01
Post-War Foundation
3.39
The Weimar Republic's founding period (1919-1923) reveals a democratic system experiencing simultaneous acute crises across all domains — a pattern that would prove characteristic of institutional collapse. The physical body of the state was critically compromised: 763,000 civilians dead from starvation during the continued Allied blockade, 426,000 more from influenza, industrial production at only 37% of pre-war capacity, and 1,200+ killed in endemic political violence that included paramilitary coups and systematic assassination of democratic leaders. The institutional mind was severely degraded with nine governments in four years, no party majority, an anti-democratic civil service inherited wholesale from the imperial era, and judges who systematically protected right-wing extremists. The structural identity of the republic was fragmenting as the 'stab-in-the-back' myth took hold, 400,000 men joined explicitly anti-democratic paramilitary organizations, and class, regional, and ideological divisions reinforced each other in mutually destructive ways. Perceived insecurity ran extraordinarily high: the Treaty of Versailles experienced as national humiliation, communist revolution feared by the middle class, 500% inflation eroding savings, and assassinations creating a climate of terror. Yet the system also demonstrated significant adaptive capacity — advanced constitutional protections, progressive labor reforms, innovative diplomacy — and moments of genuine courage, particularly the 12-million-strong general strike that defeated the Kapp Putsch. The critical deficit was courage at the elite level: the failure to purge anti-democratic elements from the judiciary and civil service, and the judicial leniency toward those who openly sought the republic's destruction. This was a system with advanced institutional design attempting to navigate catastrophic initial conditions while being actively sabotaged from within by inherited structures. The question was not whether crises would compound, but whether the moments of courage and adaptation could outrace the compounding failures — a race the historical record shows they would ultimately lose.