Monday, May 24, 2010


German Reunification


  • October 3rd, 1990

  • took place in Germany

Built on August 13, 1961 by the communist regime in East Germany, the Wall divided Berlin for 28 years. It cut right through the center of the city, dividing very important traffic links and separating families and friends. Minefields and border police with shoot-to-kill orders any further attempts by East Germans to look for a better future in the West. While the communists tightened their grip on people’s lives in East Berlin, the western part of the city became a walled-in outpost of freedom and democracy.


On November 9, 1989, the world watched in amazement as joyful crowds gathered on both sides of the Berlin Wall around midnight to celebrate the opening of the border crossings between the eastern and western parts of the city. A peaceful revolution in East Germany had finally cracked this grim symbol of Cold War and political oppression. It announced the beginning of the end of Germany’s postwar division and national unity came less than a year later on October 3, 1990.


  • 8 August 1989130 people leave from the German Democratic Republic, the GDR, to the Permanent Representation of the Federal Republic in East Berlin. They are a few of the many thousands who want to leave their home country via Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Poland.


  • 4 September 1989 This date is considered to be the start of the so-called Monday demonstrations. Around 1000 people gather in Leipzig and demand more rights and freedom. On the following Mondays there are ever more people who defy the brutal excesses of the security forces.

  • 11 September 1989 Hungary opens its borders to Austria. In only three days 15,000 people leave. At the end of September the Soviet and East German government gave 6,000 refugees staying in the German Embassy in Prague permission to leave East Germany.

  • 7 October 1989 The Government of the GDR decrees celebrations for the 40th anniversary of the founding of the state. As a reaction to this, people in many cities demonstrate against the regime of the Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschland, the SED, [Socialist Unity Party of Germany].


  • 9 October 1989 Over 70,000 people march through Leipzig city centre and call for non-violent demonstrations for freedom of opinion and political reforms. One week later they are followed by 120,000 from the whole GDR.

  • 18 October 1989 Erich Honecker resigns as Secretary-General of the SED and head of state.

  • 3 November 1989 The GDR endorses to leave the country directly via the border to Czechoslovakia. Two days later around 15,000 GDR citizens have arrived in the Federal Republic via this route.


  • 8 November 1989 The SED gives up its power in the politburo and resigns.


  • 9 November 1989 The symbol of the separation of the two German states, the Berlin Wall, falls to the jubilation of people from east and west.


  • 18 March 1990 In the spring free elections are held in the still extant GDR for the first time ever. The people elect a new Chamber of the People, the main aim of which was to prepare for accession to the Federal Republic.


  • 5 May 1990 The Two-plus-Four talks start, in which the victorious powers of the Second World War and the Foreign Ministers of the two German states discuss removal of the rights of the Allies in Germany.


  • 18 May 1990 The FRG and GDR sign the Treaty on the Creation of an Economic, Currency and Social Union.
  • 1 July 1990 The GDR adopts large parts of the economic and legal order of the Federal Republic. The deutschmark becomes the sole means of payment.


  • 23 August 1990 Before the end of the negotiations on a Unification Treaty between the two German states, the Chamber of the People decides on accession of the GDR to the Federal Republic for 3 October 1990.

  • 12 September 1990 The Foreign Ministers of the United States of America, the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom and France sign the Two-plus-Four Treaty and thus grant Germany full sovereignty.

  • 3 October 1990 In the night of 2 and 3 October 1990 the official celebrations for German Unity Day are held. Fireworks light up the sky, bells accompany the joy of the people.

  • 2 December 1990 The Germans elect a pan-German parliament. It is the first free election since 1933.

The outcome it had was that two cities reunited together like it was before.

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