Reich Ministry for Food and Agriculture
The Reich Ministry of Food and Agriculture (RMEL) was a supreme Reich authority during the Weimar Republic from 1919 to 1933 and during the Nazi era from 1933 to 1945 . The Ministry was responsible for the agricultural policy matters of the German Reich . It was headed by a Reich Minister , who in turn was subordinate to a State Secretary . On January 1, 1935, the Ministry was merged with the Prussian Ministry of Agriculture, Domains and Forests ("Prussian Ministry of Agriculture") founded in 1879 and until 1938 was given the name "Reich and Prussian Ministry of Food and Agriculture". After the end of National Socialism in 1945 and the occupation period , the Federal Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Forestry was established as the successor to the Federal Republic of Germany, which was founded in the western zones .
history
In March 1919, the “Reich Ministry of Nutrition” emerged from the Reich Food Office. This was merged with the Reich Ministry of Economics in September 1919 and re-established during the Kapp Putsch in March 1920 under the name "Reich Ministry of Food and Agriculture". In the same year the Ministry moved into the Palais of Princes Alexander and Georg at Wilhelmstrasse 72 in Berlin . From 1924 onwards, four large-format paintings by August Weber were on loan in the building , which have been considered lost since 1945.
After the National Socialists came to power on January 30, 1933, the ministry was initially under the direction of Alfred Hugenberg . After his forced resignation in June 1933, Kurt Schmitt (Reich Economics Minister) and Walther Darré (Reich Minister for Food and Agriculture) were his successors. The latter took over on June 30, 1933 as "Reich Peasant Leader" head of the Reich Ministry of Food and Agriculture, with him as the to in this function DC circuit created agriculture Reichsnährstand shelter. In personal union , Darré also headed the Office for Agricultural Policy (from 1936 "Reichsamt für Agrarpolitik"; from 1942 "Reichsamt für das Landvolk"), which was part of the party's administrative apparatus, which was responsible for the management and supervision of the Reichsnährstand. The RMEL took over the state supervision of the organization of the Reichsnährstand. As a result, individual areas of responsibility were gradually transferred to other NS authorities. In 1934, when the Reich Ministry of Food and Agriculture was spun off , the Reichsforstamt, under the leadership of Hermann Göring , was established as the highest Reich authority for forestry and hunting, timber management, nature conservation and the preservation of natural monuments. On January 1, 1935, the Reich Forestry Office was merged with the Prussian State Forestry Office. Goering's deputy and de facto head of the Reich Forestry Office became general forest master Walter von Keudell , and from 1937 Friedrich Alpers . Furthermore, in 1934 and 1935 the agricultural vocational and technical schools were outsourced to the Reich Ministry for Science, Education and National Education and veterinary medicine to the Reich Ministry of the Interior . On September 22nd, 1938, by decree of the Reich Minister, all research institutes in the field of fisheries were combined with the establishment of the Reichsanstalt für Fischerei .
Reich Minister
Surname | Taking office | Term expires | Political party | cabinet |
---|---|---|---|---|
Robert Schmidt | February 13, 1919 | March 26, 1920 | SPD | Scheidemann , farmer |
Andreas Hermes | March 27, 1920 | March 10, 1922 | center | Müller I , Fehrenbach , Wirth I , Wirth II |
Anton Fehr | March 31, 1922 | November 21, 1922 | BBB | Wirth II |
Karl Muller | November 22, 1922 | November 25, 1922 | center | Cuno |
Hans Luther | December 1, 1922 | 4th October 1923 | Non-party | Cuno , Stresemann I. |
Gerhard Count von Kanitz | October 6, 1923 | December 5, 1925 | Non-party | Stresemann II , Marx I , Marx II , Luther I |
Heinrich Haslinde | January 20, 1926 | December 17, 1926 | center | Luther II , Marx III |
Martin Schiele | January 28, 1927 | June 12, 1928 | DNVP | Marx IV |
Hermann Dietrich | June 28, 1928 | March 27, 1930 | DDP | Müller II |
Martin Schiele | March 30, 1930 | May 30, 1932 | DNVP / CNBL 1 | Brüning I , Brüning II |
Magnus Freiherr von Braun | June 1, 1932 | January 28, 1933 | DNVP | Papen , sneak |
Alfred Hugenberg | January 30, 1933 | June 29, 1933 | DNVP | Hitler |
Richard Walther Darré | June 30, 1933 | May 23, 1942 | NSDAP | Hitler |
Herbert Backe | May 23, 1942 2 | May 23, 1945 | NSDAP | Hitler , Goebbels , Schwerin von Krosigk |
State Secretaries
Surname | Taking office | Term expires | Political party |
---|---|---|---|
Ludwig Huber 1 | 1920 | 1922 | Non-party |
Carl Heinrici | 1922 | 1923 | Non-party |
Fred Hawthorn | 1923 | 1926 | Non-party |
Erich Hoffmann | 1926 | 1929 | Non-party |
Hermann Heukamp | 1929 | 1932 | Non-party |
Fritz Mussehl | 1932 | 1933 | Non-party |
Hansjoachim von Rohr | 1933 | 1933 | DNVP |
Herbert Backe | 1933 | 1944 | NSDAP |
Werner Willikens | 1934 | 1945 | NSDAP |
Hans-Joachim Riecke | 1943 | 1945 | NSDAP |
literature
- Götz Aly : The Reich Ministry for Nutrition . In: Berliner Zeitung , November 21, 1997 ( continued on p. 12 )
Web links
- Andreas Dornheim: Race, Space and Autarky. Expert opinion on the role of the Reich Ministry for Food and Agriculture in the Nazi era . (PDF) Developed for the Federal Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Consumer Protection, Bamberg 2011.
Individual evidence
- ↑ According to the register of historic Berlin urban development and architectural monuments in the Mitte district . Printed by Hans Müther: Berlin's building tradition . Verlag Das Neue Berlin, Berlin (GDR) 1956, pp. 85–108, here p. 88.
- ^ Laurenz Demps: Berlin-Wilhelmstrasse. A topography of Prussian-German power . Ch. Links Verlag, Berlin 1994, p. 305, with references.
- ↑ Wolfgang Neugebauer (Ed.): Handbook of Prussian History. Vol. 2. Berlin / New York 1992, p. 603, ISBN 3-11-008322-1 .
- ↑ a b Joachim Tauber u. a. (Ed.): Archive guide to the history of the Memel region and German-Lithuanian relations. Oldenbourg, Munich 2006, ISBN 3-486-57902-9 , p. 284.
- ↑ Riki Kalbe, Moshe Zuckermann: A property in the middle. The site of the future Holocaust memorial in words and pictures. Göttingen 2000, p. 22, ISBN 3-89244-400-5 .
- ^ Hans Kehrl : Crisis Manager in the Third Reich. With critical comments and an afterword by Erwin Viefhaus. Düsseldorf 1973, p. 49 ff.
- ^ Horst Gies: NSDAP and agricultural organizations in the final phase of the Weimar Republic. In: Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte . 15th year, 1967, issue 4, p. 375 ( PDF ).
- ^ Rudolf Kluge, Heinrich Krüger: Constitution and administration in the Greater German Empire . Reich Citizenship. 2., rework. Ed., Berlin 1939, p. 196.
- ↑ Horst Gies: The role of the Reichsnährstandes in the National Socialist system of rule. In: Gerhard Hirschfeld, Lothar Kettenacker (eds.): The “Führer State”. Studies on the structure and politics of the Third Reich (= publication by the German Historical Institute, London. Volume 8). Stuttgart 1981, ISBN 3-12-915350-0 , p. 274.
- ↑ a b Joachim Tauber u. a. (Ed.): Archive guide to the history of the Memel region and German-Lithuanian relations. Oldenbourg, Munich 2006, p. 286 f.
- ↑ Joachim Radkau u. a. (Ed.): Nature conservation and National Socialism. Frankfurt a. M. / New York 2003, ISBN 3-593-37354-8 , pp. 88 f., Note 52.
Coordinates: 52 ° 30 ′ 55 ″ N , 13 ° 22 ′ 52 ″ E