Ernst Lehmann

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Ernst Lehmann
Bundesarchiv Bild 183-R1220-401, Erich Honecker (cropped).jpg
Lehmann's official potrait in 1964
Chairman of the Communist Party of Hytekojuznia
In office
17 March 1962 – 4 June 1964
Acting chairman from 15 March 1962
Preceded byTomass Andersons
Succeeded byIlgonis Krēsliņš
Personal details
Born(1895-06-12)June 12, 1895
Köpenick, Königsreh, Mascyllary Kingdom
DiedJune 4, 1964(1964-06-04) (aged 68)
Krasno, Hytekojuznia
Cause of deathHeart attack
CitizenshipMascylla (1895–1918)
Hytekojuznia (1917–1964)
Political partyCommunist Party of Hytekojuznia
SpouseEmmeline Boll (m. 1929)
Children2
Military service
Allegiance Mascylla (1912–1916)
Red Partisans (1917)
Years of service1912–1916; 1917
Battles/warsContinental War:

Crimson Revolution:

Ernst Lehmann (12 June 1895 – 4 June 1964; aged 68) was a Mascyllary-born Hytekojuznik communist politician who briefly served as Chairman of the Communist Party of Hytekojuznia between 1962 and 1964. Lehmann was previously a high-ranking communist politician in the party, having been noted for his ability to speak fluent Hesurian, which made communication with neighbouring Mascylla easier. He assumed the position of Chairman upon the death of Tomass Andersens in 1962, setting out to increase cooperation with Königsreh in the midst of diplomatic warfare between the two countries, both having recently tested nuclear weaponry. Lehmann's attempts to establish good relations with Mascylla were successful, but were cut short by his death by heart attack in 1964.

Lehmann was born in Köpenick, a densely populated district of the Mascyllary capital Königsreh, in 1895. Drafted into the war aged 17, Lehmann saw extensive action throughout the war as a teenager, participating at the Battle of the Rohrn at 19. Discharged after the war's conclusion in 1916, Lehmann was dissatisfied with the post-war treatment of returning veterans of the war, with many not receiving proper treatment upon their return and many having lost their homes and possessions in their absence. As a result, Lehmann defected to the Red Partisans of Hytekojuznia, led by revolutionary Artjoms Viliks, in 1917. Participating in the late stages of the Crimson Revolution, Lehmann would become an influential Mascyllary member of the Partisans, being multilingual and able to communicate fluently to Mascylla. Lehmann would serve as a minor member of the party for most of his life, with multiple stints as Hytekojuznik envoy to Mascylla. In 1957 he was promoted to Secretary to Tomass Andersens, taking over from him upon his death on March 15, being sworn in officially two days later. Lehmann's tenure was marked by temporarily increased cooperation with Mascylla, with eventual peace and co-existence the aim of Lehmann in his Mascyllary relations plan. However, his death of a heart attack in 1964 and subsequent succession of Krēsliņš and later Aivars Muceniece saw his plans tarnished and rivalry restored.

Whilst Lehmann's tenure as Chairman was short-lived, he is remembered as the last Chairman who sought warm relations with Mascylla. His ethnicity and simultaneous high-ranking position within the ruling Communist Party was influential in the degradation of the decades-old Hytekojuznik–Mascyllary enmity throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Globally he is fairly well-received compared to other Hytekojuznik Chairmen, especially in Erdara. Lehmann was the only person born outside of Hytekojuznia to hold the position of Chairman.

Early life

Lehmann was born in the Mascyllary capital of Königsreh as the second of three children to father Martin Lehmann (1865–1940) and Elisa Lehmann (née Möhring; 1871–1959), on June 12, 1895. Born into a lower-middle class family in the city, Lehmann and his family, consisting of his father, his mother, and two siblings Karla (1893–1936) and Philip (1901–1979), suffered from large income equality present in the pre-war Mascyllary Kingdom. Born into a turbulent time of the kingdom, where Hytekojuznik influence over Erdara was at an all-time high after a series of successive Mascyllary defeats in the Saarow War, Elpsland War and Konreid Campaign, Lehmann was involved politically from an early age. Joining the Mascyllary Zentrum (Centre) party in 1909, aged only 14, Lehmann was a supporter of rapprochement between Mascylla and Hytekojuznia in the leadup to the Continental War (Gaia), which Lehmann recalls thinking "would be the end of a unified Mascyllary state". He was anti-war and took place, along with his family, in some of Mascylla's anti-war protests following the Edelweiss Crisis in Lilienburg.

Lehmann's membership of the Zentrum party was short-lived after they announced their support for the war in late 1910, arguing that the seizure of Lilienburg by Hytekojuznia severely limited the ability for the Hesurian people to self-determine their future. He cut short his membership in 1911, aged 16. By this time, Lehmann had dropped out of school, only attending high school in Köpenick for three years. Teaching himself from home by reading books on philosophy, Lehmann was particularly interested in the field of economics, and had read Edvin Brant's An Inquiry into the Moral Dilemma of Uneven Wealth Distribution, Lehmann's first exposure to early socialist literature. Despite his strong anti-war stance, Lehmann was forcefully conscripted into the war by the Mascyllary government under Ludwig I in 1912, aged 17, as Hytekojuznia advanced closer to the Mascyllary capital.

Lehmann with Hytekojuznik revolutionaries Teovils Blaus (left) and Visvaldis Steins (right) in 1917

Military career

Lehmann's involvement in the war saw him conscripted into the Mascyllary Third Army, under Crown Prince Joseph Ahnern, where he would stay for the entire duration of the war. He saw intermittent conflict as a backline infantryman but rarely reached the front lines. Lehmann's first front line combat experience was at the Battle of Lückwalde in December 1913, where Mascylla repulsed Hytekojuznia for the first time and began to enter the Elpsland region, previously conquered by Hytekojuznia in the 1860s. Lehmann was aware of conditions in the Hytekojuznik trenches, which were under-supplied for much of the war, and had heard stories of the experiences of Hytekojuznik soldiers in the trenches, which were in considerably poorer condition than their Mascyllary counterparts. The brutal winter conflict and the beginning of the Battle of the Rohrn began to form the basis of Lehmann's disdain for the monarchies of both Hytekojuznia and Mascylla for their lack of physical involvement in the conflict.

The invention of tanks by the Mascyllary forces and the beginning of trench bombardment by their armies only furthered Lehmann's dislike of the upper-class Mascyllary militaristic society, and sympathised with Hytekojuznik soldiers who were sent to fight in Mascylla. With Mascylla eventually emerging victorious at the Rohrn, and the Winter Offensive now beginning, coupled with Krumlavian advances in southern Hytekojuznia, Lehmann did not experience any prolonged fighting after the Rohrn, with the Third Army's role mainly reduced to conducting guerrilla warfare and capturing retreating Hytekojuznik armies in coordination with Friedrich Gabig's Fourth Army and Ruprecht von Belau's Eleventh Army, all of which participated at the Rohrn and were well-accustomed with each other. Lehmann also met Erich Möllen and Wilhelm Schellenberg, who were both members of Ahnern's Third Army, and would later go on to be pivotal leaders in the Mascyllary Revolution that curtailed the monarchy in 1923–24. Lehmann was officially discharged from the Mascyllary Army in 1916 after the surrender of Hytekojuznia.

Discontent completely with Mascyllary actions during the war, and now an open supporter of the socialist cause and sympathetic to Hytekojuznia's working-class, who were mistreated extensively by the country's large upper-class nobility during the war, Lehmann defected to Artjoms Viliks' Red Partisans in 1917, participating in the late stages of the Crimson Revolution, mostly in conflict in the north. Lehmann was pivotal in Hesurian communication with Hytekojuznia's monarchist forces, many of whom only spoke Hesurian. A veteran of the war like much of the Red Partisans, Lehmann was accepted into its ranks despite the post-war enmity between Hytekojuznia and Mascylla, who Lehmann believed was a result of conflict between its monarchies rather than its people, and was the main force behind the support of socialist underground groups in Mascyllary in the late-1910s and supported the subsequent Mascyllary Revolution in 1923.

Political career

Minor member of the Communist Party (1920–1957)

Secretary of the Chairman (1957–1962)

Chairman of the Communist Party (1962–1964)

Langquaid Summit

Death

Legacy