President of Germany (1919–1945)

President of the Reich
Reichspräsident (German)
Standard of the President
(1933–1934/35)
The Presidential Palace at the Wilhelmstrasse in Berlin
StyleHis Excellency
TypeHead of state
StatusAbolished
ResidencePresidential Palace
SeatBerlin, Germany
AppointerDirect election
under a two-round system
Term lengthSeven years,
with the possibility of indefinite re-election
Constituting instrumentWeimar constitution
PrecursorGerman Emperor
Formation11 February 1919
First holderFriedrich Ebert
Final holderPaul von Hindenburg (constitutionally)
Karl Dönitz (de facto)
Abolished
  • 2 August 1934 (Death of Paul von Hindenburg)
  • 23 May 1945 (Allied dissolution of Flensburg Government)
Superseded by

The president of Germany (German: Reichspräsident, lit.'president of the Reich') was the head of state under the Weimar Constitution, which was officially in force from 1919 to 1945, encompassing the periods of the Weimar Republic and Nazi Germany.

The Weimar constitution created a semi-presidential system in which power was divided between president, cabinet and parliament.[1] The president was directly elected under universal adult suffrage for a seven-year term, although Germany's first president, Friedrich Ebert, was elected by the Weimar National Assembly rather than the people. The intention of the framers of the constitution was that the president would rule in conjunction with the Reichstag (legislature) and that his extensive emergency powers would be exercised only in extraordinary circumstances. The political instability of the Weimar period and an increasingly severe factionalism in the legislature, however, led to the president occupying a position of considerable power, legislating by decree and appointing and dismissing governments at will.

In 1934, after the death of President Hindenburg, Adolf Hitler, who was already chancellor, assumed the powers of the presidency[2] as Führer und Reichskanzler ("Leader and Chancellor"). In his last will in April 1945, Hitler named Karl Dönitz president, thus briefly reviving the presidential office until just after the German surrender in May 1945.

The Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany established the office of Federal President (Bundespräsident), which is a chiefly ceremonial post largely devoid of political power.

  1. ^ Shugart, Matthew Søberg (December 2005). "Semi-Presidential Systems: Dual Executive and Mixed Authority Patterns" (PDF). French Politics. 3 (3): 323–351. doi:10.1057/palgrave.fp.8200087. S2CID 73642272. Retrieved 15 October 2016.
  2. ^ Gesetz über das Staatsoberhaupt des Deutschen Reichs, 1 August 1934:
    "§ 1 The office of the Reichspräsident is merged with that of the Reichskanzler. Therefore, the previous rights of the Reichspräsident pass over to the Führer and Reichskanzler Adolf Hitler. He names his deputy."