Karl Marx

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Karl Marx

Portrait of Karl Marx.
Born
Karl Heinrich Marx

5 May 1818
Trier, Kingdom of Prussia, German Confederation
Died 14 March 1883
London, United Kingdom
Nationality Prussian
Stateless (after 1845)
Known for Founder of Marxism
Field of study Philosophy, science, political economy, history

Karl Marx (5 May 1818 – 14 March 1883) was a German philosopher, economist, historian, journalist and communist revolutionary who, with the assistance of his friend Friedrich Engels, enumerated upon the societal trends and laws, refined a materialist conception of history, and developed the framework known as Marxism. He is considered the founder and first classic of Marxism.

Biography

Early life

Karl Heinreich Marx was born in Trier, Rhenish Prussia (present-day Germany), on May 5, 1818, the son of Heinrich Marx, a lawyer, and Henriette Presburg Marx, a semi-illiterate Dutchwoman, as one of 8 children (Henriette Marx, Eduard Marx, Mauritz David Marx, Hermann Marx, Emilie Conradi, Caroline Marx, and Louise Juta). He became the oldest son when his brother Mauritz died in 1819.

Both Heinrich and Henriette were descendants of a long line of rabbis. The Prussian authorities barred him from the practice of law because he was Jewish following an anti-Semitic law passed in 1815. Heinrich Marx converted to Lutheranism in about 1817. Yet he was largely irreligious and also a passionate liberal activist, being an admirer of the works of Immanuel Kant and Voltaire. However, he was still fiercely patriotic and monarchistic, and educated his family as liberal Lutherans rather than atheists. Karl was baptized in the same church in 1824 at the age of six.[1]

Education

Early intellectual development

Early agitation

Socialist agitation

Initial developments of Marxism

Later years and death

See also

References

  1. Vladimir Lenin (1914). Karl Marx: A Brief Biographical Sketch With an Exposition of Marxism. Available on the Marxists Internet Archive.