Greater Poland Uprising

Germany consented to Poland’s existence as a separate political structure on the territory of the former Russian partition. The Prussian partition — Greater Poland and Pomerania — was considered an integral part of the Reich. The armistice which ended the war was signed on 11 November in line with that conception.

[...] the city was plunging into turmoil: alarms, fusillades, theft, and shameless plunder, removal of military equipment (guns, ammunition, and weapons), and the acts undertaken by various offices...

Ignacy and Helena Paderewski’s arrival in Poznań. (NAC)

The fact that the Poznań Province remained in Germany met with rapid opposition on the part of the Poles who lived there. Numerous civic, soldiers’, and workers’ organizations were immediately set up. The Poles were trying to take over the law enforcement services. The Catholic and national milieus were the most active. Despite the chaos caused by the revolution, the lost war, and the abdication of Emperor Wilhelm II additional troops were deployed to Greater Poland in response to the Polish milieus’ actions. The spark that triggered the uprising was Jan Paderewski’s arrival in Poznań and the speech he gave on 27 December 1918 at the Bazar Hotel.

The Paderewskis [...] have finally arrived with the English [...] What crowds!! Viva!! Indescribable enthusiasm!! All the lights went out at the railway station and thousands of torches were lit up instead.

The Workers and Soldiers Council’s rally in Poznań, 12 or 13 November 1918 (Greater Poland Uprising Museum)