Everything about Junker totally explained
» See Junker (disambiguation) for other meanings.
Junkers (English pronunciation: [ˈjʊŋkə];
German pronunciation: [ˈjʊŋkɐ]) were the
landed nobility of
Prussia and Eastern
Germany - lands which are often also called "Eastelbia" (Ostelbien in German - the land east of river Elbe). These families were mostly part of the German
Uradel (very old feudal nobility) and carried on the colonization and
Christianization of the northeastern European territories in the 11th, 12th and 13th century. Today "Junker" is used as a predicate for untitled German nobility. The abbreviation of Junker is Jkr. and is most often placed before the given name and academic titles, for example: Jkr. Heinrich von Hohenberg. The female equivalent Junkfrau (Jkfr.) is only being used sporadically. In the past the predicate was also used for Barons and Counts.
In the
Netherlands the title is sometimes used, although it has taken the meaning of
jonkheer, in contrast to the description given below.
Origins
"Junker" in
German means "young lord", and is understood as
country squire. It is probably derived from the German words
Junger Herr, or
Young Lord. As part of the
nobility, many Junker families have particles such as "
von" or "
zu" before their family names. In the
Middle Ages, a Junker was simply a lesser noble, often poor and politically insignificant.
Martin Luther was given the cover name "Junker Jörg" while he lived in
Wartburg Castle in
1521. A good number of poor Junkers took up careers as soldiers and mercenaries. Over the centuries, they rose from disreputable captains of mercenary cutthroats to influential commanders and landowners in the
19th century. The rest of the article refers to these "modern" Junkers.
Modern influences
Being the bulwark of the
Hohenzollern Empire, the Junkers controlled the
military, leading in
political influence and
social status, and owning immense
estates, especially in the north-eastern half of Germany (Brandenburg, Mecklenburg, Pomerania, East Prussia, Saxony, Silesia). Their political influence extended from the
German Empire of 1871 to 1918 through the
Weimar Republic of 1919–1933. It was said that Prussia ruled Germany, the Junkers ruled Prussia, and through it the Empire itself.
They dominated all the higher civil offices and officer corps of the army and navy. Supporting
monarchism and military traditions, they were often
reactionary and protectionist; they were often anti-
liberal, siding with the conservative monarchist forces during the
Revolution of 1848. Their political interests were served by the
German Conservative Party in the
Reichstag and the extraparliamentary
Agrarian League. This political class held tremendous power over the industrial classes and the government. When Chancellor Caprivi reduced the protective duties on imports of grain, these landed magnates demanded and obtained his dismissal; and in 1902, they brought about a restoration of such duties on foodstuffs as would keep the prices of their own products at a high level.
The German statesman
Otto von Bismarck was a noted Junker, as were president
Paul von Hindenburg and Field Marshal
Gerd von Rundstedt.
The
Beer Hall Putsch of
1923, staged by
Adolf Hitler and General
Erich Ludendorff was foiled by commander von Lossow (another Junker) of the local
Reichswehr, and the Bavarian Prime Minister
Gustav von Kahr. Von Kahr was later murdered in the
Reichsmordwoche (the Blood Purge) of
June 30,
1934. This series of events, as well as a few others, led Hitler to dislike Junkers in general. However, Hitler mostly ignored the Junkers as a whole during his time in power, taking no action against them and no action in their favour.
As the war turned against Germany and Nazi atrocities were revealed, several Junkers in influential positions participated in Colonel
Claus von Stauffenberg's
assassination attempt of
20 July 1944. Fifty-eight were executed when the plot failed.(MacDonogh, p 204)
Bodenreform
After the war, during the
Bodenreform (soil reform) in the
German Democratic Republic (GDR), all private property exceeding a certain area (for example all the land that belonged to the Junkers) was seized and given to collectives of farmers or taken by the state under the slogan "Junkernland in Bauernhand!" ("Junker land into farmers hand"). During the war and in the ethnic cleansing of Prussia, the majority of the Junkers were killed. Only about 15% made it to the Western zone of occupation.(MacDonogh, p. 205)
Now, after the
German reunification, the Junkers are trying to get their former estates back. Meanwhile many old noble families are back on their original lands by buying back their land from the state. However, the treaties that
West Germany (FGR) and the
GDR had signed with the
United States, the
United Kingdom,
France and the
Soviet Union in the
1950s contained the rule that any decision made by any of the four occupation forces during the time of occupation (1945–1955) must be kept up, lest the independent Germans label it as wrong
ex post facto.
German agrarian development has been regional rather than national; that's to say, the ownership and use of land took a different trend in each of three main sections of the country. The southwest (including Bavaria, Baden, Württemberg, Hesse and Rhenish Prussia) became like France, a land of small holdings, and up to the First World War it was the only part of the Empire in which it was possible to discover peasant political influence of any importance. The northwest (including Westphalia, Lower Saxony, and parts of Hanover and Holstein) developed a system of medium-to-large holdings, yet with many peasant proprietorships. From Brandenburg eastward, however, — and especially in the Pruserania, — practically all of the land was long ago gathered into great estates, and most of the people were landless, wage-earning agricultural laborers; the latter were the lands of the Junkers.
Further Information
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