' Party. In April 1935, the party was renamed Sudetendeutsche Partei following a mandatory demand of the Czechoslovak government. The name was officially changed to Sudeten German and Carpathian German Party in November 1935.
Carpathian Germans are a group of ethnic Germans in Central and Eastern Europe. The term was coined by the historian Raimund Friederich Kaindl (1866–1930), originally generally referring to the German-speaking population of the area around the Carpathian Mountains: the Cisleithanian (Austrian) crown lands of Galicia and Bukovina, as well as the Hungarian half of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, and the northwestern (Maramuresch) region of Romania. Since the First World War, only the Germans of Slovakia and those of Carpathian Ruthenia in Ukraine have commonly been called Carpathian Germans.
The Zipser Germans, Zipser Saxons, or, simply, just Zipsers are a German-speaking sub-ethnic group in Central-Eastern Europe and national minority in both Slovakia and Romania. Along with the Sudeten Germans, the Zipser Germans were one of the two most important ethnic German groups in the former Czechoslovakia. An occasional variation of their name as 'Tzipsers' can also be found in academic articles. Former Slovak President Rudolf Schuster is partly Zipser German and grew up in Medzev.
Medzev, also known as Metzenseifen is a town and large municipality in Košice-okolie District in the Košice Region of eastern Slovakia. It is one of several towns in Bodva Valley. Other towns in Bodva Valley include: Jasov, Lucia Bania, Vyšný Medzev, and Stos. Historically, It belonged to one of the original mountain towns in the Lower Zips/Dolný Spis: Gelnica/Göllnitz, Smolník/Schmöllnitz, Nálepkovo/Wagendrüssel, Krompachy/Krompach, Mníšek nad Hnilcom/Einsiedel, Švedlár/Schwedler.
Parliamentary elections were held in Czechoslovakia on 27 October 1929. The Republican Party of Farmers and Peasants, emerged as the largest party, winning 46 seats in the Chamber of Deputies and 24 seats in the Senate. Voter turnout was 90.2% in the Chamber election and 78.8% for the Senate. The rightward shift of the 1925 elections was reversed, with moderate centre-left groups increasing their vote shares whilst the Communist Party suffered a set-back.
The Zipser German Party was a party of the First Czechoslovak Republic founded at Kežmarok on 20–22 March 1920 aiming for the representation of the Zipser Germans minority in Czechoslovakia.
The German Electoral Coalition was a political alliance in Czechoslovakia representing Sudeten Germans.
The Nové Zámky 16th electoral district was a parliamentary constituency in the First Czechoslovak Republic for elections to the Chamber of Deputies. The seat of the District Electoral Commission was in the town of Nové Zámky. The constituency elected 11 members of the Chamber of Deputies.
The German People's Group in Czecho-Slovakia was a German minority political party in the Second Czechoslovak Republic.
Die Zeit was a German language daily newspaper published in Prague, Czechoslovakia from 1935 to 1938. The newspaper was the central organ of the Sudeten German Party (SdP). The first issue came out on 1 October 1935. Die Zeit took over the role as the central party organ from the weekly Rundschau. Walter Brand was the editor-in-chief of Die Zeit.
Franz Karmasin was an ethnic German politician in Czechoslovakia, who helped found the Carpathian German Party. During World War II he was state secretary of German affairs in the Slovak Republic, and rose to the rank of SS-Sturmbannführer.
The Jihlava 10th electoral district was a parliamentary constituency in the First Czechoslovak Republic for elections to the Chamber of Deputies. The seat of the District Electoral Commission was in the town of Jihlava. The constituency elected 9 members of the Chamber of Deputies.
The German Party was a Nazi political party active amongst the German minority in Slovakia from 1938 to 1945.
Josef Steinhübl was a German politician and Catholic priest.
The Košice 20th electoral district was a parliamentary constituency in the First Czechoslovak Republic for elections to the Chamber of Deputies. The seat of the District Electoral Commission was in the town of Košice. The constituency elected 7 members of the Chamber of Deputies.
Anton Ernst Oldofredi (1906-1982) was a German scholar and politician. In the early stage of the Second World War he served as the Volksführer of the German minority in Carpatho-Ukraine and held the post of Under-Secretary of State in the government of the short-lived Republic of Carpatho-Ukraine.
Adalbert Gabriel was a Zipser German physician and politician.
Karpatendeutsche Ärzteschaft was an organization of Carpathian German physicians in the World War II-era Slovak Republic. The organization was incorporated into the People's Welfare and People's Health Department of the German Party.