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Turnip Winter
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The Turnip Winter (German: Steckrübenwinter, pronounced [ˈʃtɛkʁyːbn̩ˌvɪntɐ]) of 1916 to 1917 was a period of profound civilian hardship in Germany during World War I, named for the resulting use of turnips as a famine food.
The Turnip Winter occurred during the winter of 1916–1917. Continually poor weather conditions led to a diminished harvest, most notably in cereal production. An ongoing blockade by the Allies of World War I had also reduced Germany's food imports. The food shortages were also attributed to a seizure of horses for the Imperial German Army, the conscription of a large part of the agricultural workforce, and a shortage of farming fertilizers caused by the diversion of nitrogen to the production of explosives. In response to the food shortage, the German government introduced food rationing through the then-new War Food Office. In the summer of 1917, the food allocated offered only 1,560 calories (6,500 kJ) daily diet and dropped to 1,000 calories per day in winter. The Imperial Health Office (renamed "Reich Health Office" in 1918) required 3,000 calories (12,600 kJ) for a healthy adult male, three times what was available in winter. German soldiers relied for their survival on the availability of turnips. Driven by starvation, children started breaking into barns and looting orchards in search of food. Such disregard for authority effectively doubled the youth crime rate in Germany. Historian G.J. Meyer noted that, according to a report from a prominent Berlin physician, "eighty thousand children had died of starvation in 1916". Worker strikes were also common during this time as food shortages often directly led to labor unrest.
Introduction
[edit]For the duration of World War I, Germany was constantly under threat of starvation due to the success of the Allied blockade of Germany. Whatever meager rations remained were sent to the troops fighting the war, so the civilian population faced the brunt of the famine. The winter of 1916–1917, later known as the "Turnip Winter", marked one of the harshest years in wartime Germany. Poor autumn weather led to an equally poor potato harvest and much of the produce that was normally shipped to German cities instead rotted in the fields. Germany's massive military recruitment played a direct role in this, as all areas of the economy suffered from lack of manpower, including agriculture.[1] The loss of the potato crop forced the German population to subsist on Swedish turnip or rutabaga as an alternative.[citation needed]
Traditionally used as animal feed, the root vegetable was virtually the only food available throughout the winter of 1917. Malnourishment and illness claimed thousands of lives, mainly those of civilians and wounded soldiers who had returned to the home front. A notable marker of the harsh conditions in Germany was a spike in female mortality, which increased by 11.5% in 1916 and 30% in 1917 when compared to pre-war rates.[2] This rate increased due to malnutrition and disease that was commonplace amongst the German populace. The famine and hardship of the Turnip Winter severely affected the morale within Germany, revealing to the Germans just how hard-pressed the country had become under the duress of the war.[citation needed]
Background
[edit]At war with France, Britain, and Russia beginning in the summer of 1914, Germany faced the strain of a two-front war. To evade this compromising situation, the Germans developed a strategy known as the Schlieffen Plan. The Plan proposed that if German troops could invade France through Belgium and defeat the French, quickly removing one front, they would then be able to focus solely on Russia.[3] German faith in the Schlieffen Plan proved overly optimistic and French forces commanded by General Joseph Joffre "checked the German attack at the Marne River in September," in what would be known as the First Battle of the Marne.[4] After facing defeat at the Battle of the Marne, the actual strain of a two-front war became progressively more real for Germany. The Germans had assumed that the Schlieffen Plan would prove successful and that the war would not be a prolonged affair.[5] In the months after the Battle of the Marne, German troops faced a succession of battles against combined British and French armies, known as the "Race to the Sea," where the opposing forces attempted to "turn the other’s flank" in a contest to reach the North Sea.
From October to late November, the armies clashed in a nearly month-long battle at Ypres in Flanders, near the North Sea, which incurred a devastating loss of life for both sides.[6] After Ypres, only months after the beginning of the Great War, the German army had already lost 241,000 men.[7] As the end of 1914 approached, fighting in Western Europe, ultimately known as the "Western Front," settled to a draining affair as the German, French and British lines entrenched themselves.[8] In response to the early land campaigns, the British responded with naval measures. In order to wear down German forces, the Royal Navy, towards the end of 1914, blockaded "the northern approaches to the North Sea in an effort to cut off supplies to the soldiers and civilians of the Central Powers."[9] Locked into sustained fighting on the Western Front, which had already reduced supplies, the Germans now faced both the Russian threat in the east and the British blockade that "cut Germany off from sources of essential commodities."[10]
The British blockade highlighted major flaws in German wartime society. Although the German economy was an international juggernaut that "managed to produce most of the industrial requirements of the war," the nation "failed to secure a sufficiency of food."[11] With continued fighting on two fronts and supplies restricted by the British blockade, German food shortages at home and for troops became increasingly troublesome issues. During the winter of 1916–17, such problems reached new levels in a period known as the "Turnip Winter'".[citation needed]
The Turnip Winter
[edit]
The Turnip Winter occurred during the winter of 1916–1917 in Germany. Continually poor weather conditions led to a diminished harvest, most notably in cereal production.[12]: 233 Additionally, an Allied blockade first instituted in 1914 contributed to reduced food supplies from the Central Powers by 33 percent.[13] Food shortages were also attributed to a seizure of horses for the Imperial German Army, the conscription of a large part of the agricultural workforce, and a shortage of farming fertilizers caused by the diversion of nitrogen to explosives production.[14]
In response, the German government initiated a food rationing campaign. The campaign began with the establishment of the War Food Office on 22 May 1916. The office was responsible for "the perception of the Chancellor to create and uphold the military and nation's food supply."[15] In the summer of 1917, the food allocated offered only 1,560 calories (6,500 kJ) daily diet and dropped to 1,000 calories per day in winter.[12]: 237 However, the Imperial Health Office (renamed "Reich Health Office" in 1918) required 3,000 calories (12,600 kJ) for a healthy adult male, three times what was available in winter. German soldiers "increasingly relied, for sheer survival, on one of the least appealing vegetables known to man, the humble turnip."[16] During this time, the black market became a prominent means of obtaining otherwise scarce foodstuffs. Historian Avner Offer suggests that approximately "one-fifth to one-third of food could only be obtained through illegal channels."[17]
Social unrest
[edit]Driven by starvation, children would break into barns and loot orchards in search of food. Such disregard for authority effectively doubled the youth crime rate in Germany.[18] Historian G.J. Meyer noted that, according to a report from a prominent Berlin physician, "eighty thousand children had died of starvation in 1916."[16] Worker strikes were also common during this time as food shortages often directly led to labor unrest. The most notable strike took place in Düsseldorf in the summer of 1917 where workers complained of uneven food distribution.[19]
Military issues
[edit]In 1916, a naval revolt arose from protests against inedible rations. Sailors claimed that they received rations shorted by two ounces for three consecutive weeks while officers ate and drank luxuriously.[20] The conservative German government believed a Socialist conspiracy was behind the mutiny. In 1926, German officials put Socialist Deputy Wilhelm Dittmann on trial for the uprising. Through letters from sailors to their respective homes, Dittmann illustrated that food was inedible and "did not have any political significance."[20] The letters cleared the Socialist party from accusations that they had sought to extend the Bolshevik Revolution into Germany.[20]
Aftermath
[edit]The solution to replace potatoes with turnips greatly affected the diets and nutrition of the German people during and after the war. By the start of the war, Germany consumed potatoes more than any other food, and the shortage greatly changed the gastronomic tastes of the Germans.[21] In addition to affecting the Germans’ tastes, replacing the potatoes did not allow the German people to get the necessary vitamins and minerals they were accustomed to acquiring.[21] The turnips did not affect just the potatoes, but the bread as well. Bread called Kriegsbrot ("War bread")[note 1] contained flour from potatoes. When replaced by substitutes, the bread became significantly harder to digest, making it difficult for the body to adapt. The Kriegsbrot demonstrates how the Turnip Winter reached the front lines as well, as soldiers were greatly affected by the lack of food.[21] The continued search for substitutes during the blockade truly affected the ability of the German people to obtain food in cities. Evelyn Blücher, an English woman married to Prince Blücher, recounts the experience in her memoir by saying:
We are all growing thinner every day, and the rounded contours of the German nation have become a legend of the past. We are all gaunt and bony now, and have dark shadows round our eyes, and our thoughts are chiefly taken up with wondering what our next meal will be, and dreaming of the good things that once existed.[21]
However, not only were there physical symptoms, as she describes, but also social consequences, such as the pillaging of food stores after the war.[21]
Notes
[edit]- ^ Cozean, Jesse (2011). My Grandfather's War: A Young Man's Lessons from the Greatest Generation. Globe Pequot. p. 112. ISBN 9780762776092.
The recipe, as quoted from the records of the German Food Providing Ministry published in Berlin in 1941, was "50% bruised rye grain, 20% sliced sugar beets, 20% 'tree flour' (sawdust), 10% minced leaves and straw."
References
[edit]- ^ Grebler, Leo; Winkler, Wilhelm (November 1941). The Cost of the World War to Germany and to Austria-Hungary. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press. p. 29.
- ^ Keegan, John (2012). The First World War. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. p. 495. ISBN 9780307831705.
- ^ Robbins, Keith (22 August 2002). The First World War. Oxford University Press. p. 30. ISBN 9780192803184.
It had appeared, for a time, that the British and French were going to be defeated in northern France and Belgium, with a similar fate awaiting the Germans on their Eastern front and the Serbs on their Northern front, but in all cases the defenders had averted disaster.
- ^ Gordon Wright. "France in Modern Times." (New York: W. W. Norton, 1981), 302.
- ^ Michael S. Neiberg. Fighting The Great War. (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2005), 32.
- ^ Robbins 2002, p. 34. "At the other end of the line, further German attempts to outflank Verdun failed, but they did capture Saint-Mihiel and a section of the west bank of the Meuse before they were stopped. In the north, a sustained German attack in early October led to the surrender of Antwerp on 10 October. Not even the presence of Winston Churchill and a few thousand British marines could prevent the inevitable. Churchill, King Albert and the Belgian army extricated themselves in time. The Belgians joined the British in Flanders and, together with a small French contribution, they formed a not invariably solid line confronting the Germans. The Germans appeared confident that they could reach the Channel ports, through the British also appeared confident that they could attack. The Allies did give ground in the series of battles which took place between mid-October and mid-November known collectively as the first battle of Ypres, but the Germans did not achieve their objectives."
- ^ Keegan 2012, p. 136.
- ^ Robbins 2002, p. 34a.
- ^ William Kelleher Storey. "First World War: A Concise Global History." (Rowman & Littlefield, 2010), 71.
- ^ Meyer, G. J. (2006). A World Undone. Random House Publishing Group. p. 275. ISBN 9780440335870.
- ^ Offer, Avner (1989). The First World War: An Agrarian Interpretation. Clarendon Press. p. 23. ISBN 9780198219460.
- ^ a b Starling, Ernest H. (1920). "The Food Supply of Germany During the War". Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. 83 (2): 225–254. doi:10.2307/2341079. JSTOR 2341079.
- ^ Webb, Ken (2017) [2012]. "World War I: From Sarajevo to Versailles". Ken Webb (3rd Edition): 79.
- ^ Holborn, Hajo (1982). A History of Modern Germany, Volume 3: 1840-1945. Princeton NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 459–460. ISBN 978-0691008868.
- ^ Tucker, Spencer; Roberts, Priscilla Mary (2005). World War I: A Student Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 1242. ISBN 9781851098798.
When the Imperial Grain Corporations (Reichsgetreidestelle) was established in July 1915, [Dr. Georg] Michaelis became chairman of its board. In 1916 he proposed establishment of an independent War Food Office (Kriegsernährungsamt) to organize the entire German food supply on the home front. Due to bureaucratic rivalries, he did not head the new office.
- ^ a b Meyer 2006, p. 415.
- ^ Offer 1989, p. 54.
- ^ Offer 1989, p. 59.
- ^ Offer 1989, p. 69.
- ^ a b c Eyre, Lincoln (23 January 1926). "Says Food Caused German Mutinies". The New York Times.
- ^ a b c d e Vincent, Charles Paul (1985). The Politics of Hunger: The Allied Blockade of Germany, 1915-1919. Athens, OH: Ohio University Press. p. 127. ISBN 9780821408209.
Sources
[edit]- Keegan, John (2012) [1998]. The First World War. Knopf Doubleday. ISBN 9780307831705.
- Meyer, Gerald J. (2006). A World Undone: The Story of the Great War 1914 to 1918. Random House. ISBN 978-0-553-80354-9.
- Offer, Avner (1989). The First World War: An Agrarian Interpretation. Clarendon Press. ISBN 9780198219460.
- Robbins, Keith (2002) [1984]. The First World War. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780191647178.
Further reading
[edit]- Neiberg, Michael S. Fighting The Great War. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2005.
- Storey, William Kelleher. First World War: A Concise Global History. Rowman & Littlefield, 2010, 71.
- Wright, Gordon. France in Modern Times. New York: W. W. Norton, 1981.
Turnip Winter
View on GrokipediaHistorical Context
Pre-War German Food Security
Prior to World War I, the German Empire achieved food security through domestic agricultural production supplemented by international trade, though it was not fully self-sufficient. Agriculture encompassed large estates in northern Germany and approximately four million small farms, producing staples like potatoes, rye, and wheat, but these proved inadequate for the expanding urban population amid rapid industrialization. In 1914, Germany imported about one-third of its foodstuffs, fodder, and fertilizers, including half its meat supplies and nearly all vegetable fats, relying heavily on sources such as Russian wheat to bridge domestic shortfalls.[2][5] Statistical assessments for 1912–1913 indicate that imports constituted approximately 20 percent of total caloric intake and 29 percent of protein consumption, with grains showing even greater foreign dependence. Urban dwellers, whose wages often allocated over half their income to food—such as Rhenish workers spending 26 marks monthly—depended on these cheap imports to maintain affordability, highlighting underlying vulnerabilities in distribution and pricing. The 1911 tariff agreement, which raised bread prices and intensified urban-rural tensions, underscored these strains without precipitating outright shortages.[6][5] Despite import reliance, pre-war Germany avoided famines or widespread malnutrition, supported by efficient trade networks and steady production growth. The agricultural sector's share of net domestic product had declined to 23 percent by 1913 from over 40 percent in 1870, reflecting urbanization's toll, yet overall supply met demand through global markets. This equilibrium masked risks from potential disruptions, as domestic output alone could not sustain the population's nutritional needs.[7][2]Onset of World War I and Early Blockade Effects
The First World War began on July 28, 1914, following Austria-Hungary's declaration of war against Serbia in retaliation for the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand on June 28.[8] Germany's alliance obligations led it to declare war on Russia on August 1, 1914, and on France on August 3, 1914; the subsequent German invasion of neutral Belgium on August 4 prompted Britain to declare war on Germany that same day, drawing in the Entente powers against the Central Powers.[9] Germany's pre-war preparations included stockpiling food and raw materials for an anticipated short conflict, but the nation depended on substantial overseas imports to sustain its population and industry.[3] Britain's Royal Navy, leveraging its naval supremacy, imposed a blockade on German ports immediately upon entering the war in August 1914, aiming to sever Germany's access to global trade routes for food, fertilizers, and other essentials.[10] Pre-war, Germany imported 20-25 percent of its caloric needs, including critical volumes of wheat, fats, and nitrate fertilizers derived from overseas sources, which supported domestic agriculture and urban consumption.[11] The blockade intercepted merchant shipping bound for Germany, drastically reducing import volumes from the conflict's early months, though enforcement was initially incomplete due to reliance on distant blockading squadrons and allowances for neutral vessels under declaration protocols.[12] Early blockade effects manifested in rising food prices and localized shortages by late 1914, exacerbated by panic buying, hoarding, and the diversion of resources to the military front.[2] Urban centers like Berlin experienced the first strains, with bread rationing implemented in December 1914 to curb consumption amid declining supplies of milled grains.[13] The cost of basic family foodstuffs escalated sharply, rising about 50 percent from June 1914 to June 1915, as reduced imports strained distribution networks and prompted farmers to withhold produce from regulated markets.[3] While stockpiles prevented outright famine in 1914, these developments signaled the blockade's cumulative pressure, setting the stage for intensified vulnerabilities as the war extended beyond expectations.[14]Causal Factors
Role of the Allied Naval Blockade
The Allied naval blockade, initiated by Britain on August 4, 1914, shortly after the outbreak of World War I, aimed to sever Germany's access to overseas imports by declaring the North Sea a military area and enforcing a distant blockade through patrols and contraband controls.[10] This strategy, primarily executed by the Royal Navy with support from other Allied fleets, intercepted neutral shipping bound for German ports or neutral destinations suspected of re-exporting to Germany, effectively halting maritime trade routes from the Americas and other suppliers.[12] By early 1915, the blockade intensified with Britain's Order in Council of March 11, which expanded the definition of contraband to include foodstuffs destined for Germany, even on neutral vessels, justifying the seizure of cargoes like wheat, fats, and nitrates essential for fertilizers.[12] Pre-war, Germany relied on imports for critical agricultural inputs and approximately 20% of its caloric needs, including 1.86 million tons annually of animal and vegetable fats and oils—far exceeding domestic production—and vast quantities of nitrogenous fertilizers from sources like Chile.[12] The blockade reduced Germany's overall overseas imports from 10 billion marks in 1913 to a fraction by 1916, with foodstuff imports plummeting to near zero, depriving the population of compensatory supplies during domestic shortfalls.[15] In the context of the Turnip Winter (winter 1916-1917), the blockade's cumulative effects exacerbated a failed potato harvest—caused by excessive rainfall leading to rot—by preventing the importation of alternative staples, resulting in per capita food availability dropping below subsistence levels and forcing reliance on low-nutrient fodder like turnips.[12] Historical analyses estimate that blockade-induced restrictions accounted for roughly half of the exogenous pressures on Germany's food supply during this period, with the remainder stemming from wartime disruptions, though the policy deliberately targeted civilian sustenance to undermine war effort and morale.[3] This deprivation contributed to widespread malnutrition, particularly among urban civilians and children, with caloric intake falling to an average of 1,000-1,500 per day by early 1917, far below pre-war norms of around 3,000.[16]Agricultural Shortfalls and Climatic Conditions
The 1916 harvest in Germany was markedly deficient, particularly for potatoes, which constituted a primary caloric source for civilians and were expected to yield sufficiently to offset grain shortages. Yields fell to roughly 50% of prior years' norms despite an expanded planting area of approximately 2.8 million hectares for maincrop potatoes.[17][18] This shortfall stemmed from a combination of unseasonably wet autumn conditions promoting rot in storage and the rapid spread of late blight fungus (Phytophthora infestans), which destroyed significant portions of the crop amid cool, moist weather conducive to the pathogen.[2][19] Climatic anomalies exacerbated these agricultural vulnerabilities; a multi-year pattern of heavy rainfall from 1912 to 1917, peaking in 1915–1916, caused flooding, delayed sowing, and diminished overall crop quality across cereals, root vegetables, and fodder.[20] Spring droughts in some regions stunted early growth, while the rainy harvest season hindered field drying and increased disease incidence, with seed potatoes from prior poor yields carrying latent infections that amplified the blight outbreak.[21] Grain production, including wheat and rye, also declined by 10–20% compared to 1915, as wet soils impeded mechanical harvesting and threshing.[5] The ensuing winter of 1916–1917 brought extreme cold, with temperatures dropping below -20°C in parts of northern Germany, freezing rivers, rails, and roads critical for food distribution from rural areas. This compounded pre-existing shortfalls by spoiling remaining stocks in unheated warehouses and limiting coal supplies for processing, forcing reliance on hardier but lower-nutrient alternatives like turnips (Brassica rapa), which yielded modestly better under marginal conditions.[2][22] War-related factors, such as conscripted labor reducing fieldwork efficiency and restricted fertilizer imports, further depressed per-hectare outputs, though direct climatic impacts accounted for the bulk of the yield collapse.[5]German Domestic Policies and Resource Allocation
In response to escalating shortages, the German government centralized food management under the Prussian War Ministry's War Food Office (Kriegsamt für Volksernährung), established in May 1916, to oversee distribution and rationing across the empire.[5] This body aimed to coordinate procurement, pricing, and allocation, building on earlier efforts like the Imperial Grain Authority's bread rationing introduced in January 1915, which prohibited farmers from using grain as animal fodder to preserve human supplies.[5] However, implementation lagged behind the blockade's effects, with comprehensive rationing for potatoes enacted in April 1916, butter and sugar in May, meat in June, and eggs, milk, and other fats by November.[2] The Hindenburg Program, launched on August 31, 1916, prioritized armaments production by mandating compulsory labor for all males aged 16-60, redirecting agricultural workers to factories and munitions plants, which reduced farm output and exacerbated civilian food deficits.[23] [24] This policy, intended to maximize war resources, implicitly favored military needs over domestic agriculture, as raw materials and labor were funneled into industry despite recognition of the need to sustain population food supplies.[23] In October 1916, Supreme Army Command under Paul von Hindenburg introduced a "productivity principle" tying rations to contributions to the war effort, effectively penalizing non-workers and urban civilians while attempting to incentivize output.[5] Resource allocation consistently privileged the armed forces, with soldiers receiving higher caloric intakes than civilians, leading to resentment and further strain on home front supplies during the 1916-1917 winter.[5] By late 1916, weekly civilian rations had dwindled to approximately 400 grams of bread, 225 grams of meat, and minimal fats, supplemented inadequately by turnips when staple crops failed, rendering price controls ineffective amid black market proliferation.[25] These measures, while providing structure, failed to offset labor shortages and poor harvests, contributing to widespread malnutrition as policies overemphasized industrial mobilization at the expense of sustainable food production.[5]The Crisis Unfolded
Chronology of the 1916-1917 Shortages
In spring 1916, Germany implemented expanded rationing measures amid deteriorating food supplies from the Allied naval blockade and labor shortages on farms. Potatoes were rationed starting in April, followed by butter and sugar in May, and meat in June.[2] These steps reflected early efforts to distribute dwindling stocks, as cereal and root crop yields began to falter due to unseasonable weather and reduced fertilizer imports. By summer, waves of food-related riots erupted across urban areas, signaling growing civilian discontent with shortages and rising prices.[2] The 1916 harvest, particularly potatoes, suffered catastrophic failure from constant autumn rains that promoted rot and fungal blight, yielding only about half the previous year's output.[26] Planting delays from wet fields exacerbated the issue, leaving storage cellars inadequately filled by October. Meat ration cards were distributed in regions like Prussia's Eckartsberga county between October 2 and 29, while eggs, milk, and other fats joined the ration list in November.[5] Late 1916 saw supplementary rations allocated to heavy industry workers and soup kitchens conditioned on surrendering meat or potato coupons, yet black market activity surged as official supplies lagged.[2] The onset of the frigid "Turnip Winter" in late 1916 marked the crisis's peak, with weeks-long absences of potatoes due to spoilage, transport breakdowns from coal shortages, and prioritization of military needs. Turnips, typically animal fodder, became the staple substitute, often boiled into unpalatable soups or ersatz bread, contributing to widespread intestinal disorders dubbed "turnip disease" among children.[2][5] Rations in industrial areas like Herne provided merely a quarter of required daily fats, fueling malnutrition and excess mortality from tuberculosis and related ailments.[5] Into 1917, shortages persisted with further bread ration cuts and degraded quality, such as increased extraction rates in war bread from 76% in November 1916 to 81% by February, diluting nutritional value with bran and sawdust fillers.[27] Hunger protests escalated in spring, evolving into strikes demanding political reforms, as caloric intake hovered around subsistence levels and urban foraging intensified. By summer, overall rations approximated 1,000 calories daily in many areas, underscoring the blockade's cumulative toll on civilian endurance.[2]Rationing Measures and Ersatz Foods
Rationing in Germany intensified during World War I as food shortages deepened, with comprehensive systems implemented by 1916 for nearly all staples including bread, meat, potatoes, and later turnips. Bread ration cards were introduced nationwide by the Imperial Grain Authority in January 1915, marking the start of formalized distribution.[28] In May 1916, the Prussian War Ministry established the War Food Office to centralize control over supplies, aiming to allocate resources amid declining imports and domestic yields.[5] Price controls accompanied rations to curb inflation, though black markets flourished due to persistent shortfalls.[5] By the Turnip Winter of 1916-1917, daily bread allowances had dwindled to around 225 grams per person in many areas, with workers sometimes receiving up to 300 grams while others got less.[29] Meat rations fell to minimal levels, often 50 grams or less per day, supplemented sporadically by horsemeat or preserved goods.[30] Turnips, as a resilient fodder crop spared from total requisition, became a rationed staple; for instance, Erfurt residents received stamps for 1 kilogram weekly in 1917.[31] Overall caloric intake dropped to approximately 1,000 calories daily by mid-1917, about 40% of pre-war norms, exacerbating malnutrition.[2] Ersatz substitutes proliferated to stretch scarce resources, with bread often adulterated by mixing sawdust, wood pulp, peas, or beans into flour to increase volume.[32][30] Turnips themselves were processed into ersatz bread or jam-like spreads, while coffee was replaced by brews from acorns, figs, or chicory, and fats by "Hindenburg fat"—a margarine substitute from low-grade oils and turnip residues.[33] Milk was diluted or faked with chalk and water, and egg powder adulterated, contributing to widespread digestive ailments dubbed "turnip disease."[5] These measures, while innovative, failed to prevent caloric deficits and health declines, as substitutes lacked nutritional value.[5]Civilian Health and Mortality Data
The Turnip Winter of 1916–1917 marked a peak in civilian mortality attributable to malnutrition and exacerbated diseases, with German post-war analyses estimating that 763,000 individuals perished nationwide from starvation and its complications over the course of World War I, many during this acute phase.[2] Demographic studies place the total excess civilian deaths linked to the Allied blockade at 424,000 to 800,000, primarily from hunger-induced vulnerabilities rather than direct violence, with the 1916–1917 period contributing disproportionately due to caloric intakes dropping below 1,000 per day in urban areas.[3] [12] Tuberculosis mortality, a key indicator of nutritional decline, surged from 105 deaths per 100,000 in 1913 to 147 per 100,000 by 1918, with accelerated rates evident in 1916–1917 as weakened immune systems failed against opportunistic infections.[2] Other deficiency-related conditions proliferated, including rickets from vitamin D shortages causing skeletal deformities in children, scurvy manifesting as ulceration and bleeding gums, and dysentery outbreaks tied to contaminated ersatz foods and poor hygiene amid caloric deficits.[5] Influenza and pneumonia deaths also escalated, as chronic undernourishment eroded respiratory defenses, contributing to an overall crude death rate climb that outpaced pre-war baselines by 20–30% in affected regions.[34] Anthropometric records reveal profound health deterioration among the young, with children's average heights and weights declining markedly from 1914 onward; for instance, urban schoolchildren exhibited stunting equivalent to 1–2 years of growth loss by 1917, corroborated by wartime measurements in multiple cohorts.[14] Infant mortality, while mitigated somewhat by targeted milk rations for mothers, still reflected broader trends, with underweight births and elevated perinatal risks linked to maternal caloric shortfalls averaging 40% below requirements.[5] These outcomes stemmed causally from sustained blockade-induced import halts, compounded by the 1916 potato blight, underscoring malnutrition's role in systemic physiological collapse rather than isolated epidemics.[12]Societal Impacts
Labor Unrest and Strikes
The Turnip Winter exacerbated labor unrest across Germany, as chronic food shortages eroded workers' willingness to sustain war production amid malnutrition and declining real wages. In 1917, the number of strikes surged to 561 incidents involving approximately 670,000 participants, a sharp increase from 14,000 strikers in 1915, driven primarily by inadequate rations and unequal food distribution that undermined confidence in government provisioning.[35] A pivotal episode occurred in April 1917, when metalworkers and munitions factory employees in Berlin initiated mass walkouts over bread ration reductions and broader subsistence failures linked to the ongoing blockade-induced famine. On April 15, shop stewards from the metalworkers' union convened to organize action, leading to strikes that halted production the following day, with estimates of 200,000 to 300,000 workers participating in demands for improved food allocations, peace negotiations, and civil liberties.[15][35][36] These actions, often termed a "bread strike," reflected the intersection of economic desperation and political dissent, as workers protested not only caloric deficits—averaging 1,000 calories daily in winter—but also the prioritization of military needs over civilian sustenance. Government responses involved military suppression by local deputy commanding generals, including arrests and press censorship, though negotiations occasionally yielded minor concessions to resume output.[37][35] Such unrest signaled deepening societal fractures, with urban proletarian districts in Berlin and other industrial centers witnessing recurrent protests that disrupted armament manufacturing, foreshadowing larger 1918 convulsions. While not solely attributable to the Turnip Winter, the famine's legacy of hunger riots and looting amplified strike militancy, as documented in contemporary police and press reports highlighting systemic provisioning breakdowns.[35][38]Erosion of Home Front Cohesion
The Turnip Winter of 1916–1917 intensified longstanding rural-urban divides in Germany, as city dwellers, facing acute shortages, accused rural peasants of hoarding foodstuffs and engaging in profiteering, which eroded mutual trust and the broader social solidarity needed to maintain home front unity.[39] State-mandated price controls and compulsory requisitions provoked widespread peasant resentment, leading many to withhold grain and other produce rather than comply, thereby destabilizing national food supplies and fostering a sense of alienation from imperial authorities.[39] This passive resistance marked a gradual withdrawal of rural support for the war effort, contributing to the eventual disintegration of the Central Powers' home fronts by 1918.[39] Urban civilian morale plummeted amid daily struggles, with residents queuing for hours to obtain meager rations, often resulting in disputes among civilians and with shopkeepers that heightened interpersonal tensions and social friction.[5] Malnutrition and related health crises, including vitamin deficiencies and a condition known as "turnip disease," afflicted families, particularly affecting children and straining household dynamics as women shouldered intensified agricultural and domestic labor, leading to higher rates of accidents and illnesses among them.[5] Civilian mortality reflected this breakdown, rising from approximately 468,000 deaths in 1916 to 523,000 in 1917, underscoring the physical toll that weakened communal resilience and faith in the government's ability to protect the populace.[5] The proliferation of black marketeering further undermined social order, as unequal access to illicit goods deepened class and regional animosities, while perceptions of unfair distribution eroded confidence in official rationing systems and propaganda urging sacrifice for the front lines.[5] These fissures collectively sapped the psychological cohesion of the home front, transforming initial wartime patriotism into disillusionment and paving the way for revolutionary unrest in late 1918.[5]Military Discipline and Morale Decline
The Allied naval blockade and domestic agricultural failures during the Turnip Winter of 1916–1917 extended severe food shortages to German front-line troops, who faced repeated cuts to rations that included monotonous staples like turnips and ersatz bread, often insufficient to maintain physical strength for combat duties.[40] [5] Soldiers' daily caloric intake frequently fell below requirements, contributing to widespread malnutrition and fatigue, as evidenced by medical reports of troops losing significant body weight—up to 60 pounds in some cases by early 1917.[5] These privations eroded morale, as troops received letters detailing starvation at home, fostering resentment toward the high command for prolonging the war amid perceived unequal resource distribution favoring officers.[41] [5] Regional tensions intensified, with non-Prussian units expressing discontent over favoritism in provisioning, while the monotony and scarcity of diets prompted high command concerns about sustained fighting capacity.[40] [5] Discipline faltered as hunger manifested in increased desertions, with rates reaching up to 10% among units transferred from the Eastern to Western Front in 1917, often motivated by desires to aid starving families or evade further deprivation.[41] Instances of insubordination rose, including refusals to advance or complaints against superiors for "prolonging the war," signaling a breakdown in cohesion that foreshadowed broader collapses in 1918.[41] By spring 1917, these factors had transformed initial war enthusiasm into war-weariness, with material shortages exacerbating a loss of unit solidarity and combat effectiveness.[42]Economic Dimensions
Disruptions to Industry and Production
The severe malnutrition during the Turnip Winter of 1916–1917 directly undermined German industrial output by debilitating the workforce, with average civilian caloric intake falling to around 1,000 calories per day by summer 1917—less than half the minimum required for basic sustenance.[43] This caloric deficit caused pervasive fatigue, weakness, and chronic absenteeism among factory laborers, particularly in energy-intensive sectors like munitions and metalworking, where physical exertion was essential.[43] Workers often spent shifts in states of exhaustion, dozing or exhibiting minimal effort, which sharply curtailed productivity; night shifts suffered disproportionately as hunger exacerbated sleep disturbances and reduced endurance.[43] Industrial staffing compounded these issues through reliance on inexperienced "patchwork" crews of women, adolescents, and the elderly, who themselves endured nutritional shortfalls that impaired learning curves and operational efficiency in understaffed mills and factories.[43] Rations provided only about one-quarter of necessary dietary fats, fostering widespread health deterioration that further eroded labor capacity and contributed to elevated civilian mortality rates, including over 523,000 female deaths in 1917 linked to famine-related causes.[5] These human factors intertwined with logistical strains but were causally primary in the productivity collapse, as malnourished workers could not sustain pre-war output levels despite government exhortations for increased effort.[43] Hunger-fueled discontent manifested in surging labor unrest, with strikes disrupting production lines; late 1917 saw repeated walkouts over food allocations, culminating in the massive January 1918 munitions strike involving up to 1 million workers, including 400,000 in Berlin alone, which halted assembly for days and amplified supply bottlenecks.[43] Overall, these disruptions reflected a vicious cycle where food scarcity not only weakened bodies but eroded the cohesion needed for wartime industrial mobilization, hastening economic vulnerabilities that persisted into 1918.[5]Strain on Transportation and Logistics
The German railway network, critical for internal distribution, was severely strained by the demands of the ongoing war, with military transports prioritized over civilian food shipments. By late 1916, railways were overburdened with troop movements, munitions, and supplies for the fronts, leaving limited capacity for perishable goods like potatoes, which comprised a staple of the German diet. This prioritization contributed to delays in harvesting and delivery, allowing much of the 1916 potato crop—already diminished by excessive autumn rains—to rot in fields or storage facilities before reaching urban centers.[2][44] The harsh winter conditions of 1916-1917 exacerbated these logistical failures, as freezing temperatures halted canal traffic essential for bulk goods and disrupted rail operations through ice accumulation on tracks and rolling stock. Coal shortages, stemming from disrupted mining output and allocation to military needs, further hampered locomotive power, reducing train frequencies and reliability. In urban areas, food inspectors at railway stations routinely seized smuggled provisions—such as butter and eggs—from civilians returning from rural foraging, enforcing rationing but underscoring the breakdown in equitable distribution.[45][2] These transportation bottlenecks amplified the effects of the Allied naval blockade and poor harvests, transforming regional surpluses into widespread scarcity. Weeks passed without potato deliveries to cities, forcing reliance on inferior substitutes like turnips, which were harder to transport due to their bulk and lower nutritional value. The cumulative strain on logistics not only deepened civilian hunger but also highlighted systemic inefficiencies in wartime resource allocation, where military imperatives consistently trumped home-front sustenance.[5][2]Immediate Aftermath
Link to Armistice and Revolution
The Turnip Winter of 1916–1917 represented a critical inflection point in German civilian morale, exposing the unsustainable strain of the Allied naval blockade and agricultural failures, which persisted and intensified through subsequent years.[46] By reducing caloric intake to as low as 1,000–1,500 calories per day in urban areas and fostering widespread malnutrition, these shortages eroded public endurance for the war effort, setting the stage for escalating domestic instability.[5] This morale decline manifested in hunger protests and strikes, such as the mass walkouts in April 1917 and the larger January 1918 strikes involving over one million workers across major cities, which the government suppressed only through military intervention but at the cost of further alienating the populace.[47] These home front fractures compounded military exhaustion following the failure of the 1918 Spring Offensives, where German forces, hampered by logistical strains including food deficits, could not achieve breakthroughs against Allied lines.[48] By October 1918, the cumulative impact of blockade-induced hardships—originating in the Turnip Winter's revelations of vulnerability—fueled naval mutinies in Kiel on October 29, sparking the German Revolution that rapidly spread to workers' councils and army units nationwide.[49] The revolutionary upheaval forced Kaiser Wilhelm II's abdication on November 9, 1918, compelling the new civilian government under Prince Max von Baden to accept the Armistice of Compiègne on November 11, as continued resistance risked total societal breakdown.[50] Historians attribute this linkage to the blockade's long-term erosion of cohesion, with estimates of 400,000–700,000 excess civilian deaths from starvation and disease by war's end underscoring the causal pressures that rendered prolonged fighting untenable.[12]Persistence of Hardships Post-War
The Allied naval blockade responsible for the acute food shortages during the Turnip Winter continued unabated after the Armistice of 11 November 1918, as the policy required a formal peace treaty before relief could commence.[51] This extension into the postwar period maintained pressure on Germany's depleted agricultural and import systems, with the blockade formally ending only on 12 July 1919 following ratification of the Treaty of Versailles on 28 June 1919.[51] German officials reported on 12 January 1919 that domestic food stocks, already strained by wartime rationing, were on the verge of exhaustion, prompting urgent appeals for imports that went largely unheeded until late March.[51] Initial Allied food shipments reached Hamburg on 26 March 1919, but volumes were insufficient to alleviate widespread hunger, as the blockade's partial relaxation prioritized military and political leverage over humanitarian aid.[51] Starvation persisted through the winter of 1918–1919, with conservative estimates attributing approximately 250,000 civilian deaths to malnutrition during this timeframe, many occurring after the armistice amid compounded effects of disease and exposure.[52] Desperate conditions fueled incidents of public scavenging, including reports of women and children dismembering livestock killed in urban clashes for sustenance.[53] These postwar hardships intertwined with political upheaval, as caloric deficits—often below subsistence levels—eroded public health and intensified revolutionary pressures in the nascent Weimar Republic, delaying economic stabilization until broader international relief efforts gained traction later in 1919.[54] The blockade's prolongation, justified by Allied concerns over German resurgence, underscored the causal link between naval strategy and civilian deprivation extending beyond active hostilities.Legacy and Interpretations
Quantitative Assessments of Famine Severity
Official postwar assessments by the German Reichsgesundheitsamt estimated 763,000 excess civilian deaths from starvation and malnutrition-related diseases attributable to the Allied blockade between 1914 and 1919, with the Turnip Winter of 1916–1917 representing the acute nadir of food scarcity.[55] [12] These calculations excluded deaths from the 1918 influenza pandemic and focused on urban populations hardest hit by import disruptions, poor harvests, and rationing failures, though contemporary critics noted potential inflation for reparations negotiations.[56] Historians such as Avner Offer have qualified these totals, arguing that while blockade-induced undernutrition elevated mortality—particularly among children, women, and urban dwellers—direct starvation accounted for a fraction, with many fatalities stemming from tuberculosis and other infections worsened by caloric deficits and immune suppression.[56] Excess mortality spiked in winter 1916–1917, with female and elderly rates rising disproportionately due to priority rationing favoring industrial workers and soldiers; overall civilian death rates in major cities like Berlin exceeded peacetime baselines by 20–30% in affected demographics.[12] Average daily caloric intake fell below 1,500 kcal per person from 1916 to mid-1919, a reduction of over 30% from prewar levels of approximately 2,280 kcal, compounded by low-nutrient substitutes like high-bran bread that further diminished effective energy yield by 15–20%.[55] Rations during the Turnip Winter prioritized staples but failed to sustain basal metabolic needs, especially in cold weather.| Food Item | Prewar Weekly/Daily Amount | Turnip Winter Ration |
|---|---|---|
| Bread (daily) | 225 g | 160 g |
| Meat (weekly) | 1,050 g | 135 g |
| Potatoes (relative) | 100% of baseline | 71% of baseline |
