Early Life and Military Career
Paul von Hindenburg was born into an aristocratic family on October 2, 1847, in Posen, Prussia (present-day Poznań, Poland). His father, a Prussian military officer-turned-government official, was granted a title of nobility in 1869; his mother was the daughter of a doctor.
When he was 19, Hindenburg enlisted in the Prussian army during the Austro-Prussian War of 1866, also known as the Seven Weeks’ War, which was considered a key precursor to Germany’s unification. He served as a staff officer during the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-71, and was eventually promoted to lieutenant general.
In 1911, Hindenburg retired from the military at age 64, but, in 1914, was called back to active duty with the outbreak of World War I. Commanding the Eighth Army, he was promoted to field marshal and led a series of victories against the Russians on the eastern front that made him a cult national hero. One of the most notable, the Battle of Tannenberg in Poland, which he commanded with his chief of staff Gen. Erich Ludendorff, was one of Germany’s most significant victories of the war.
“Soon after the outbreak of war Hindenburg became Germany’s major symbol of victory against the enemy and of unity at home–a function traditionally performed by the Emperor in wartime, or perhaps on occasion by the Chief of the General Staff, but certainly not by the commander of a single German army,” writes Anna von der Golz in Hindenburg.
“Hindenberg will sort it out,” she adds, quickly became a catchphrase and statues and portraits of the field marshal became commonplace. Kaiser Wilhelm appointed Hindenburg chief of the German General Staff, giving him command of the army, but the Allies went on to deliver a crushing defeat.
Germany's Second President
Following Germany’s World War I loss, Hindenburg retired from the army a second time and turned to politics. In 1925, the “Victor of Tannenberg” was elected president of the democratic Weimar Republic (1919-1933) at age 77, making him Germany’s second president (he was reelected in 1932).
Focusing on bringing stability to the region in the wake of the war and the severe terms of the Armistice of Compiègne, Hindenburg turned to delivering presidential emergency decrees. Allowed by the country’s constitution during periods of unrest and economic turmoil, these edicts gave him the power to sidestep the approval of the German parliament, silence his political opponents, stifle free speech and other civil liberties and allow military generals to form foreign policy.