Encarta Search
Search Encarta about Frankfurt Parliament

Windows Live® Search Results

See all search results in
Windows Live® Search Results

Frankfurt Parliament

Encyclopedia Article

Frankfurt Parliament, national assembly elected by popular vote during the German revolutions of 1848 that tried and failed to create a unified German state.

On May 18, 1848, about 600 delegates met in Frankfurt to begin drafting a constitution for a unified Germany that would replace the German Confederation that had resulted from the Congress of Vienna in 1815. The deputies, though able, lacked experience. Instead of establishing a central power in Germany, the deputies bickered about the fundamental rights of the German people. Serious differences also arose over questions of how to secure sovereign powers for the central government and whether to consider Austrians a part of the German people. One group of delegates, called the “Small German Party”, wanted to exclude Austria altogether, arguing that its diverse population was mostly foreign and non-German. Another group of deputies, called the “Large German Party”, demanded Austria's inclusion.

The Frankfurt Assembly failed to complete its work while enthusiasm for the revolution was still at its height. The imperial army of Austria overthrew the revolutionaries in Vienna. The Prussian king Frederick William IV followed Austria's example and dismissed the Prussian assembly.

Nevertheless, the assembly continued its work and completed a constitution. The proposed constitution excluded all non-German lands from the proposed German empire and provided for a hereditary emperor, a democratic legislative body, a governmental ministry, and a supreme court. In April 1849 the assembly sent a delegation to Berlin to offer the title of hereditary German emperor to the king of Prussia. The Prussian king, fearing war with Austria and Russia, declined the German crown. Radical political groups in Germany tried to impose the constitution through civil war, but were suppressed.

Find in this article
View printer-friendly page
E-mail




© 2008 Microsoft