Die Russische Freiwillige Westarmee in Kurland 1919. Regionale Besatzungspraxis im Spannungsfeld zwischen Imperialismus und Selbstbestimmung

The terms “self-determination,” “democracy,” and “national autonomy” were omnipresent after the end of World War I. Yet it was not only actors with revolutionary or nation-state agendas who used these popular slogans. Representatives of the just-collapsed Empires in Eastern Europe also explained the...

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Main Author: Thomas Rettig
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Verlag Herder Institut 2024-03-01
Series:Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.zfo-online.de/portal/zfo/article/view/11475/11357
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author Thomas Rettig
author_facet Thomas Rettig
author_sort Thomas Rettig
collection DOAJ
description The terms “self-determination,” “democracy,” and “national autonomy” were omnipresent after the end of World War I. Yet it was not only actors with revolutionary or nation-state agendas who used these popular slogans. Representatives of the just-collapsed Empires in Eastern Europe also explained their actions in the violent phase of negotiating future state order with these terms and thus—intentionally or unintentionally—contributed to the estab-lishment of the corresponding vocabulary. Often, however, it remained unclear which con-crete political objectives were concealed behind the buzzwords.The article explores this question using the example of the West Russian Volunteer Army and its commander-in-chief Pavel Bermondt-Avalov. This army appeared for a short period in 1919 as an occupying force in Courland and in the north of Lithuania and represents a special example of an imperialist military enterprise in the civil wars of Central and Eastern Europe. The personnel composition of thisarmy and the political circles associated with it combined objectives that included the restoration of the Tsarist empire, the retention of re-gional self-government by the Baltic German elites, and the safeguarding of German war aims in Eastern Europe. Since the competition for regional state reorganization was foughtnot least with propa-gandistic means, the actors tried to communicate their own understanding of a right to national self-determination to the population of the occupied territory as well as to the inter-ested world public. The article examines both this communicative strategy and the way in which the political promises were institutionalized on the ground.
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spelling doaj.art-226250a0fbbd48ac8d6fc61c036e6ace2024-04-22T11:42:29ZdeuVerlag Herder InstitutZeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung0948-82942701-04492024-03-01731131163https://doi.org/10.25627/202473111475Die Russische Freiwillige Westarmee in Kurland 1919. Regionale Besatzungspraxis im Spannungsfeld zwischen Imperialismus und SelbstbestimmungThomas Rettig0https://orcid.org/0009-0006-0774-6800University of GreifswaldThe terms “self-determination,” “democracy,” and “national autonomy” were omnipresent after the end of World War I. Yet it was not only actors with revolutionary or nation-state agendas who used these popular slogans. Representatives of the just-collapsed Empires in Eastern Europe also explained their actions in the violent phase of negotiating future state order with these terms and thus—intentionally or unintentionally—contributed to the estab-lishment of the corresponding vocabulary. Often, however, it remained unclear which con-crete political objectives were concealed behind the buzzwords.The article explores this question using the example of the West Russian Volunteer Army and its commander-in-chief Pavel Bermondt-Avalov. This army appeared for a short period in 1919 as an occupying force in Courland and in the north of Lithuania and represents a special example of an imperialist military enterprise in the civil wars of Central and Eastern Europe. The personnel composition of thisarmy and the political circles associated with it combined objectives that included the restoration of the Tsarist empire, the retention of re-gional self-government by the Baltic German elites, and the safeguarding of German war aims in Eastern Europe. Since the competition for regional state reorganization was foughtnot least with propa-gandistic means, the actors tried to communicate their own understanding of a right to national self-determination to the population of the occupied territory as well as to the inter-ested world public. The article examines both this communicative strategy and the way in which the political promises were institutionalized on the ground.https://www.zfo-online.de/portal/zfo/article/view/11475/11357imperialismself-determinationpropagandacivil warwhite movementcourlandlatvia
spellingShingle Thomas Rettig
Die Russische Freiwillige Westarmee in Kurland 1919. Regionale Besatzungspraxis im Spannungsfeld zwischen Imperialismus und Selbstbestimmung
Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung
imperialism
self-determination
propaganda
civil war
white movement
courland
latvia
title Die Russische Freiwillige Westarmee in Kurland 1919. Regionale Besatzungspraxis im Spannungsfeld zwischen Imperialismus und Selbstbestimmung
title_full Die Russische Freiwillige Westarmee in Kurland 1919. Regionale Besatzungspraxis im Spannungsfeld zwischen Imperialismus und Selbstbestimmung
title_fullStr Die Russische Freiwillige Westarmee in Kurland 1919. Regionale Besatzungspraxis im Spannungsfeld zwischen Imperialismus und Selbstbestimmung
title_full_unstemmed Die Russische Freiwillige Westarmee in Kurland 1919. Regionale Besatzungspraxis im Spannungsfeld zwischen Imperialismus und Selbstbestimmung
title_short Die Russische Freiwillige Westarmee in Kurland 1919. Regionale Besatzungspraxis im Spannungsfeld zwischen Imperialismus und Selbstbestimmung
title_sort die russische freiwillige westarmee in kurland 1919 regionale besatzungspraxis im spannungsfeld zwischen imperialismus und selbstbestimmung
topic imperialism
self-determination
propaganda
civil war
white movement
courland
latvia
url https://www.zfo-online.de/portal/zfo/article/view/11475/11357
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