Abstract
Bismarck’s abridgment of the Ems Dispatch and the perceived insult to
French honor that resulted from its publication provided the French
foreign minister with a casus belli
that quickly led to the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War in mid-July
1870. This is a facsimile of the original coded telegram sent from Bad
Ems by Heinrich Abeken, a member of the North German Confederation’s
legation in Paris, to Bismarck (then in Berlin) in the middle of the
afternoon on July 13, 1870. The Abeken text reads [Page 1]: “Ems, July
13, 1870. To the Federal Chancellor Count Bismarck, No. 61, 3:10 p.m.
Station Ems. (Rush!) His Majesty the King [Wilhelm I] writes to me: ‘M.
Benedetti intercepted me on the Promenade in order to demand of me most
insistently that I should authorize him to telegraph immediately to
Paris that I shall obligate myself for all future time never again to
give my approval to the candidacy of the Hohenzollerns should it be
renewed. I refused to agree to this, the last time somewhat severely,
informing him that one dare not and cannot assume such obligations
à tout jamais. Naturally, I informed
him that I had received no news as yet, and since he had been informed
earlier than I, by way of Paris [page 2 begins here] and Madrid, he
could easily understand that my Government was once again out of the
matter.’ Since then His Majesty has received a dispatch from the Prince
[Charles Anthony]. As His Majesty informed Count Benedetti that he was
expecting news from the Prince, His Majesty himself, in view of the
above-mentioned demand and in consonance with the advice of Count
Eulenburg and myself, decided not to receive the French envoy again but
to inform him through an adjutant that His Majesty had now received from
the Prince confirmation of the news which Benedetti had already received
from Paris, and that he had nothing further to say to the Ambassador.
His Majesty leaves it to the judgment of Your Excellency whether or not
to communicate at once the new demand by Benedetti and its rejection to
our ambassadors and to the press. [Signed] A[beken] 13.7.70.” Facsimile
from the files of the Political Archive of the German Foreign
Office.