November 1918

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The following events occurred in November 1918:

black and white photograph of five men in military uniforms standing side-to-m right, seen outside his railway carriage No. 2419 D in the Forest of Compiègne.
Field Marshal Ferdinand Foch stands with his staff outside the rail carriage where the armistice ending World War I was signed.
Painting depicting the signing of the armistice. Behind the table, from right to left, General Chief of Staff Maxime Weygand, Field Marshal Ferdinand Foch (standing) and Royal Navy Admiral Rosslyn Wemyss and fourth from the left, Royal Navy Captain Jack Marriott. In the foreground, Matthias Erzberger, representing the new German government, Major-General Detlof von Winterfeldt (with helmet) of the Imperial German Army, Alfred von Oberndorff, a diplomat at the Foreign Ministry,[1] and Captain Ernst Vanselow of the Imperial German Navy.
Wilhelm II, German Emperor, abdicates his throne and flees to the Netherlands.

November 1, 1918 (Friday)

Dmytro Vitovsky (middle) proclaims Lemberg the capital of West Ukrainian People's Republic, but ethnic Polish resist and ignite the Polish–Ukrainian War.
Austro-Hungarian battleship SMS Viribus Unitis sinks in the port of Pula, Croatia following sabotage.
Wrecked subway car following train accident in Brooklyn, New York City.

November 2, 1918 (Saturday)

November 3, 1918 (Sunday)

German sailors of Prinzregent Luitpold pose with a sign saying they are joining other ships in the Kiel mutiny.

November 4, 1918 (Monday)

Painting by George Edmund Butler showing New Zealand troops scaling a wall of the Le Quesnoy fort during the Battle of the Sambre.
Poet Wilfred Owen, killed in battle

November 5, 1918 (Tuesday)

November 6, 1918 (Wednesday)

German Parliament leader Friedrich Ebert

November 7, 1918 (Thursday)

November 8, 1918 (Friday)

November 9, 1918 (Saturday)

Crowds gather outside the Reichstag in Berlin to hear the German Empire was now a republic.

Luxembourg faced two small communist rebellions in Luxembourg City (10 November) and Esch-sur-Alzette (11 November). Both were quickly suppressed by police. Socialists and liberals in the Chamber of Deputies called for the abdication of Grand Duchess Marie Adelaide, which was narrowly defeated.[77]

November 10, 1918 (Sunday)

November 11, 1918 (Monday)

"Berlin seized by revolutionists": The New York Times on Armistice Day, 11 November 1918.

November 12, 1918 (Tuesday)

November 13, 1918 (Wednesday)

November 14, 1918 (Thursday)

Tomáš Masaryk, first president of Czechoslovakia

November 15, 1918 (Friday)

John Lavery's painting of the German naval delegates arriving on HMS Queen Elizabeth to discuss surrender to the Royal Navy.

November 16, 1918 (Saturday)

November 17, 1918 (Sunday)

November 18, 1918 (Monday)

November 19, 1918 (Tuesday)

November 20, 1918 (Wednesday)

November 21, 1918 (Thursday)

HMS Cardiff leading the surrendering Imperial German Navy into the Firth of Forth.

November 22, 1918 (Friday)

November 23, 1918 (Saturday)

November 24, 1918 (Sunday)

November 25, 1918 (Monday)

November 26, 1918 (Tuesday)

November 27, 1918 (Wednesday)

Emden, Frankfurt and Bremse entering Scapa Flow

November 28, 1918 (Thursday)

Estonian Army recruitment poster during the Estonian War of Independence.

November 29, 1918 (Friday)

November 30, 1918 (Saturday)

References