Erich Ludendorff

Erich Ludendorff
Ludendorff in 1924
Member of the Reichstag
In office
24 June 1920 – 13 June 1928
ConstituencyNational list
First Quartermaster General of the
Great General Staff
In office
29 August 1916 – 26 October 1918
Chief[a]Paul von Hindenburg
Preceded byHugo von Freytag-Loringhoven
Succeeded byWilhelm Groener
Personal details
Born
Erich Friedrich Wilhelm Ludendorff

(1865-04-09)9 April 1865
Kruszewnia, Prussia
Died20 December 1937(1937-12-20) (aged 72)
Munich, Germany
Political partyDVFP
Other political
affiliations
NSFB (1924–1925)
Spouses
Margarethe Schmidt
(m. 1909; div. 1925)
    Mathilde von Kemnitz
    (m. 1925)
    RelativesHans Ludendorff (brother)
    Heinz Pernet (stepson)
    Signature
    Military service
    Allegiance
    Branch/service
    • Imperial German Army
      • Prussian Army
    Years of service1883–1918
    RankGeneral der Infanterie
    Battles/wars
    Expand list:
    • World War I
      • Russian invasion of East Prussia (1914)
        • Battle of Tannenberg
        • First Battle of the Masurian Lakes
      • Battle of the Vistula River
      • Battle of Łódź
      • Winter Battle of the Masurian Lakes
      • Battle of Humin-Bolimów
      • Battle of Łomża
      • German summer offensive (1915)
      • Bug–Narew offensive
      • Siege of Novogeorgievsk
      • Riga–Schaulen offensive
      • Vilno-Dvinsk offensive
      • Lake Naroch
      • Baranovichi offensive
      • Brusilov offensive
      • Second Battle of the Somme
      • German spring offensive
      • Second Battle of the Marne
    • Kapp Putsch
    • Beer Hall Putsch
    AwardsGrand Cross Of The Iron Cross Pour le Mérite
    Iron Cross 1st Class

    Erich Friedrich Wilhelm Ludendorff (German: [ˈeːʁɪç ˈfʁiːdʁɪç ˈvɪlhɛlm ˈluːdn̩dɔʁf] ; 9 April 1865 – 20 December 1937) was a German general and politician. He achieved fame during World War I (1914–1918) for his central role in the German victories at Liège and Tannenberg in 1914. After his appointment as First Quartermaster General of the German General Staff in 1916, Ludendorff became Germany's chief policymaker in a de facto military dictatorship until the country's defeat in 1918. Later during the years of the Weimar Republic, he took part in the failed 1920 Kapp Putsch and Adolf Hitler's 1923 Beer Hall Putsch, thereby contributing significantly to the Nazis' rise to power.

    Erich Ludendorff came from a non-noble family in Kruszewnia in the Prussian Province of Posen. Upon completing his education as a cadet, he was commissioned a junior officer in 1885. In 1893, he was admitted to the prestigious German War Academy, and only a year later was recommended by its commandant to the General Staff Corps. By 1904, he had rapidly risen in rank to become a member of the Army's Great General Staff, where he oversaw the development of the Schlieffen Plan.

    Despite being removed from the Great General Staff for meddling in politics, Ludendorff restored his standing in the army through his success as a commander in World War I. In August 1914, he led the successful German assault on Liège, earning him the Pour le Mérite. On the Eastern Front under the command of General Paul von Hindenburg, Ludendorff was instrumental in inflicting a series of crushing defeats against the Russians, notably at Tannenberg and the Masurian Lakes.

    By the end of August 1916, General Ludendorff successfully lobbied for Hindenburg's appointment as head of the Supreme Army Command and his own promotion to the rank of First Quartermaster General. Once he and Hindenburg established a military dictatorship in all but name, Ludendorff directed Germany's entire military strategy and war effort for the rest of the conflict. In this capacity, he secured Russia's defeat on the Eastern Front and launched a new wave of offensives on the Western Front resulting in advances not seen since the war's outbreak. However, by late 1918, all improvements in Germany's fortunes were reversed after a string of defeats in the Allies' Hundred Days Offensive. Faced with the war effort's collapse and a growing popular revolution, Kaiser Wilhelm II forced Ludendorff to resign.

    After the war, Ludendorff became a prominent nationalist leader and a promoter of the stab-in-the-back myth, which posited that Germany's defeat and the settlement reached at Versailles were the result of a treasonous conspiracy by Marxists, Freemasons and Jews. He also took part in the failed 1920 Kapp Putsch and 1923 Beer Hall Putsch before unsuccessfully standing in the 1925 election for president. Thereafter, he retired from politics and devoted his final years to the study of military theory. His most famous work in this field was The Total War, where he argued that a nation's entire physical and moral resources should remain forever poised for mobilization because peace was merely an interval in a never-ending chain of wars. Following his death from liver cancer in Munich in 1937, Ludendorff was given—against his explicit wishes—a state funeral organized and attended by Hitler.
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