Abstract
At their meeting in Koblenz (July 8-10, 1948), the western zone
minister presidents did not overtly reject the Western powers’ London
Documents (also known as the Frankfurt Documents), but they did express
serious reservations about the founding of a West German constituent
state, which they feared might lead to a final division of Germany.
Instead of convoking a national constituent assembly to write a
constitution for the new “state,” the minister presidents recommended
that a “parliamentary council” (consisting of representatives of the
state parliaments) deliberate on a “basic law” for an “administrative
region.” Since Military Governors Lucius D. Clay and Brian H. Robertson
had made it clear that the Western powers would not change their
position on the desired founding of a West German state, the minister
presidents formulated a compromise at another conference in Rüdesheim
(July 21-22, 1948): the terms “parliamentary council” and “basic law”
would be retained, but they would ask for no fundamental concessions
with regard to the London Documents.
In the picture we see, from
left to right behind the table: State Secretary Hermann Brill, Minister
President Christian Stock, Privy Councilor Apel (all from Hesse),
Minister Carl Spiecker, Minister President Karl Arnold, Privy Councilor
Katzenberger (all from North Rhine-Westphalia) and (front left) Minister
of Justice Rudolf Katz (Schleswig-Holstein).