On October 29, 1918, sailors in the German High Seas Fleet from the German Admiralty to go to sea to launch one final attack on the British navy. Their defiance echoes the despondent mood of many on the side of the Central Powers during the last days of World War I.
By the last week of October 1918, three of the Central Powers鈥擥ermany, Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire鈥攚ere at least in talks with the Allies about reaching an armistice, while the fourth, Bulgaria, had already concluded one at the end of September. With the end of the war seemingly in sight, the German naval command, led by Reinhardt Scheer, decided to launch a last-ditch effort against the British in the North Sea.
In the words of Scheer, 鈥淎n honorable battle by the fleet鈥攅ven if it should be a fight to the death鈥攚ill sow the seed of a new German fleet of the future. There can be no future for a fleet fettered by a dishonorable peace.鈥 Choosing not to inform the chancellor, Max von Baden, of its plans, the German Admiralty issued the order to leave port on October 28.
The sailors themselves, however, believing the attack to be a suicide mission, would have none of it. Though the order was given five times, each time they resisted. In total, 1,000 mutineers were arrested, leaving the Imperial Fleet immobilized. By October 30, the resistance had engulfed the German naval base at Kiel, where sailors and industrial workers alike took part in the rebellion; within a week, it had spread across the country, with revolts in Hamburg, Bremen and Lubeck on November 4 and 5 and in Munich two days later. This widespread discontent led Socialist members of the German Reichstag, or parliament, to declare the country a republic on November 9, followed swiftly by Kaiser Wilhelm鈥檚 abdication and finally, on November 11, the end of the First World War.