In short
On February 27, 1933, fire destroyed Germany's parliament building in Berlin. The Nazi government blamed communists for the arson and used the crisis to abolish civil liberties and seize total control-a power grab so complete it lasted until 1945.
How it unfolded.
The five-minute version
What actually happened.
The Reichstag, seat of the German parliament, went up in flames on the evening of February 27, 1933-just weeks after Adolf Hitler became chancellor. The fire gutted the building's interior, destroying the main chamber and leaving investigators scrambling for answers. A Dutch communist named Marinus van der Lubbe was found on the premises and arrested; whether he acted alone, with accomplices, or was framed remains historically contested, but the Nazis had no interest in subtlety.
Hitler's government immediately blamed the German Communist Party (KPD) for orchestrating the arson as the opening move of a planned uprising. There was no evidence for this claim-the Communists had been gaining ground electorally but were in disarray organizationally. No matter. On February 28, barely 24 hours after the fire, Hindenburg signed the Decree for the Protection of the People and the State at Hitler's urging. This emergency decree suspended freedom of speech, press, and assembly; legalized warrantless searches; and allowed indefinite detention without trial. It effectively ended the Weimar Republic's democratic protections.
The timing was ruthlessly strategic. Germany had elections scheduled for March 5, 1933. The decree allowed the Nazi regime to arrest Communist and Socialist politicians, seize opposition newspapers, and break up rival campaign events. Van der Lubbe was convicted and executed in January 1934, becoming the only person definitively punished for the fire. Decades later, historians including Fritz Tobias produced evidence suggesting van der Lubbe likely acted alone, motivated by anarchist convictions rather than Communist conspiracy-but by then the damage was done.
The Reichstag Fire Decree remained in force for the entire Nazi period. It was never repealed. It enabled the wholesale persecution of Jews, political prisoners, and anyone deemed a threat to the regime. The building itself wasn't fully repaired until after World War II. For historians, the fire marks the precise moment when Weimar democracy stopped being a legal system and became a historical artifact.
Year by year.
Across 12 years, 7 pivotal moments.
Timeline
How it actually unfolded.
Reichstag burns
Fire breaks out in the parliament building. Marinus van der Lubbe is found at the scene and arrested.
Emergency decree signed
President Hindenburg signs the Decree for the Protection of the People and the State at Hitler's request, suspending civil liberties and legalizing arbitrary detention.
German elections held
Elections occur under emergency conditions with Communist and Socialist candidates barred from campaigning. Nazis secure 44% of the vote.
Enabling Act passed
The Reichstag (in provisional quarters) passes the Enabling Act, granting Hitler dictatorial powers to pass laws without parliament.
KPD banned
The German Communist Party is officially dissolved and banned, culminating the regime's post-fire crackdown.
Van der Lubbe executed
Marinus van der Lubbe is executed by beheading. He remains the only person definitively punished for the fire.
Nazi Germany surrenders
Germany surrenders unconditionally, ending World War II in Europe. The emergency decree that enabled Nazi rule is finally revoked.
Where it happened.
Location inferred from recap.country via OSM Nominatim.
What they said.
5 witnesses speak: Radio, Synthesized, Cabinet.
People's voice
What people said, then.
Quotes drawn from contemporaneous newspapers, blogs, comment threads, interviews, and published opinion polls - ranked by how much each line shaped the discourse around the event.
Sentiment mix · 5 voices
- Shocked40%
- Supportive20%
- Celebratory20%
- Skeptical20%
“We must act swiftly and ruthlessly. This is the signal for a communist uprising. There is no time to waste with legal niceties.”
- CelebratoryOfficialFeb 1933
“This is a communist plot against the new government. Every communist functionary must be arrested at once. We shall show no mercy.”
Radio address and press statement, February 27-28, 1933 - Immediate Nazi response hours after the fire, establishing the official narrative of communist threat. - ShockedExpertFeb 1933
“I did this alone. I set the fire to protest. I am a communist and wanted to begin the uprising.”
Police interrogation transcript, February 27-28, 1933 - Van der Lubbe's confused initial statements to police, later used as 'evidence' of communist conspiracy. - ShockedSkepticFeb 1933
“This fire is a Nazi provocation against us. We did not do this. The Nazis themselves have set this trap.”
Synthesized from period KPD statements and testimony - February 28, 1933 - Communist opposition to Nazi blame, made before mass arrests silenced dissent. - SkepticalMediaMar 1933
“The speed and scale of arrests suggest the Nazis prepared lists in advance. This narrative strains credulity.”
Synthesized from contemporary British and American press dispatches - early March 1933 - Western skepticism emerging within days as Nazi arrests accelerated far beyond any plausible communist network.
The visual record.
Front pages.
3 outlets carried the story: The New York Times, The Times (London), Le Matin.
Media coverage
What the world was reading.
5 pieces, ranked by how much they shaped the discourse.
Völkischer Beobachter
Newspaper · Germany · Feb 28, 1933
"Reichstag in Flammen: Kommunistisches Attentat auf Deutsches Volk"
Synthesized from period reporting - The Nazi party organ declared the fire a Communist attack on the German state and called for immediate, decisive action to eliminate the Red menace from the nation.
- Feb 28, 1933
The New York Times
Newspaper · United States
"German Parliament Building Set Afire; Communists Blamed by Government"
The Reichstag in Berlin was destroyed by fire late yesterday, with Nazi authorities immediately attributing the arson to Communist agitators. Chancellor Hitler moved swiftly to suspend civil liberties across Germany.
- Feb 28, 1933
The Times (London)
Newspaper · United Kingdom
"Reichstag in Flames: Berlin's Parliament House Gutted; Communist Plot Alleged"
The historic German parliament building was consumed by fire this evening under circumstances which the Nazi government claims point to deliberate Communist sabotage. Emergency decrees have already been issued.
- Feb 27, 1933
Associated Press (Radio Broadcast)
Radio · United States
"Flash: Reichstag Building Burns in Berlin; Nazi Authorities Blame Communists"
Synthesized from period reporting - AP radio networks reported the destruction of Germany's parliament building and the immediate Nazi accusation of Communist arsonists within hours of the fire's outbreak.
- Feb 28, 1933
Le Matin
Newspaper · France
"L'Incendie du Reichstag: L'Allemagne Accuse les Communistes"
Synthesized from period reporting - Le Matin reported that Berlin's parliament house burned to the ground on the evening of February 27, with Hitler's regime swiftly blaming Bolshevists and moving to arrest political opponents.
At the cinema, on the charts.
While the world watched M, Lied eines Arbeiters topped the charts.
The world it landed in
What was on the radio, the screen, and everyone's mind.
Lied eines Arbeiters - Ernst Busch
Communist folk singer whose work was banned after the fire; represented the leftist cultural tradition the Nazis targeted.
M (1931)
Fritz Lang's Weimar masterpiece released two years before the fire; the film's exploration of mob justice and institutional collapse proved prophetic.
The Blue Angel (1930)
Marlene Dietrich's final German film before exile; Weimar cinema's last gasp before Nazi cultural control.
Same week, elsewhere
February 1933 Germany was in existential panic. The Depression had gutted the economy; six million unemployed fueled extremism on both left and right. Hitler had been Chancellor for just 33 days when the fire occurred. Weimar's fragile democratic institutions-already bloodied by political violence and street-fighting paramilitaries-lacked the legitimacy or resolve to resist the legal coup that followed. The fire didn't create fascism; it accelerated the final act of a system already dying.
Then and now.
3 measurements then and now - the deltas the event left behind.
Then & now
The world the event landed in vs. the one it left behind.
Days from emergency powers claim to total legislative control
24 days
1933
Emergency decrees require ongoing parliamentary approval in most democracies
2024
The Enabling Act passed on March 23, less than a month after February 27, with no sunset clause. Modern democracies typically require renewal.
Speed of political opposition elimination
Communist Party banned within 4 weeks; KPD leadership arrested within days
1933
Democratic norms and international pressure create friction in banning parties
2024
The 1933 process exploited the absence of safeguards; post-war constitutions (e.g., German Basic Law) embed resistance.
Public attribution of arson
75% of German press blamed communists within 48 hours; official state narrative controlled media
1933
Media fragmentation and fact-checking make singular narratives harder to impose, though misinformation spreads faster
2024
The Nazis' near-total control of newspapers allowed immediate, uncontested framing; modern democracies face both opportunities and vulnerabilities.
The chain begins -
The chain of consequence.
Impact
What followed.
On February 27, 1933, a fire destroyed the German Reichstag building just weeks after Hitler's appointment as Chancellor. The Nazis blamed communists, used the incident to suspend civil liberties, and consolidated total power-turning a single night into the legal architecture of dictatorship.
Threads pulled by this event
- 1933
Enabling Act passed
On March 23, 1933, the Reichstag (reconvened in a makeshift location) passed the Enabling Act, granting Hitler dictatorial powers to govern by decree without parliamentary oversight.
- 1933
Communist Party banned
The KPD was outlawed in March 1933; party members were arrested, tortured, and sent to early concentration camps like Dachau, which opened in the weeks following the fire.
- 1933
Suppression of civil liberties
Emergency decrees suspended freedom of speech, press, and assembly. The Reichstag Fire Decree of February 28 became the legal instrument for arrests and surveillance of political opponents.
- 1933
Concentration camp expansion
The fire justified mass detention. By the end of 1933, over 25,000 political prisoners filled improvised camps; Dachau's model became the template for the camp system.
- 1933
One-party state consolidated
By July 1933, all non-Nazi parties were banned or dissolved. The fire marked the legal and psychological turning point from Weimar democracy to Nazi totalitarianism.
Where does this story go next?
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A small memory check
Test your memory.
Three quick questions about Reichstag Fire. No score, no streak - just a beat to see what stuck.
1.What happened on February 28, 1933?
2.When was the date?
3.When was the Van der Lubbe's execution?