Weimar Germany: a time frame from 1918 to 1924

Crises Domestic Policies
October 30th, 1918 The German Revolution begins with the mutiny of sailors at Kiel,  
November 9th Prince Max takes it on himself to announce the Kaiser’s abdication and resigns himself. Ebert becomes Chancellor. Wilhelm goes into exile on November 10th. November 9th Ebert and General Groener agreed to cooperate so as to ensure order.  
November 11th The Armistice is signed  
January 5th, 1919 The Spartacist Uprising begins.   General Groener agrees to the formation of Freikorps units.
  January 19th Elections were held for a Constituent Assembly.
April 7th A soviet republic is declared in Bavaria (it is crushed on May 1st).  
May 7th The terms of the peace treaty, the Treaty of Versailles, were handed to the Germans at Versailles.  
  Germans are shocked and angered. The headline in the German newspaper, Deutsche Zeitung, reads: Vengeance! German Nation!
  July 31st Germany’s new constitution was passed by the Constituent Assembly and ratified by the newly elected President, Ebert, on August 11th. It looked to be the most liberal and democratic constitution ever written.
March 12th, 1920 The beginning of the Kapp Putsch  
Mid-March to mid-April Virtual civil war in the Ruhr region – as many as 2,000 are killed.  
January, 1923 French and Belgian troops occupy the Ruhr when Germany fails to make its reparation payments.   The German government instigates a policy of passive resistance resulting in hyperinflation that lasts the entire year.
November 8th – 9th The Munich Beer Hall putsch  
  November 15th Stresemann scraps the old mark and introduces  the Rentenmark which soon became the Reichsmark.
February 26th – April 1st, 1924 Hitler’s trial  
  August, 1924 The Dawes Plan was announced which eased the terms of the payments including lengthening the time Germany had to pay its reparation bill. A massive American loan of 800 million marks was also agreed to help the German economy recover.
December 20th Hitler is released from prison.