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Conservative Party (Prussia)

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Prussian political party
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Conservative Party
Konservative Partei
FoundersLeopold von Gerlach
Ludwig von Gerlach
Friedrich Julius Stahl
Founded1848; 177 years ago (1848)
Dissolved1876; 149 years ago (1876)
Preceded byConservative faction in thePrussian National Assembly
Succeeded byGerman Conservative Party
Free Conservative Party
NewspaperNeue Preußische Zeitung (commonly called theKreuzzeitung)
IdeologyConservatism
Monarchism
Anti-parliamentarianism
Defense ofJunker interests
Political positionRight-wing[1][2]

TheConservative Party (German: Konservative Partei) was a political party inPrussia which was founded in 1848 by the relatively loose cooperation of conservative associations, groups and members of parliament.[3]

In 1866 theFree Conservative Party (known as the German Reich Party in theReichstag from 1871) split from the Conservatives, who were then called Old Conservatives.[4] In 1876 the Conservative Party merged with the newly foundedGerman Conservative Party.[5]

History

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Origins in the Revolution of 1848

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Demonstrations on Alexanderplatz during the March Revolution of 1848 in Berlin.

The Conservative Party developed during the political crisis brought about by theRevolutions of 1848 in theKingdom of Prussia. Demonstrations and confrontations during theMarch Revolution in Berlin led KingFrederick William IV to promise governmental reforms and to authorize the election of thePrussian National Assembly, which convened in May 1848 to draft a constitution for the monarchy.[6]

Within the National Assembly, deputies who favored maintaining the traditional structures of the Prussian state began coordinating their positions in response to constitutional proposals advanced by liberal and democratic representatives. Many of these conservative deputies were drawn from thelandowning nobility of the eastern provinces and from senior officials within the Prussian civil service. They objected to draft provisions that would substantially limit the authority of the Crown or introduce broader forms of parliamentary control than had existed before 1848.[7]

By mid-1848 conservative deputies met regularly outside the assembly to coordinate their interventions and to formulate shared positions on constitutional questions. Their cooperation intensified as political unrest continued and as debates in the Assembly moved toward issues such as ministerial responsibility and the structure of the executive. Conservatives argued that several proposed reforms were incompatible with the constitutional and administrative practices of the Prussian state as it had developed since the early nineteenth century.[8]

After the king dissolved the National Assembly in December 1848 and introduced thePrussian Constitution of 1848 by royal decree, conservative deputies supported the reassertion of monarchical authority and regarded the new constitutional framework as a necessary measure to stabilize the state after months of disruption.[9] These developments accelerated the consolidation of a coherent conservative political grouping.

In the same year, the establishment of theNeue Preußische Zeitung (commonly called theKreuzzeitung) created a central press organ that articulated conservative viewpoints and helped to link sympathetic deputies, writers, and officials. By the early 1850s these networks had developed into the Conservative Party, which operated within the constitutional structure defined after 1848 and represented supporters of the monarchy and traditional Prussian state institutions.[10]

The Constitutional Conflict, 1860–1866

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The party played a central role in the constitutional crisis that began in 1861, when disagreements arose between the Crown and the liberal majority in thePrussian House of Representatives over funding the planned reorganization of the army. Conservatives endorsed the army reform program and the government’s interpretation that military authority was vested in the monarch under the constitution.[11]

In September 1862 KingWilhelm I appointedOtto von Bismarck as Minister President to resolve the deadlock. Bismarck’s decision to implement the army reform without parliamentary approval was generally supported by conservative deputies, who viewed the conflict as a legal dispute over constitutional interpretation rather than a challenge to accepted political order.[12]

Otto von Bismarck in 1862.

By 1866 differences over economic policy, administrative reform, and the government’s broader political strategy contributed to a division within conservative ranks. A faction supportive of Bismarck’s leadership but inclined toward cooperation with moderate liberal elements formed theFree Conservative Party (Freikonservative Partei), while the original organization continued as the Conservative Party.[13]

Participation in the North German Confederation, 1867–1871

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Following Prussia’s victory in theAustro-Prussian War and the establishment of theNorth German Confederation in 1867, conservative representatives held seats both in the Prussian Landtag and in the federal parliament of the new confederation. In both bodies they supported measures that strengthened the executive authority of the federal presidium held by the Prussian king and reinforced Prussia’s leading position within northern Germany.[14]

The party’s electoral strength remained concentrated in Prussia’s eastern provinces, where large estates and administrative structures had long supported conservative influence. Conservatives generally endorsed Bismarck’s military and diplomatic policies, including those that culminated in the Franco–Prussian War of 1870–1871 and the subsequent proclamation of theGerman Empire.


Merger and Dissolution, 1871–1876

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After the unification of Germany in 1871 political life in the new empire prompted further realignment on the conservative side. Differences between the Conservative Party and the Free Conservatives narrowed as both operated within an imperial parliament whose structure limited Prussian-specific political agendas. Conservative deputies continued to defend monarchical authority and agrarian interests, but the creation of imperial political parties gradually reduced the distinctiveness of the Prussian party.[15]

In 1876 the Conservative Party formally merged with elements of the Free Conservative Party and various conservative associations to form theGerman Conservative Party (Deutschkonservative Partei). This merger marked the dissolution of the original Prussian Conservative Party, which ceased to exist as an independent organization.[16]

Chairmen

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Electoral results

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German Reichstag/Bundestag

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See also:Reichstag (German Empire),Reichstag (Weimar Republic), andBundestag
Election yearConstituencySeats won+/–
Votes%
February 1867629,36016.86
63 / 297
August 18671868480,77520.92
66 / 382
Increase 3
1871524,88113.51
56 / 382
Decrease 9
1874352,0506.78
21 / 397
Decrease 35

References

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  1. ^Christopher Clark,Iron Kingdom: The Rise and Downfall of Prussia, 1600–1947 (Harvard University Press, 2006), pp. 475–482.
  2. ^David Blackbourn,History of Germany 1780–1918 (Blackwell, 2003), pp. 129–134.
  3. ^"Influence of Prussian Nationalism - Germany before World War One, 1890-1914 - AQA - GCSE History Revision - AQA".BBC Bitesize. Retrieved2022-09-19.
  4. ^Asmuss, Burkhard; Scriba, Arnulf (2 September 2016)."Die Freikonservative Partei 1866–1918" [The Free Conservative Party 1866–1918].Deutsches Historisches Museum (in German). Retrieved6 July 2025.
  5. ^Booms, Hans (1954).Die Deutschkonservative Partei [The German Conservative Party](PDF) (in German). Bonn: Kommission für Geschichte des Parlamentarismus und der politischen Parteien. p. 5.
  6. ^Christopher Clark,Iron Kingdom: The Rise and Downfall of Prussia, 1600–1947 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2006), pp. 458–464.
  7. ^David Blackbourn,History of Germany 1780–1918 (Oxford: Blackwell, 1998), pp. 175–177.
  8. ^Hans-Ulrich Wehler,Deutsche Gesellschaftsgeschichte, Bd. 1 (Munich: C.H. Beck, 1987), pp. 778–783.
  9. ^Wehler,Deutsche Gesellschaftsgeschichte, pp. 782–784.
  10. ^Frank-Lothar Kroll,Preußens Krone (Munich: C.H. Beck, 2001), pp. 184–188.
  11. ^David Blackbourn,History of Germany 1780–1918 (Oxford: Blackwell, 1998), pp. 175–177.
  12. ^Christopher Clark,Iron Kingdom: The Rise and Downfall of Prussia, 1600–1947 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2006), pp. 475–482.
  13. ^Hans Booms,Die Deutschkonservative Partei (Bonn: KGParl, 1954), p. 5.
  14. ^Blackbourn,History of Germany 1780–1918, pp. 175–177.
  15. ^Kroll,Preußens Krone, pp. 184–188.
  16. ^Booms,Die Deutschkonservative Partei, p. 5.
Political parties in Germany until the end of World War I
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