Karl Marx was born on May 5, 1818 in Trier, Kingdom of Prussia and passed away on 14 March, 1883 in London. Marx enrolled in the University of Berlin in 1836. After resigning as editor of a liberal newspaper in Berlin, Marx married his fiancé Jenny von Westphalen. They both moved to Paris. In Paris Marx met Friedrich Engels. Engels would become Marx’s colleague and lifelong friend. According to Frederic Bender, 1944’s Paris would also be the setting where Marx would write the Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts (1). These manuscripts contained Marx’s first inklings …show more content…
In Belgium Marx studied socialism as well as history. These intense studies of history led Marx and Engels to write, The German Ideology (1), a manuscript that attempted to predict the future of the political state of the world. The German Ideology stated that in capitalist societies the bourgeois would eventually cause the working class to rise up against the oppression and create an equal society. In Belgium Marx and Engels founded the Communist League. McLellan affirms that this was the first ever Marxist party to form (2). The formation of the Communist League also pushed Marx and Engels to write the Communist Manifesto.
In Belgium, 1884 Marx and Engels published their most influential work ever, The Communist Manifesto. A year after publishing the Communist Manifesto, Marx, his wife, and two children all moved to London, where Marx would stay for the rest of his life. Bender states that in 1867, Marx published Capital (Das Kapital) …show more content…
Communism aims to benefit the proletariat. This is where Marx lays out ten general rules of communism. Chapter three presents the difference between communism and other socialist philosophies. Communism is the only philosophy that deals with the central matters of class warfare. Communism would nearly abolish the class system and put the proletarians in control. Book four, the final book, is a description of the revolts going on throughout Europe. Both being German, Marx and Engels focused on the revolts of the kingdoms that would make up modern day