Abstract
In the winter and spring of 1879, Otto von Bismarck (1815–1898), the
Catholic Center Party leader Ludwig Windthorst (1812–1891), and the
Vatican were feeling each other out regarding a possible settlement of
the Kulturkampf conflict. At this
time Bismarck was preparing to turn away from the National Liberals and
base his future parliamentary support in the Reichstag on the
protectionist industrial and agricultural tariffs favored by the
Conservative parties and the Center. On March 31, 1879, Bismarck held an
hour-long private conversation with Windthorst. Soon thereafter, on the
evening of May 3 Windthorst created a sensation by appearing at
Bismarck’s [parliamentary] soirée for the first time since 1869, where
he was warmly received by Bismarck. The Baroness Hildegard von
Spitzemberg noted in her diary that Windthorst had been treated “as if
there had never been a Kulturkampf”
(“als sei nie Kulturkampf gewesen.”) The artist intentionally put
Windthorst, not Bismarck, in the center of the frame and increased his
stature relative to Bismarck’s to illustrate the power he held in that
moment.