- Prince Maximilian of Baden
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Maximilian of Baden Chancellor of Germany In office
3 October – 9 November 1918Monarch William II Preceded by Georg, count of Hertling Succeeded by Friedrich Ebert Minister president of Prussia In office
3 October – 9 November 1918Preceded by Georg, count of Hertling Succeeded by Friedrich Ebert Foreign minister of Prussia In office
3 October – 9 November 1918Preceded by Georg, count of Hertling Succeeded by None Personal details Born 10 July 1867
Baden-BadenDied 6 November 1929 (aged 62)
SalemPolitical party None Spouse(s) Marie Louise, princess of Hanover Maximilian of Baden (also known as Max von Baden; full name: Maximilian Alexander Friedrich Wilhelm of Baden) (10 July 1867 – 6 November 1929) was a German prince and politician. He was heir to the Grand Duchy of Baden and in 1918 briefly served as chancellor of Germany, overseeing the transformation into a parliamentary system.
Contents
Life
Born in Baden-Baden, Maximilian was the son of Prince Wilhelm of Baden, third son of Leopold, grand duke of Baden, and Princess Maria Maximilianovna of Leuchtenberg, a niece of Alexander II, Czar of Russia.
He was named after his maternal grandfather, Maximilian Jevgenevich de Beauharnais, duke of Leuchtenberg, and bore a resemblance to his cousin, Napoleon III, emperor of the French.
Following the death of his father in 1897, he was heir to the grand-ducal throne of his cousin Frederick II.
Chancellor
Noted as a liberal before and during the First World War, he was appointed Chancellor of Germany in October 1918 in order to negotiate an armistice with the Allies in the last days of the war. Although he had serious reservations about the way the German General Staff wanted to conduct negotiations, he accepted the charge, and appointed a government that for the first time included representatives of the Social Democrats, Friedrich Ebert and Philipp Scheidemann.
The government's efforts to secure an armistice were interrupted by the outbreak of revolution in Germany in early November. Maximilian urged Emperor William II to abdicate. Despite similar advice by Paul von Hindenburg and Wilhelm Groener of the General Staff, the Emperor considered abdication only as Emperor, not as King of Prussia. On 9 November 1918, Maximilian went ahead and announced the abdication anyway, and then resigned in favor of Friedrich Ebert.
Later life
Prince Maximilian, Margrave of Baden, spent the rest of his life in retirement. In 1928, following the death of Grand Duke Frederick II, he became head of the House of Baden. He died at Salem the following year.
Children
Maximilian was married to Marie Louise, eldest daughter of Ernest Augustus II, crown prince of Hanover and Thyra, princess of Denmark. The couple had two children:
- Marie Alexandra (1 August 1902 - 29 January 1944), who married Wolfgang, landgrave of Hesse-Kassel and a son of Prince Frederick Charles of Hesse-Kassel, designated crown prince of Finland, and Margaret, princess of Prussia. Marie Alexandra was killed in a bombing of Frankfurt by the Allies of World War II. They had no children.
- Berthold (24 February 1906 - 27 October 1963), who married Theodora, daughter of Andrew, prince of Greece and Denmark and Alice, princess of Battenberg. Prince Berthold was the brother-in-law of Philip, duke of Edinburgh.
Ancestry
References
- My Syllabus of Errors, by O.C. Hiss. Berlin: Potsdam Press, 1990.
External links
- A Page About Max von Baden (in German)
Prince Maximilian of BadenBorn: 10 July 1867 Died: 6 November 1929Political offices Preceded by
Georg Graf von HertlingChancellor of Germany
Prime Minister of Prussia
3 October – 9 November 1918Succeeded by
Friedrich EbertTitles in pretence Preceded by
Frederick II— TITULAR —
Grand Duke of Baden
8 August 1928 – 6 November 1929
Reason for succession failure:
Grand Duchy abolished in 1918Succeeded by
BertholdThe generations indicate descent from Charles Frederick, the first Grand Duke of a united Baden. 1st Generation Charles Louis, Hereditary Prince • Prince Friedrich • Louis I, Grand Duke of Baden • Leopold, Grand Duke of Baden • Prince Wilhelm • Prince Maximilian2nd Generation Charles, Grand Duke of Baden • Louis II, Grand Duke of Baden • Frederick I, Grand Duke of Baden • Prince Wilhelm • Prince Karl3rd Generation Frederick II, Grand Duke of Baden • Prince Maximilian4th Generation 5th Generation Margrave Maximilian* • Prince Ludwig Wilhelm* •6th Generation 7th Generation Prince Leopold* • Prince Friedrich* • Prince Karl-Wilhelm* •*Titular prince of Baden due to the 1918 German Revolution Chancellors of Germany North German Confederation
(1867–1871)German Empire
(1871–1918)Weimar Republic
(1919–1933)Third Reich
(1933–1945)- Adolf Hitler
- Joseph Goebbels
- Count Schwerin von Krosigk (as Leading Minister)
Federal Republic
(1949–)Ministers President of Prussia Kingdom of Prussia
(1701–1918)Office established 1848 · Arnim-Boitzenburg · Camphausen · Auerswald · Pfuel · Brandenburg · Ladenberg · Manteuffel · Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen · Hohenlohe-Ingelfingen · Bismarck · Roon · Bismarck · Caprivi · Eulenburg · Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst · Bülow · Bethmann Hollweg · Michaelis · Hertling · BadenFree State of Prussia
in the Weimar Republic
(1918–1933)Free State of Prussia
in the Third Reich
(1933–1935)Hertzberg · Goltz · Hardenberg · Bernstorff · Ancillon · Werther · Maltzan · H. Bülow · Canitz und Dallwitz · Arnim-Boitzenburg · Arnim · Schleinitz · Auerswald · Dönhoff · Brandenburg · Eichmann · Arnim-Heinrichsdorff-Werbelow · Brandenburg · Schleinitz · Radowitz · Manteuffel · Schleinitz · Bernstorff · Bismarck · Caprivi · Bieberstein · B. Bülow · Bethmann Hollweg · Michaelis · Hertling · BadenCategories:- 1867 births
- 1929 deaths
- People from Baden-Baden
- People from the Grand Duchy of Baden
- Chancellors of Germany
- German Empire politicians
- German people of World War I
- Princes of Baden
- House of Zähringen
- Dukes of Baden
- Prussian politicians
- German Student Corps members
- University of Heidelberg alumni
- Knights First Class of the Order of the Zähringer Lion
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