Armistice, 1918Account of the discussions and negotiations in Germany, from the time the German leaders first realized that victory was impossible until Nov. 11, 1918. |
Contents
Ludendorff Finds Victory Doubtful 1 | 17 |
Ludendorff Demands an Immediate Armistice | 24 |
Ludendorff Forces Prince Max to Sue for Peace | 56 |
Copyright | |
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abdication accept Admiral Scheer afternoon agreed Allies Alsace-Lorraine American Amtliche Urkunden answer armistice terms asked Austria Austria-Hungary Belgium Berlin Bolshevism British Cabinet Clause Clemenceau Colonel House conference coöperation Crown Prince decision delegation demand discussion Document draft Ebert Emperor enemy Entente Erinnerungen Erzberger evacuation Field Marshal fighting Foreign Office Foreign Relations Foreign Secretary Fourteen Points France Frankfurter Zeitung French front German Army German Government Germany's Groener Haeften Hertling High Command Hindenburg Hintze House Papers Ibid immediate Imperial Chancellor informed Kaiser Kiel Lansing levée en masse Lloyd George Ludendorff Marshal Foch ment military situation Minister Mordacq morning nation naval Navy neutral Niemann Noske November October October 14 October 30 party Payer political possible Powers President Wilson Prince Max proposal question Reichstag reply revolution Scheer Scheidemann September ships Social Democrats soldiers Solf submarine Supreme Army Command surrender telegram territory tion troops United Ursachen Vossische Zeitung Wemyss