Johannes Hoffmann (SPD politician) explained

Johannes Hoffmann
Office:Minister President of Bavaria
Term Start:17 March 1919
Term End:14 March 1920
Predecessor:Kurt Eisner
Successor:Gustav Ritter von Kahr
Office2:Education minister of Bavaria
Term Start2:8 November 1918
Term End2:14 March 1920
Predecessor2:Eugen von Knilling
Successor2:Franz Matt
Birth Date:3 July 1867
Birth Place:Ilbesheim, Kingdom of Bavaria
Nationality:German
Death Place:Berlin
Party:German People's Party
Social Democratic Party of Germany (from 1907)

Johannes Hoffmann (3 July 1867  - 15 December 1930) was a German politician and member of the Social Democratic Party from Bavaria. He served as a Minister in the revolutionary government of the Bavarian Soviet Republic and subsequently in the People's State of Bavaria administration, 1919–20.

Biography

Born in Ilbesheim, near Landau, Palatinate, his parents were Peter Hoffmann and Maria Eva, née Keller. He attended the Gymnasium in Landau, and, having completed his studies at the teaching seminary, served as a school teacher in Kaiserslautern from 1887. He married Luise Ackermann in 1892.

Between 1899 and 1904, Hoffmann was a member of the Kaiserslautern city council, seconded by the liberal German People's Party (DVP). In 1907, he joined the Social Democrats and was elected deputy of the Bavarian Landtag the next year; his candidacy earned him disciplinary proceedings and he finally had to quit public service.

In 1910 he returned into the Kaiserslautern city council and from 1912 he held the position of second mayor. In the same year, he was elected to the German Reichstag parliament. After the German Revolution of 1918–19 and the establishment of the People's State of Bavaria, he served as Bavarian Minister of Education under Minister-President Kurt Eisner. During his tenure as Minister of Education, he removed the Bavarian schooling system from the supervision of the Catholic Church. After Eisner's assassination (21 February 1919) he succeeded him as minister-president of the People's State of Bavaria on 17 March 1919[1] as the first freely elected Bavarian Minister President.

Ousted from Munich by the forces of the Bavarian Soviet Republic and the local worker's council led by Hoffmann's former party fellow Ernst Niekisch, the parliament and government fled to Bamberg in April 1919, where Hoffmann took part in the working out of the Bavarian Constitution ("Bamberg Constitution"). After his government had Munich occupied by Reichswehr troops and paramilitary Freikorps units, Hoffmann and his cabinet were able to return in May 1919. However, on 14 March 1920, Hoffmann resigned during the Kapp Putsch and was succeeded by Gustav von Kahr,[2] after he was forced out of office by the Bavarian Civil Guards and Freikorps forces.[3]

Hoffmann returned to Kaiserslautern. After standing unsuccessfully for Mayor of Ludwigshafen, he again tried to pursue his teaching career. Nevertheless, he was dismissed on charges of collaboration during the Allied occupation of the Rhineland. At least, Hoffmann retained his Reichstag mandate until his death in 1930. All pension claims raised by his widow were denied by the Bavarian government.

Literature

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Free state of Bavaria - List of ministers . 9 October 2010 . bot: unknown . https://web.archive.org/web/20090729175341/http://geocities.com/CapitolHill/Rotunda/2209/Bavaria.html . 29 July 2009 .
  2. http://www.worldstatesmen.org/German_States1918.htm Bayern (Bavaria) - Minister-presidents
  3. Diehl, James M. Paramilitary Politics in Weimar Germany. Indiana University Press, 1977. pp. 72–74.