Julius Curtius (7 February 1877, Duisburg – 10 November 1948, Heidelberg) was Foreign Minister of Germany from October, 1929 to October 1931. Curtius was a member of the national-liberal German People's Party and worked closely with Heinrich Brüning to revise the Treaty of Versailles in Germany's favor. However, Curtius was not a member of Brüning's inner circle. His notable achievement as Foreign Minister was in negotiating a customs union with Austria in March 1931, but opposition from France scuttled the proposed union. To halt the union, the French withdrew a number of short loans they had made to Austria; the withdrawal of the French loans helped to cause the collapse of Austria's largest bank in May, 1931, which in its turn set a series of banking collapses all over Central Europe in the summer of 1931. Curtius was intimately involved in the negotiations that led to the issuing of the Hoover Moratorium by the U.S President Herbert Hoover that halted war reparations payments by Germany in June 1931 as part of the effort to limit the financial fall-out of the banking collapse.
His dismissal as foreign minister was largely brought about by pressure from General Kurt von Schleicher and President Paul von Hindenburg. A somewhat mediocre man, Curtius' appointment was due more to the memory of his predecessor, Gustav Stresemann, and of the German People's Party, than to his own abilities.
Political offices |
Preceded by
Gustav Stresemann |
Foreign Minister of Germany
1929 – 1931 |
Succeeded by
Heinrich Brüning |
Economy Ministers of Germany
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Imperial Economy Secretaries
(1871–1918) |
- Rudolf Schwander
- Hans Karl Freiherr von Stein zu Nord- und Ostheim
- August Müller
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Weimar Republic
(1918–1933) |
- Rudolf Wissell
- Robert Schmidt
- Ernst Scholz
- Robert Schmidt
- Johann Becker
- Hans von Raumer
- Joseph Koeth
- Eduard Hamm
- Albert Neuhaus
- Rudolf Krohne
- Julius Curtius
- Paul Moldenhauer
- Robert Schmidt
- Hermann Dietrich
- Ernst Trendelenburg
- Hermann Warmbold
- Ernst Trendelenburg
- Hermann Warmbold
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Nazi Germany
(1933–1945) |
- Alfred Hugenberg
- Kurt Schmitt
- Hjalmar Schacht
- Hermann Göring
- Walther Funk
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German Democratic Republic
(1949–1990) |
- Christa Luft
- Gerhard Pohl
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Federal Republic of Germany
(1949–) |
- Ludwig Erhard
- Kurt Schmücker
- Karl Schiller
- Helmut Schmidt
- Hans Friderichs
- Otto Graf Lambsdorff
- Manfred Lahnstein
- Otto Graf Lambsdorff
- Martin Bangemann
- Helmut Haussmann
- Jürgen Möllemann
- Günter Rexrodt
- Werner Müller
- Wolfgang Clement
- Michael Glos
- Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg
- Rainer Brüderle
- Philipp Rösler
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Foreign Ministers of Germany
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German Empire
(1871–1918) |
- Thile
- Balan
- B.E. v. Bülow
- Radowitz
- Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst
- Limburg-Stirum
- Busch
- Hatzfeld zu Trachenberg
- H. v. Bismarck
- Bieberstein
- B. von Bülow
- Richthofen
- Tschirschky-Bögendorff
- Schoen
- Kiderlen-Waechter
- Jagow
- Zimmermann
- Kühlmann
- Hintze
- Solf
- Brockdorff-Rantzau
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Weimar Republic
(1918–1933) |
- Brockdorff-Rantzau
- Müller
- Köster
- Simons
- Rosen
- Wirth
- Rathenau
- Rosenberg
- Stresemann
- Curtius
- Brüning
- Neurath
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Nazi Germany
(1933–1945) |
- Neurath
- Ribbentrop
- Seyss-Inquart
- Schwerin von Krosigk
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German Democratic Republic
(East Germany) (1949–1990) |
- Dertinger
- Ackermann
- Bolz
- Winzer
- Fischer
- Meckel
- de Maizière
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Federal Republic of Germany
(since 1949) |
- Adenauer
- Brentano
- Schröder
- Brandt
- Scheel
- Genscher
- Kinkel
- J. Fischer
- Steinmeier
- Westerwelle
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The Second Müller Cabinet
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- Hermann Müller (Chancellor, SPD)
- Gustav Stresemann (DVP)
- Julius Curtius (DVP)
- Carl Severing (SPD)
- Erich Koch-Weser (DDP)
- Theodor von Guérard (Z)
- Rudolf Hilferding (SPD)
- Paul Moldenhauer (DVP)
- Robert Schmidt (SPD)
- Hermann Dietrich (DDP)
- Rudolf Wissell (SPD)
- Wilhelm Groener (independent)
- Georg Schätzel (BVP)
- Adam Stegerwald (Z)
- Joseph Wirth (Z)
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Persondata |
Name |
Curtius, Julius |
Alternative names |
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Short description |
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Date of birth |
7 February 1877 |
Place of birth |
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Date of death |
10 November 1948 |
Place of death |
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