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War & Peace Quote by Gustav Stresemann

"Historians still often see the end of the war as meaning nothing more for Germany than lost territories, lost participation in colonization, and lost assets for the state and individuals. They frequently overlook the most serious loss that Germany suffered"

About this Quote

Stresemann’s sentence is a quiet rebuke aimed less at Germany’s enemies than at Germany’s own story about itself. Written by a politician who lived the aftershocks of 1918, it rejects the comforting ledger-book interpretation of defeat: provinces surrendered, colonies stripped, accounts frozen. Those are real, he concedes, but they’re also measurable, negotiable, and therefore psychologically safer. You can bargain over borders. You can’t so easily bargain over what he’s gesturing toward: status.

The subtext is that historians (and, by extension, the public) are missing the humiliation and political poisoning that followed the armistice. Stresemann is pointing at the loss of dignity, legitimacy, and strategic agency, the sense that Germany had been reduced from an actor to a problem to be managed. In Weimar’s early years, that “most serious loss” shows up as internal fracture: a state whose authority is contested, whose democratic experiment is burdened by the stigma of surrender, whose politics are ripe for revenge narratives.

It’s also a rhetorical move with an agenda. Stresemann, a pragmatic nationalist and architect of rapprochement, wants space for revision without militarism. By framing the true damage as intangible, he makes a case that the postwar order must be adjusted not merely for economic reasons but to stabilize a society that feels dishonored. The line doubles as a warning: ignore the psychic and political wounds of defeat, and you don’t just miswrite history; you help manufacture the next crisis.

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TopicWar
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APA Style (7th ed.)
Stresemann, Gustav. (n.d.). Historians still often see the end of the war as meaning nothing more for Germany than lost territories, lost participation in colonization, and lost assets for the state and individuals. They frequently overlook the most serious loss that Germany suffered. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/historians-still-often-see-the-end-of-the-war-as-54323/

Chicago Style
Stresemann, Gustav. "Historians still often see the end of the war as meaning nothing more for Germany than lost territories, lost participation in colonization, and lost assets for the state and individuals. They frequently overlook the most serious loss that Germany suffered." FixQuotes. Accessed February 1, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/historians-still-often-see-the-end-of-the-war-as-54323/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Historians still often see the end of the war as meaning nothing more for Germany than lost territories, lost participation in colonization, and lost assets for the state and individuals. They frequently overlook the most serious loss that Germany suffered." FixQuotes, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/historians-still-often-see-the-end-of-the-war-as-54323/. Accessed 1 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Gustav Stresemann

Gustav Stresemann (May 10, 1878 - October 3, 1929) was a Politician from Germany.

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