- Alfred von Tirpitz
Infobox Military Person
name= Alfred von Tirpitz
lived= March 19, 1849 – March 6, 1930
placeofbirth=Küstrin ,Brandenburg
placeofdeath=Ebenhausen nearMunich
caption= Alfred von Tirpitz
nickname=
allegiance=Deutsches Reich
branch=navy|German Empire
serviceyears=
rank=Grand Admiral
commands=
unit=
battles=World War I
awards=
laterwork=Alfred von Tirpitz (March 19, 1849 – March 6, 1930) was a German
Admiral , Secretary of State of the Imperial Naval Office, the powerful administrative branch of theKaiserliche Marine from 1897 until 1916.Born in
Küstrin inBrandenburg , the son of a senior civil servant, he grew up inFrankfurt (Oder) . He joined thePrussian Navy in 1865 and attendedKiel Naval School, gaining his commission in 1869. Upon the creation of the German fleet in 1871 he was part of atorpedo squadron. In 1877 he rose to become the head of the torpedo-arm which he re-organised into the torpedo inspectorate.Captain Tirpitz became Chief of the Naval staff in 1892 and was made aRear Admiral in 1895. In 1896-97 he commanded the Asian cruiser squadron and oversaw the gain of Kiaochow as a German naval base. In 1897 he was made Secretary of State of theReichsmarineamt - the Imperial Naval Office. An energetic campaigner for a greatly enlarged fleet, he attracted the attention and support of the Kaiser. Tirpitz was ennobled to von Tirpitz in 1900. Tirpitz' design to achieve world power status through naval power, while at the same time addressing domestic issues are commonly referred to as theTirpitz Plan . Politically, the Tirpitz-Plan was marked by theFleet Acts of 1898, 1900, 1908 and 1912. By 1914, they had given Germany the second-largest naval force in the world (roughly 40% smaller than theRoyal Navy ). It included seventeen modern dreadnoughts, fivebattlecruiser s, twenty-fivecruiser s and twenty pre-dreadnoughtbattleship s as well as over fortysubmarine s. Although including fairly unrealistic targets, the expansion program was sufficient to alarm the British, starting a costly naval arms race, pushing the British into closer ties with the French.Tirpitz developed a "risk theory" (an analysis which today would be considered part of
game theory ) whereby, if theGerman Navy reached a certain level of strength relative to the British Navy, the British would try to avoid confrontation with Germany (that is, maintain afleet in being ). If the two navies fought, the German Navy would inflict enough damage on the British, that the latter ran a risk of losing their naval dominance. Because the British relied on their navy to maintain control over theBritish Empire , Tirpitz felt they would rather maintain naval supremacy in order to safeguard their empire, and let Germany become a world power, than lose the empire as the cost of keeping Germany less powerful. This theory sparked a navalarms race between Germany and Great Britain in the first decade of the 20th century.However, this theory was based on the assumption that Great Britain would have to send its fleet into the
North Sea to blockade the German ports (blockading Germany was the only way the Royal Navy could seriously harm Germany), where the German Navy could force a battle. But due to Germany's geographic location, Great Britain could blockade Germany by closing the entrance to the North Sea in theEnglish Channel and the area between Bergen and theShetland Islands . Faced with this option a German Admiral commented, "If the British do that, the role of our navy will be a sad one", correctly predicting the role the surface fleet would have duringWorld War I .Tirpitz had been made a
Grand Admiral in 1911. Despite the building program he felt the war had come too soon for a successful surface challenge to the Royal Navy as the fleet act of 1900 had included a seventeen-year timetable. Unable to influence naval operations from his purely administrative position, Tirpitz became a vocal spokesman for an unrestrictedU-boat warfare, which he felt could break the British strangelehold on Germany's sea lines of communication. Interestingly, his construction policy never bore out his political stance on submarines, and by 1917 there was a severe shortage of newly built submarines. When restrictions on the submarine war were not lifted he fell out with emperor and was compelled to resign onMarch 15 ,1916 . He was replaced as Secretary of State of the Imperial Naval Office byEduard von Capelle .In 1917 Tirpitz became head of the short-lived Fatherland Party ("Deutsche Vaterlandspartei"), which sought to rally popular support for an all-out effort to win the First World War. After Germany's defeat he supported the right-wing "Deutschnationalen Volkspartei" (DNVP, German National People Party) and sat for it in the Reichstag from 1924 until 1928.
The German battleship "Tirpitz" was named after him in 1939.
References
* http://www.dhm.de/lemo/html/biografien/TirpitzAlfred (deutch)
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