Johannes Bell Explained

Johannes Bell
Order1:Reich Minister of Justice
Term Start1:17 July 1926
Term End1:29 January 1927
Chancellor1:Wilhelm Marx
Predecessor1:Wilhelm Marx (acting)
Successor1:Oskar Hergt
Order2:Reich Minister for the Occupied Territories
Term Label2:Acting
Term Start2:17 July 1926
Term End2:29 January 1927
Chancellor2:Wilhelm Marx
Predecessor2:Wilhelm Marx (acting)
Successor2:Wilhelm Marx (acting)
Order3:Reich Minister of Transport
Term Start3:5 November 1919
Term End3:1 May 1920
Chancellor3:Gustav Bauer
Hermann Müller
Predecessor3:Position established
Successor3:Gustav Bauer
Office4:Reich Minister for the Colonies
Term Start4:21 June 1919
Term End4:7 November 1919
Chancellor4:Philipp Scheidemann
Gustav Bauer
Predecessor4:Philipp Scheidemann
Successor4:Position abolished
Birth Date:23 September 1868
Birth Place:Essen, Rhine Province, Kingdom of Prussia
Death Place:Beverungen, West Germany
Profession:Jurist
Party:Centre Party

Johannes Bell (23 September 1868 – 21 October 1949) was a German jurist and politician from the Centre Party. During the Weimar Republic era, he briefly served as Minister of Colonial Affairs, Minister of Transport (1919/20), and as Minister of Justice (1926/27). He was one of the two German representatives who signed the Treaty of Versailles in June 1919.

Life

Johannes Bell was born on 23 September 1868 in Essen in what was then the Rhine Province of Prussia, as the son of Josef Bell, a land surveyor, and his wife Josefine (née Steuer). A Roman Catholic, Bell married Trude Nünning in 1896.[1]

Bell studied law at Tübingen, Leipzig and Bonn and was awarded a Doctor of Law in 1890.[2]

He started practicing law in Essen in 1894 and in 1900 became a notary. After 1908, Bell was a member of the Prussian diet. From 1911/12 to 1933 (i.e. both in the Empire and in the Weimar Republic), he was a member (and 1920 to 1926 Vice-President) of the Reichstag for the Catholic German Center Party or Zentrum. He was also a member of the constituent assemblies, Weimar National Assembly and its Prussian equivalent, the .[1] [2]

Bell was a member of the first democratically elected governments of Germany, the Cabinet Scheidemann, Cabinet Bauer and Cabinet Müller I. In February 1919, Bell became Reichskolonialminister (Minister of Colonial Affairs) and he held that post until the ministry was dissolved in November 1919. Together with Hermann Müller (SPD), Bell signed the Treaty of Versailles for Germany on 28 June 1919. After June 1919, he also was Reichsverkehrsminister (Minister of Transport). In this capacity, Bell was instrumental in the creation of the Deutsche Reichsbahn, which involved the nationalization of various regional railway lines.[1] He remained in office just long enough to see the National Assembly approve the unification of railways and then resigned in May 1920.[3]

Bell was also a senior figure in the parliamentary group of the Zentrum and the author of numerous publications, making him a well-known political figure.[1]

Johannes Bell once again served as a minister of Germany from July 1926 to February 1927 in the cabinet of Wilhelm Marx, as Reichsjustizminister (Minister of Justice) and minister for the occupied territories. After 1930, he was chairman of the Reichstag committee on violations of international law.[1] [2]

After the Nazis seized power in 1933, Bell retired from politics. He died on 21 October 1949 in Würgassen/Weser.[1]

Selected works

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Biografie Johannes Bell (German). Bayerische Staatsbibliothek. 2 January 2014.
  2. Web site: Biografie Johannes Bell (German). Deutsches Historisches Museum. 3 January 2014.
  3. Web site: Files of the Reichskanzlei: Kabinett Müller I, Kabinettsbildung und Charakteristik der Minister (German). Bundesarchiv. 3 January 2014.