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War in History
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Junior Officership in the German Army during the Great War, 1914—1918

Alexander Watson

This article reassesses German junior officers' performance in the First World War. Contrary to current historiography, it argues that the peacetime corps's social elitism was successful in ensuring a militarily effective, naturally paternalistic and conscientious leadership. The infamous wartime Offiziershaß (`officer hate') did not derive from social segregation between ranks but was rather a form of the `front—rear' tension common to all belligerent armies, aggravated by material shortage. Despite training and organizational difficulties, the successful dissemination of the corps's aristocratic values to wartime-recruited officers maintained good inter-rank relations within combat units, enabling the army to endure four years of gruelling warfare.

War in History, Vol. 14, No. 4, 428-453 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/0968344507081555


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