21 February 1848 A.D. Marx & Engels Publish Communist Manifesto in London
21 February 1848 A.D. Marx
& Engels Publish Communist Manifesto in
London
Editors. “1848 – The Communist
Manifesto, written by Karl Marx with the assistance of Friedrich Engels, is
published in London by a group of German-born revolutionary socialists known as
the Communist League.” This Day in U.S. Military History. N.d. https://thisdayinusmilhist.wordpress.com/2014/02/21/february-21/. Accessed 20 Feb 2015.
1848 – The
Communist Manifesto, written by Karl Marx with the assistance of Friedrich
Engels, is published in London by a group of German-born revolutionary
socialists known as the Communist League. The political pamphlet–arguably
the most influential in history–proclaimed that “the history of all hitherto
existing society is the history of class struggles” and that the inevitable
victory of the proletariat, or working class, would put an end to class society
forever. Originally published in German as Manifest der Kommunistischen Partei
(“Manifesto of the Communist Party”), the work had little immediate impact. Its
ideas, however, reverberated with increasing force into the 20th century, and
by 1950 nearly half the world’s population lived under Marxist governments.
Karl Marx was born in Trier, Prussia, in 1818–the son of a Jewish lawyer who
converted to Lutheranism. He studied law and philosophy at the universities of
Berlin and Jena and initially was a follower of G.W.F. Hegel, the 19th-century
German philosopher who sought a dialectical and all-embracing system of
philosophy. In 1842, Marx became editor of the Rheinische Zeitung, a liberal
democratic newspaper in Cologne. The newspaper grew considerably under his
guidance, but in 1843 the Prussian authorities shut it down for being too
outspoken. That year, Marx moved to Paris to co-edit a new political review.
Paris was at the time a center for socialist thought, and Marx adopted the more
extreme form of socialism known as communism, which called for a revolution by
the working class that would tear down the capitalist world. In Paris, Marx
befriended Friedrich Engels, a fellow Prussian who shared his views and was to
become a lifelong collaborator. In 1845, Marx was expelled from France and
settled in Brussels, where he renounced his Prussian nationality and was joined
by Engels. During the next two years, Marx and Engels developed their
philosophy of communism and became the intellectual leaders of the
working-class movement. In 1847, the League of the Just, a secret society made
up of revolutionary German workers living in London, asked Marx to join their
organization. Marx obliged and with Engels renamed the group the Communist
League and planned to unite it with other German worker committees across
Europe. The pair were commissioned to draw up a manifesto summarizing the
doctrines of the League. Back in Brussels, Marx wrote The Communist Manifesto
in January 1848, using as a model a tract Engels wrote for the League in 1847.
In early February, Marx sent the work to London, and the League immediately
adopted it as their manifesto. Many of the ideas in The Communist Manifesto
were not new, but Marx had achieved a powerful synthesis of disparate ideas
through his materialistic conception of history. The Manifesto opens with the
dramatic words, “A spectre is haunting Europe–the spectre of communism,” and
ends by declaring: “The proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains.
They have a world to win. Workers of the world, unite!” In The Communist
Manifesto, Marx predicted imminent revolution in Europe. The pamphlet had
hardly cooled after coming off the presses in London when revolution broke out
in France on February 22 over the banning of political meetings held by
socialists and other opposition groups. Isolated riots led to popular revolt, and
on February 24 King Louis-Philippe was forced to abdicate. The revolution
spread like brushfire across continental Europe. Marx was in Paris on the
invitation of the provincial government when the Belgian government, fearful
that the revolutionary tide would soon engulf Belgium, banished him. Later that
year, he went to the Rhineland, where he agitated for armed revolt. The
bourgeoisie of Europe soon crushed the Revolution of 1848, and Marx would have
to wait longer for his revolution. He went to London to live and continued to
write with Engels as they further organized the international communist
movement. In 1864, Marx helped found the International Workingmen’s
Association–known as the First International–and in 1867 published the first
volume of his monumental Das Kapital–the foundation work of communist theory.
By his death in 1884, communism had become a movement to be reckoned with in
Europe. Twenty-three years later, in 1917, Vladimir Lenin, a Marxist, led the
world’s first successful communist revolution in Russia.
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