Online Encyclopedia

EUGEN RICHTER (1839–1906)

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Originally appearing in Volume V23, Page 312 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EUGEN

RICHTER (1839–1906)  , German politician, was born on the 3oth of
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July 1839 at
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Dusseldorf . After attending the
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universities of
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Bonn,
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Heidelberg and Berlin, he entered thegovernment service, being stationed in his native
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town . In 1864 he was chosen burgomaster of Neuwied; but he was already known for his Liberal opinions, and the government refused to confirm the appointment, He was hereupon transferred to
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Bromberg, in East Prussia, which to an inhabitant of the Rhine-
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land was the worst form of exile, and in consequence he resigned his place in the public service . He now went to Berlin, where he earned hiS living as a journalist . He was the most consistent advocate of those doctrines of laissez faire and individual liberty which the Germans call Manchestertum . He was also keenly interested in the attempts made at that period to create co-operative societies among, the working men, and wrote a
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work on co-operative stores . It was not long before he came into conflict with the government; an electioneering pamphlet published in 1867 was confiscated; he was put on his trial but acquitted . In 1867 he was elected a member of the newly formed Reichstag, and in 1869 of the Prussian parliament . He soon became one of the most influential politicians in Germany . A member of the Progressive party, in 188o one of the founders, and eventually the leader, of the Freisinnige, he was always in opposition . Next to Windthorst (q.v.) he was Bismarck's most dangerous opponent . After the
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great change of policy in 1878, for a time his influence was a great impediment to the government; as a consistent adherent to
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free trade, he was the leader of the opposition to the introduction of
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protection, to the new colonial policy, and to State
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Socialism .

It was after 188o that he raised the cry Bismarck muss fort . He always took a great

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part in debates on the military and
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naval establishments, in vain opposing the constant increase of army and
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navy . It was his refusal to support the government proposals in 1893 for an increase of the army which led to the break up of his party: he was
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left with only eleven followers; and, except among the
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middle class of Berlin and some other Prussian cities, the old Radical party, of which he was the chief representative, from that time had little influence in the country . In 1885 he founded the Freisinnige Zeitung,-which he edited himself; of his numerous brochures the most successful was his attack on Socialism, entitled Sozialdemokratische Zukunftsbilder (Berlin, 1891), a
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clever and successful satire on the Socialist state of the future . This has been translated into the
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English . He also wrote much on Prussian
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finance, and under the title Das politische A, B, C Buch compiled a very useful
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political handbook for Radical voters . He also published in 1892 reminiscences of his youth (Jugenderinnerungen), and two volumes of
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parliamentary reminiscences (lm alten Reichstag, 1894–1896) . IHe died at
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Jena on the 26th of
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January e906 .

End of Article: EUGEN RICHTER (1839–1906)
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