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Biographies | Sir Winston Churchill | Georges Clemenceau | General Erich von Falkenhayn | Marshal Ferdinand Foch | Archduke Franz Ferdinand | Emperor Franz Josef I | Sir Douglas Haig | General Paul von Hindenburg | Emperor Karl I | David Lloyd George | General Erich Ludendorff | General Robert Nivelle | Vittorio Orlando | General Henri-Philippe Pétain | Gavril Princip | Kiaser Wilhelm II | President Woodrow Wilson | Arthur Zimmermann
Grandson of Queen Victoria and Germany's last Kaiser, Wilhelm ascended the throne in 1888. He showed an early determination to rule in his own right by removing Bismarck from office in 1890.
Germany's economy expanded dramatically under Wilhelm II, and this was accompanied by a marked desire for Germany to play a bigger role on the world stage. It acquired overseas territories - Togoland (present-day Togo), Cameroon, Tanganyika (mainland Tanzania), South West Africa (Namibia), Tsingtao and various Pacific island groups - and embarked on an arms race with Britain. In so doing, Germany was acting like any other imperial state, but the older, more established empires (Britain, France, Russia) tended to view it as an aggressive, threatening upstart.
Wilhelm was dominant in German political and military life in 1914, but during the first two years of the war, he was progressively sidelined by a group of generals and industrialists orchestrated by Ludendorff. In August 1916, Ludendorff and Hindenburg formed the Third Supreme Command, and they exercised the real power in Germany thereafter.
Wilhelm abdicated on 9 November 1918, while Germany was racked by civil and political unrest, and he went into exile in Holland. He devoted the rest of his life to writing his memoirs and propagating the myth of the 'stab in the back'.