List of chancellors of Germany

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Portrait of Otto Von Bismarck in 1890
Portrait of Konrad Adenauer in 1952
Portrait of Helmut Kohl in 1996
Portrait of Angela Merkel in 2019

The Chancellor of Germany[1] is the political leader of Germany and the head of the federal government. The office holder is responsible for selecting all other members of the government and chairing cabinet meetings.[2]

The office was created in the North German Confederation in 1867,[3] when Otto von Bismarck became the first chancellor. With the unification of Germany and establishment of the German Empire in 1871, the Confederation evolved into a German nation-state and its leader became known as the chancellor of Germany.[4] Originally, the chancellor was only responsible to the emperor. This changed with the constitutional reform in 1918, when the Parliament was given the right to dismiss the chancellor. Under the 1919 Weimar Constitution the chancellors were appointed by the directly elected president, but were responsible to Parliament.[5]

The constitution was set aside during the 1933–1945 Nazi dictatorship. During Allied occupation, no independent German government and no chancellor existed; and the office was not reconstituted in East Germany, thus the head of government of East Germany was chairman of the Council of Ministers. The 1949 Basic Law made the chancellor the most important office in West Germany, while diminishing the role of the president.[1]

North German Confederation (1867–1871)

Federal Chancellor of the North German Confederation

The North German Confederation came into existence after the German Confederation was dissolved following the Prussian victory in the Austro-Prussian War of 1866. The chancellor was appointed by the Bundespräsidium, a position that was held constitutionally by the Prussian king.[3]

Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term of office Political Party
Took office Left office Time in office
Portrait Otto von Bismarck
(1815–1898)
1 July
1867
21 March
1871
3 years, 263 days Non-partisan

German Reich (1871–1945)

German Empire (1871–1918)

Reich Chancellor of the German Reich

The German Empire was born out of the North German Confederation as result of the Franco-Prussian War (1870/71). The Präsidium (the Prussian king), which now had also the title Emperor, named the chancellor.[4]

Political parties:   None   Centre

No. Portrait Name
(birth–death)
Term of office Political party Cabinet
Took office Left office Time in office
1 Portrait Fürst
Otto von Bismarck
(1815–1898)
21 March
1871
20 March
1890
18 years, 364 days Non-partisan Bismarck
2 Portrait Count
Leo von Caprivi
(1831–1899)
20 March
1890
26 October
1894
4 years, 220 days Non-partisan Caprivi
3 Portrait Fürst
Chlodwig zu Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst
(1819–1901)
29 October
1894
17 October
1900
5 years, 353 days Non-partisan Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst
4 Portrait Fürst
Bernhard von Bülow
(1849–1929)
17 October
1900
14 July
1909
8 years, 270 days Non-partisan Bülow
5 Portrait Theobald von Bethmann-Hollweg
(1856–1921)
14 July
1909
13 July
1917
7 years, 364 days Non-partisan Bethmann-Hollweg
6 Portrait Georg Michaelis
(1857–1936)
14 July
1917
1 November
1917
110 days Non-partisan Michaelis
7 Portrait Count
Georg von Hertling
(1843–1919)
1 November
1917
30 September
1918
333 days Centre Party Hertling
8 Portrait Prince
Max von Baden
(1867–1929)
3 October
1918
9 November
1918
37 days Non-partisan Baden

Weimar Republic (1918–1933)

Reich Chancellor of the German Reich

On 9 November 1918, Chancellor Max von Baden handed over his office to Friedrich Ebert. Ebert continued to serve as head of government during the three months between the end of the German Empire in November 1918 and the first gathering of the National Assembly in February 1919 as Chairman of the Council of the People's Deputies, until 29 December 1918 together with USPD Leader Hugo Haase.[6]

The Weimar Constitution of 1919 set the framework for the Weimar Republic. The chancellors were officially installed by the president; in some cases the chancellor did not have a majority in parliament.[1][5]

Political parties:   SPD   Centre   DVP   None

No. Portrait Name
(birth–death)
Term of office Political party Cabinet Reichstag
Took office Left office Time in office
Pre-constitutional Weimar Republic (1918–1919)
9 Portrait Friedrich Ebert
(1871–1925)
(de facto head of government)
9 November
1918
13 February
1919
96 days Social Democratic Party
(SPD)
Council of the People's Deputies
SPDUSPD
(as of 29 December 1918 SPD alone)
10 Portrait Philipp Scheidemann
(1865–1939)
as Reich Minister President[a]
13 February
1919
20 June
1919
127 days Social Democratic Party
(SPD)
Scheidemann
SPDDDPZ
(Weimar Coalition)
Nat.Ass.
(Jan.1919)
11 Portrait Gustav Bauer
(1870–1944)
as Reich Minister President[b]
21 June
1919
14 August
1919
54 days Social Democratic Party
(SPD)
Bauer
SPDDDPZ
(Weimar Coalition)
Weimar Republic (1919–1933)
11 Portrait Gustav Bauer
(1870–1944)
14 August
1919
26 March
1920
225 days Social Democratic Party
(SPD)
Bauer
SPDDDPZ
(Weimar Coalition)
Nat.Ass.
(Jan.1919)
12 Portrait Hermann Müller
(1876–1931)
First term
27 March
1920
21 June
1920
86 days Social Democratic Party
(SPD)
Müller I
SPDDDPZ
(Weimar Coalition)
13 Portrait Constantin Fehrenbach
(1852–1926)
25 June
1920
4 May
1921
313 days Centre Party Fehrenbach
ZDDPDVP
1
(Jun.1920)
14 Portrait Joseph Wirth
(1879–1956)
10 May
1921
14 November
1922
1 year, 188 days Centre Party Wirth I
ZSPDDDP
(Weimar Coalition)
Wirth II
ZSPDDDP
(Weimar Coalition)
15 Portrait Wilhelm Cuno
(1876–1933)
22 November
1922
12 August
1923
263 days Non-partisan Cuno
Ind.DVPDDPZBVP
16 Portrait Gustav Stresemann
(1878–1929)
13 August
1923
30 November
1923
109 days German People's Party Stresemann I
DVPSPDZDDP
Stresemann II
DVPSPDZDDP
17 Portrait Wilhelm Marx
(1863–1946)
First term
30 November
1923
15 January
1925
1 year, 46 days Centre Party Marx I
ZDVPBVPDDP
Marx II
ZDVPDDP
2
(May 1924)
18 Portrait Hans Luther
(1879–1962)
15 January
1925
12 May
1926
1 year, 117 days Non-partisan Luther I
DVPDNVPZDDPBVP
3
(Dec.1924)
Luther II
DVPZDDPBVP
17 Portrait Wilhelm Marx
(1863–1946)
Second term
17 May
1926
12 June
1928
2 years, 26 days Centre Party Marx III
ZDVPDDPBVP
Marx IV
ZDNVPDVPBVP
12 Portrait Hermann Müller
(1876–1931)[c]
Second term
28 June
1928
27 March
1930
1 year, 272 days Social Democratic Party
(SPD)
Müller II
SPDDVPDDPZBVP
4
(May 1928)
19 Portrait Heinrich Brüning
(1885–1970)[d]
30 March
1930
30 May
1932
2 years, 61 days Centre Party Brüning I
ZDDPDVPWFBVPKVP
5
(Sep.1930)
Brüning II
ZDSPBVPKVP–CLV
20 Portrait Franz von Papen
(1879–1969)[d]
1 June
1932
17 November
1932
169 days Non-partisan Papen
Ind.DNVP
6
(Jul.1932)
21 Portrait Kurt von Schleicher
(1882–1934)[d]
3 December
1932
28 January
1933
56 days Non-partisan Schleicher
Ind.DNVP
7
(Nov.1932)
  1. ^ The title of Reich Chancellor was not formally used until the Weimar Constitution took effect on 14 August 1919. Instead, Scheidemann was appointed as Reichsministerpräsident (Reich Minister President).
  2. ^ The title of Reich Chancellor was not formally used until the Weimar Constitution took effect. Instead, like Scheidemann, Bauer was appointed as Reichsministerpräsident (Reich Minister President). After the Weimar Constitution took effect on 14 August 1919, Bauer's official title became Reich Chancellor.
  3. ^ Müller was the last parliamentary chancellor until Konrad Adenauer in 1949.
  4. ^ a b c Non-parliamentary chancellor, appointed by Reichspräsident Paul von Hindenburg after no majority parliamentary coalition could be formed.

Nazi Germany (1933–1945)

Reich Chancellor of the German Reich

Adolf Hitler's Machtergreifung (seizure of power) marked the end of the Weimar Republic and the beginning of Nazi Germany. Hitler reigned as dictator and consolidated all power to himself. After the death of president Hindenburg, Hitler took over the president's powers and called himself Führer und Reichskanzler.


No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term of office Political Party Cabinet Reichstag[a]
Took office Left office Time in office
22 Hitler portrait crop.jpg Führer
Adolf Hitler
(1889–1945)
30 January
1933[b]
30 April
1945
(died in office)
12 years, 90 days National Socialist
German Workers' Party
Hitler
NSDAPDNVP (until 1933)
8 (Mar. 1933)
9 (Nov. 1933)
10 (Mar. 1936)
11 (Apr. 1938)
23 Portrait Joseph Goebbels
(1897–1945)
30 April
1945
(de jure)[c]
1 May
1945
(died in office)
1 day National Socialist
German Workers' Party
(Cabinet nominated in Hitler's testament but never convened)
NSDAP
24 Portrait Lutz Graf Schwerin von Krosigk
(1887–1977)
as Leading Minister[d]
1 May
1945
23 May
1945
(arrested)[e]
21 days National Socialist
German Workers' Party
Schwerin von Krosigk
NSDAP
  1. ^ No elections held during World War II. Last convened on 26 April 1942.
  2. ^ Non-parliamentary chancellor, appointed by Reichspräsident Paul von Hindenburg after no majority parliamentary coalition could be formed
  3. ^ Appointed by Adolf Hitler in his Political Testament
  4. ^ The title of Chancellor was not used formally. On May 2, 1945, Reichspräsident Karl Dönitz appointed him as Leading Minister and Reich Minister for Foreign Affairs after the suicide of Goebbels. He was de facto the Chancellor of Germany.
  5. ^ Arrested; government dissolved by the Allies.[7]

Federal Republic of Germany (1949–present)

Federal Chancellor of the Republic of Germany

In 1949, two separate German states were established: the Federal Republic of Germany (known as West Germany) and the German Democratic Republic (known as East Germany). The list below gives the chancellors of West Germany; the government of East Germany was headed by the chairman of the Council of Ministers.[8] In 1990, East Germany was dissolved as it merged with West Germany; Germany was reunified. It retained the name of the Federal Republic of Germany.[9]

Political parties:   CDU (4)   SPD (4)   FDP (1)   Independent (1)

  Denotes acting (i.e. ad interim)
No. Portrait Name
(birth–death)
Term of office Political party Cabinet Bundestag
Took office Left office Time in office
25 Portrait Konrad Adenauer
(1876–1967)
15 September
1949
20 October
1953
14 years, 30 days Christian Democratic Union
(CDU)
Adenauer I
CDU/CSUFDPDP
1 (1949)
20 October
1953
29 October
1957
Adenauer II
CDU/CSUFDP/FVPDPGB/BHE
2 (1953)
29 October
1957
14 November
1961
Adenauer III
CDU/CSUDP
3 (1957)
14 November
1961
15 October
1963
Adenauer IV
CDU/CSUFDP
4 (1961)
26 Portrait Ludwig Erhard
(1897–1977)
15 October
1963
26 October
1965
3 years, 45 days Independent
(No party membership;
but affiliated with the CDU)
[10][a]
Erhard I
CDU/CSUFDP
26 October
1965
30 November
1966
Erhard II
CDU/CSUFDP
5 (1965)
27 Portrait Kurt Georg Kiesinger
(1904–1988)
30 November
1966
21 October
1969
2 years, 324 days Christian Democratic Union
(CDU)
Kiesinger
CDU/CSUSPD
28 Portrait Willy Brandt
(1913–1992)
21 October
1969
15 December
1972
4 years, 197 days Social Democratic Party
(SPD)
Brandt I
SPDFDP
6 (1969)
15 December
1972
7 May
1974
Brandt II
SPDFDP
7 (1972)
Portrait Walter Scheel
(1919–2016)
Acting[b]
7 May
1974
16 May
1974
9 days Free Democratic Party
(FDP)
Brandt II
(acting)
29 Portrait Helmut Schmidt
(1918–2015)
16 May
1974
14 December
1976
8 years, 138 days Social Democratic Party
(SPD)
Schmidt I
SPDFDP
14 December
1976
4 November
1980
Schmidt II
SPDFDP
8 (1976)
4 November
1980
1 October
1982
Schmidt III
SPDFDP
9 (1980)
30 Portrait Helmut Kohl
(1930–2017)
1 October
1982
29 March
1983
16 years, 26 days Christian Democratic Union
(CDU)
Kohl I
CDU/CSUFDP
29 March
1983
11 March
1987
Kohl II
CDU/CSUFDP
10 (1983)
11 March
1987
18 January
1991
Kohl III
CDU/CSUFDP
11 (1987)
18 January
1991
17 November
1994
Kohl IV
CDU/CSUFDP
12 (1990)
17 November
1994
27 October
1998
Kohl V
CDU/CSUFDP
13 (1994)
31 Portrait Gerhard Schröder
(born 1944)
27 October
1998
22 October
2002
7 years, 26 days Social Democratic Party
(SPD)
Schröder I
SPDGreen
14 (1998)
22 October
2002
22 November
2005
Schröder II
SPDGreen
15 (2002)
32 Portrait Angela Merkel
(born 1954)
22 November
2005
28 October
2009
16 years, 16 days Christian Democratic Union
(CDU)
Merkel I
CDU/CSUSPD
16 (2005)
28 October
2009
17 December
2013
Merkel II
CDU/CSUFDP
17 (2009)
17 December
2013
14 March
2018
Merkel III
CDU/CSUSPD
18 (2013)
14 March
2018
8 December
2021
Merkel IV
CDU/CSUSPD
19 (2017)
33 Portrait Olaf Scholz
(born 1958)
8 December
2021
Incumbent 2 years, 202 days Social Democratic Party
(SPD)
Scholz
SPDGreenFDP
20 (2021)
  1. ^ Later on, Erhard briefly became the leader of the CDU from 1966 to 1967.
  2. ^ As Vice Chancellor under Brandt, Scheel served as acting Chancellor following Brandt's resignation.[11]

Timeline

Olaf ScholzAngela MerkelGerhard SchröderHelmut KohlHelmut SchmidtWalter ScheelWilly BrandtKurt Georg KiesingerLudwig ErhardKonrad AdenauerLutz Graf Schwerin von KrosigkJoseph GoebbelsAdolf HitlerKurt von SchleicherFranz von PapenHeinrich BrüningHans LutherWilhelm MarxGustav StresemannWilhelm CunoJoseph WirthConstantin FehrenbachHermann Müller (politician)Gustav BauerPhilipp ScheidemannFriedrich EbertMaximilian of BadenGeorg von HertlingGeorg MichaelisTheobald von Bethmann-HollwegBernhard von BülowChlodwig zu Hohenlohe-SchillingsfürstLeo von CapriviOtto von Bismarck

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "Neuland Grundgesetz | Abkehr von Weimarer Verfassung – Reaktion auf Nazi-Deutschland" [Virgin Soil "Basic Law" | Departure from Weimar Constitution - Reaction to Nazi Germany] (in German). Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung. 1 September 2008. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
  2. ^ "Tasks of the Federal Chancellor". bundeskanzlerin.de. The Press and Information Office of the Federal Government. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
  3. ^ a b Verfassung des Norddeutschen Bundes  [North German Constitution] (in German). 26 June 1867 – via Wikisource.
  4. ^ a b Constitution of the German Empire  [Verfassung des Deutschen Reichs]. 16 April 1871 – via Wikisource.
  5. ^ a b "The Seeds of Evil: The Rise of Hitler — The Constitution of the Weimar Republic". schoolshistory.org.uk. 2004. Archived from the original on 20 August 2011. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
  6. ^ "Biografie Friedrich Ebert 1871-1925" [Biography of Friedrich Ebert]. www.dhm.de/lemo (in German). LeMO/Deutsches Historisches Museum. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  7. ^ Hillmann, Jörg; Zimmermann, John (2014) [2002]. "Die »Reichsregierung« in Flensburg" [The "Government" in Flensburg]. Kriegsende 1945 in Deutschland (in German). Munich: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG. pp. 35–65. ISBN 978-3-486-83332-4.
  8. ^ "Entstehung der DDR: Verfassung und Führungsrolle der SED" [Formation of the GDR: Constitution and the SED's Leadership Role]. www.hdg.de/lemo (in German). LeMO/Haus der Geschichte. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  9. ^ "Vertrag zwischen der Bundesrepublik Deutschland und der Deutschen Demokratischen Republik über die Herstellung der Einheit Deutschlands (Einigungsvertrag)" [Unification Treaty between the Federal Republic of Germany and the German Democratic Republic]. Treaty of 31 August 1990 (in German). Retrieved 13 March 2018.
  10. ^ Jörges, Hans Ulrich; Wüllenweber, Walter (25 April 2007). "CDU-Altkanzler: Ludwig Erhard war nie CDU-Mitglied" (in German). Der Stern. Retrieved 8 April 2018.
  11. ^ McFadden, Robert D. (24 August 2016). "Walter Scheel, Leading Figure in West German Thaw With the East, Dies at 97". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 March 2018.