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Alfred von Tirpitz
German naval officer (1849–1930)
German naval officer (1849–1930)
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| image | Bundesarchiv Bild 134-C1743, Alfred von Tirpitz.jpg |
| caption | Von Tirpitz in 1903 |
| birth_date | |
| birth_place | Küstrin, Prussia |
| death_date | |
| death_place | Ebenhausen, Germany |
| placeofburial | Munich Waldfriedhof |
| allegiance | Kingdom of Prussia (1869–1871) |
| German Empire (1871–1916) | |
| branch | Prussian Navy |
| serviceyears | 1869–1916 |
| rank | Grand admiral |
| commands | Torpedo Inspectorate |
| East Asia Squadron | |
| Imperial Naval Office | |
| battles | Franco-Prussian War |
| World War I | |
| awards | |
| module | |
| embed | yes |
| office | State Secretary for the Navy of Germany |
| monarch | Wilhelm II |
| chancellor | Chlodwig Carl Viktor |
| Bernhard von Bülow | |
| Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg | |
| termstart | 18 June 1897 |
| termend | 15 March 1916 |
| predecessor | Friedrich von Hollmann |
| successor | Eduard von Capelle |
German Empire (1871–1916)
East Asia Squadron Imperial Naval Office World War I Bernhard von Bülow Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg Alfred Peter Friedrich von Tirpitz (; born Alfred Peter Friedrich Tirpitz; 19 March 1849 – 6 March 1930) was a German grand admiral and State Secretary of the German Imperial Naval Office, the administrative branch of the German Imperial Navy from 1897 until 1916.
Prussia never had a major navy, nor did any of the other German states before the German Empire was formed in 1871. Tirpitz took the modest Imperial Navy and, starting in the 1890s, turned it into a world-class force that could threaten Britain's Royal Navy. However, during World War I, his High Seas Fleet proved unable to end Britain's command of the sea and its chokehold on Germany's economy. The one great engagement at sea, the Battle of Jutland, ended in a narrow German tactical victory but a strategic failure. As the High Seas Fleet's limitations became increasingly apparent during the war, Tirpitz became an outspoken advocate for unrestricted submarine warfare, a policy which would ultimately bring Germany into conflict with the United States. By the beginning of 1916, he was dismissed from office and never regained power. Following his dismissal, he would become Chairman of the far-right German Fatherland Party, an ideological precursor to the German National People's Party.
Family and early life
Tirpitz was born in Küstrin (today Kostrzyn in Poland) in the Prussian province of Brandenburg, the son of lawyer and later judge Rudolf Tirpitz (1811–1905). His mother was the daughter of a doctor. Tirpitz grew up in Frankfurt (Oder). He recorded in his memoirs that as a child he was a mediocre pupil.
Tirpitz spoke English fluently and was sufficiently at home in Britain that he sent his two daughters Ilse and Margot to Cheltenham Ladies' College.
On 18 November 1884 he married Maria Augusta Lipke (born 11 October 1860 in Schwetz, West Prussia, died after 1941). On 12 June 1900 he was elevated to the Prussian nobility, becoming von Tirpitz. He had four children: Max, Wolfgang, Ilse (born 1885) and Margot (born 1888). His son, Oberleutnant zur See Wolfgang von Tirpitz, was taken prisoner of war after the sinking of in the Battle of Heligoland Bight on 28 August 1914. Ilse married diplomat Ulrich von Hassell who was executed in 1944 as an anti-Hitler activist. Their daughter and her young sons were then taken as hostages. She wrote of the experience in A Mother's War.
Fatherland Party

In September 1917 Grand Admiral Tirpitz became a co-founder of the Pan-Germanic and nationalist Fatherland Party (Deutsche Vaterlandspartei). The party was organised jointly by Heinrich Claß, Konrad Freiherr von Wangenheim, Tirpitz as chairman and Wolfgang Kapp as his deputy. The party attracted the opponents of a negotiated peace; it organised opposition to the parliamentary majority in the Reichstag, which was seeking peace negotiations. It sought to bring together outside parliament all parties on the political right, which had not previously been done. At its peak, in the summer of 1918, the party had around 1,250,000 members. It proposed both Generalfeldmarschall Paul von Hindenburg and General Erich Ludendorff as "people's emperors" of a military state whose legitimacy was based on war and on war aims instead of on the parliamentary government of the Reich. Internally, there were calls for a coup d'etat against the German government, to be led by Hindenburg and Ludendorff, even against the Kaiser if necessary. Tirpitz's experience with the Navy League and with mass political agitation convinced him that the means for a coup was at hand.
Tirpitz considered that one of the main aims of the war must be annexation of new territory in the west, to allow Germany to develop into a world power. This meant holding the Belgian ports of Zeebrugge and Ostend, with an eye to the main enemy, the United Kingdom. He proposed a separate peace treaty with Russia, giving them access to the ocean. Germany would be a great continental state but could maintain its world position only by expanding world trade and continuing the fight against the UK. He complained of indecision and ambiguity in German policy, humanitarian ideas of self-preservation, a policy of appeasement of neutrals at the expense of vital German interests, and begging for peace. He called for vigorous warfare without regard for diplomatic and commercial consequences and supported the most extreme use of weapons, especially unrestricted submarine warfare.
The Fatherland Party had ceased its operations by February 1919.
From 1908 to 1918 Tirpitz served as a member of the Prussian House of Lords.
After 1918
After Germany's defeat Tirpitz supported the right-wing German National People's Party (Deutschnationale Volkspartei, or DNVP) and sat for it in the Reichstag from 1924 until 1928.
Tirpitz died in Ebenhausen, near Munich, on 6 March 1930. He is buried in the Waldfriedhof in Munich.
Commemoration
The Tirpitz Range on the island of New Hanover in Papua New Guinea takes its name from Alfred von Tirpitz.
Honours
- Honorary doctorates from the universities of Göttingen, 16 June 1913; and Greifswald
- Honorary doctorate of engineering from the Technische Hochschule Charlottenburg
- Freeman of the city of Frankfurt (Oder), 15 January 1917
- The German battleship Tirpitz.
- Tirpitzia, a genus of plants from China and Asia (the family Linaceae), was named after him in 1921 by Johannes Gottfried Hallier.
;German orders and decorations
- Flag of the Kingdom of Prussia (1803-1892).svg Prussia:
- Knight of the Royal Crown Order, 2nd Class, 3 September 1892; with Star
- Knight of the Red Eagle, 2nd Class with Oak Leaves, 18 January 1897; with Star, 27 January 1899; Grand Cross with Crown and Swords on Ring
- Commander's Cross of the Royal House Order of Hohenzollern, with Star, 13 September 1901; Grand Commander's Cross with Swords
- Knight of the Black Eagle, with Collar in Diamonds
- Service Award Cross
- Pour le Mérite (military), 10 August 1915
- Iron Cross, 1st Class
- Brunswick: Grand Cross of the Order of Henry the Lion, 1902
- Baden:
- Grand Cross of the Zähringer Lion, with Oak Leaves, 1899; with Golden Collar, 1901
- Knight of the House Order of Fidelity
- Kingdom of Bavaria: Grand Cross of the Military Merit Order
- Bremen: Hanseatic Cross
- Saxe-Coburg and Gotha Saxe-Altenburg Saxe-Meiningen Ernestine duchies: Grand Cross of the Saxe-Ernestine House Order
- Flagge Großherzogtum Hessen ohne Wappen.svg Hesse and by Rhine: Grand Cross of the Merit Order of Philip the Magnanimous, with Crown, 18 September 1903
- Flagge Fürstentum Lippe.svg Schaumburg-Lippe Lippe: Cross of Honour of the House Order of Lippe
- Mecklenburg-Schwerin: Grand Cross of the Griffon
- Oldenburg: Grand Cross of the Order of Duke Peter Friedrich Ludwig, with Golden Crown
- Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach: Grand Cross of the White Falcon
- Kingdom of Saxony:
- Grand Cross of the Albert Order, 1899
- Knight of the Rue Crown
- Württemberg:
- Grand Cross of the Friedrich Order, 1898
- Grand Cross of the Württemberg Crown
;Foreign orders and decorations
- Austria-Hungary:
- Grand Cross of the Order of Franz Joseph, 1895
- Grand Cross of the Imperial Order of Leopold, 1900
- Grand Cross of the Royal Hungarian Order of St. Stephen, 1911
- Belgium: Grand Cordon of the Order of Leopold
- Kingdom of Bulgaria: Grand Cross of St. Alexander
- Denmark: Grand Cross of the Dannebrog, 31 December 1906
- French Third Republic: Commander of the Legion of Honour
- Greece Kingdom of Greece: Grand Cross of the Redeemer
- Kingdom of Italy:
- Grand Cross of Saints Maurice and Lazarus
- Grand Officer of the Crown of Italy
- Empire of Japan: Grand Cordon of the Rising Sun, with Paulownia Flowers
- Norway: Grand Cross of St. Olav, 15 December 1906
- Ottoman Empire: Order of Osmanieh, 1st Class
- Qing dynasty: Order of the Double Dragon, Class II Grade I
- Kingdom of Romania: Grand Cross of the Star of Romania
- Russian Empire:
- Knight of St. Alexander Nevsky, in Diamonds, August 1902 – during the visit of the German Emperor to the Russian fleet maneuvers in Reval.
- Knight of the White Eagle
- Restoration (Spain):
- Grand Cross of Naval Merit, with White Decoration, 1902
- Grand Cross of the Order of Charles III, 2 November 1905
- Grand Cross of Military Merit
- Sweden:
- Commander of the Sword, 2nd Class, 1890
- Commander Grand Cross of the Order of Vasa, 1908
- United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland: Honorary Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order, 1 July 1904 – during the visit of King Edward VII to Kiel.
Works
- Erinnerungen (1919, online)
- My memories (Vol I, 1919)
- My memories (Vol II, 1919)
Notes
Bibliography
Works
- Tirpitz, Alfred von, Erinnerungen (Leipzig: K.F.Koehler, 1919).
Secondary source
- Berghahn, V.R. Germany and the Approach of War in 1914 (Macmillan, 1973). pp. 25–42
- Berghahn, Volker Rolf. Der Tirpitz-Plan (Droste Verlag, 1971). in German
- Bird, Keith. "The Tirpitz Legacy: The Political Ideology of German Sea Power," Journal of Military History, July 2005, Vol. 69 Issue 3, pp. 821–825
- Bönker, Dirk. Militarism in a Global Age: Naval Ambitions in Germany and the United States before World War I (2012) excerpt and text search; online review
- Bönker, Dirk. "Global Politics and Germany's Destiny 'from an East Asian Perspective': Alfred von Tirpitz and the Making of Wilhelmine Navalism." Central European History 46.1 (2013): 61–96.
- Clark, Sir Christopher, The Sleepwalkers: How Europe Went to War in 1914 (New York: Harper 2013)
- Epkenhans, Michael. Tirpitz: Architect of the German High Seas Fleet (2008) excerpt and text search, 106pp
- Herwig, Holger H., 'Admirals versus Generals: The War Aims of Imperial German Navy 1914–1918', Central European History 5 (1972), pp. 208–233.
- Hobson, Rolf. Imperialism at Sea: Naval Strategic Thought, the Ideology of Sea Power, and the Tirpitz Plan, 1875–1914 (Brill, 2002)
- Hulsman, John C. "To Dare More Boldly: The Audacious Story of Political Risk" (Princeton UP, 2018 ) ch 9 on "1898-1912: the promised land fallacy: Von Tirpitz disastrously builds a Navy." Pp 209–232.
- Kelly, Patrick J. "Strategy, Tactics, and Turf Wars: Tirpitz and the Oberkommando der Marine, 1892–1895," Journal of Military History, October 2002, Vol. 66 Issue 4, pp. 1033–1060
- Kennedy, Paul. The rise and fall of British naval mastery (2017) pp. 205–239.
Primary sources
- Marinearchiv, Der Krieg zur zee 1914–1918 (18 vols, Berlin and Frankfurt: E.S.Mittler & Sohn, 1932–66).
- Marinearchiv, Der Krieg zur See 1914–1918. Der Handelskrieg mit U-Booten (5 vols., Berlin: E.S. Mittler & Sohn, 1923–66).
References
- "Alfred von Tirpitz: Er betrieb Deutschlands falsche Flottenpolitik - WELT".
- "Ulrich von Hassell".
- "Ulrich von Hassell".
- Massie p. 166
- Massie p. 167
- Massie, pp. 169–170
- Massie p. 171
- Massie pp. 172–174
- Massie pp. 174–178
- Massie p. 178
- Massie pp. 177–179
- Massie pp. 180–181
- Massie pp. 181–182
- Massie pp. 182–183
- Massie p. 183
- Massie pp. 184–185
- (2002). "Warfare and Society in Europe, 1792- 1914". Taylor & Francis.
- (13 July 1915). "The Ambassador in Germany (Gerard) to the Secretary of State".
- Patrick J. Kelly, ''Tirpitz and the Imperial German Navy'' (2011) pp. 410–421
- Raffael Scheck, ''Alfred von Tirpitz and German right-wing politics, 1914–1930'' (1998), chapter 5
- "''Tirpitzia'' Hallier f. {{!}} Plants of the World Online {{!}} Kew Science".
- (1918). "Handbuch über den Königlich Preussischen Hof und Staat".
- "Alfred Peter Friedrich von Tirpitz".
- (1886). "Königlich Preussische Ordensliste (supp.)".
- (1895). "Königlich Preussische Ordensliste (supp.)". Preussische Ordens-Liste.
- "Navy Awards During World War I".
- ''Hof- und Staatshandbuch des Herzogtums Braunschweig für das Jahr 1908''. Braunschweig 1908. Meyer. p. 10
- ''Hof- und Staats-Handbuch des Großherzogtum Baden'' (1910), "Großherzogliche Orden" [https://digital.blb-karlsruhe.de/blbihd/periodical/pageview/1881435 p. 187]
- (1914). "Großherzoglich Hessische Ordensliste". Staatsverlag.
- Sachsen. (1901). "Staatshandbuch für den Königreich Sachsen: 1901". Heinrich.
- (1907). "Hof- und Staats-Handbuch des Königreich Württemberg". Landesamt.
- (1908). "Handbuch über den Königlich Preussischen Hof und Staat".
- (1918). "Hof- und Staatshandbuch der Österreichisch-Ungarischen Monarchie".
- (1929). "Statshaandbog for Kongeriget Danmark for Aaret 1929". J.H. Schultz A.-S. Universitetsbogtrykkeri.
- (1922). "Norges Statskalender".
- (9 August 1902). "Latest intelligence - the Imperial meeting at Reval".
- (1914). "Guía Oficial de España".
- (1914). "Guía Oficial de España".
- (1915). "Sveriges statskalender".
- [https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/27704/page/5191 ''The London Gazette''], issue 27704, p. 5191
- Republished in a single volume by NSNB with an introduction by Erik Empson in 2013 [https://www.amazon.com/Memoirs-Volumes-Illustrated-First-Classics-ebook/dp/B00DH2E9LE/ ASIN B00DH2E9LE].
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