Abstract
When the Prussian government fired the Berlin police president, Emil
Eichhorn (USPD) for ostensibly supporting the People’s Naval Division
during the Christmas rebellion, further unrest and mass demonstrations
by the radical left against Eichhorn’s dismissal ensued. Armed
insurgents occupied many publishing houses in Berlin’s newspaper
quarter, among them that of the SPD newspaper
Vorwärts. This photograph from
January 11, 1919, shows armed revolutionary civilians and soldiers
behind barricades of newsprint rolls defending their position at the
Rudolf Mosse publishing house, which they had occupied. Their goal was
to prevent elections to the national assembly – intended to pave the way
for a parliamentary democracy – and instead establish a socialist soviet
republic. A revolutionary committee under the leadership of Karl
Liebknecht and the USPD politician Otto Ledebour rejected the legitimacy
of the Council of People’s Deputies and declared its dissolution.
Negotiations between the Social Democratic government and the insurgents
collapsed. Military suppression of the revolt began on January 8 on
Gustav Noske’s orders, and it lasted until January 12, costing many
lives. In a bloody demonstration of the press’s power to explain the
hectic revolutionary events, the newspaper quarter saw especially fierce
fighting. After the January revolts had been violently ended, army and
free corps units performed clean-up operations to suppress any final
revolutionary activities. Among the victims were Rosa Luxemburg and Karl
Liebknecht.