Friedrich Engels, Philosopher, Political economist, activist and Revolutionary Socialist, was born in Barmen, Rhenish Prussia, 200 years ago today on the 28th November 1820. He was the oldest of the six children of Friedrich and Elisabeth Franziska
Mauritia Engels. The senior Engels, a successful industrialist, was a
Christian Pietist and religious fanatic. After attending elementary
school at Barmen, young Friedrich entered the gymnasium in nearby
Elberfeld at the age of 14, but he left it 3 years later. Although he
became one of the most learned men of his time, he had no further formal
schooling.
Under pressure from his tyrannical father, Friedrich was sent to the city of Bremen to be inducted into the family business by
learning about the industry as a clerk to a firm of linen exporters.To assuage the deadly boredom, Engels wrote articles in newspapers that
were critiques of the conditions of workers and the social costs of
industrialisation. He had naturally not yet formulated any critique of
capitalism per se, His ire was directed at the stultifying effects of Calvinism and the
social costs of the Protestant work ethic with the misery it imposed on
factory workers.
In 1841, bored with being deskbound in Bremen, Engels returned home to a life that he found equally tedious. To escape he, later that year, volunteered for one year’s service with the Royal Prussian Guards Artillery, based in the capital Berlin.
In 1841, bored with being deskbound in Bremen, Engels returned home to a life that he found equally tedious. To escape he, later that year, volunteered for one year’s service with the Royal Prussian Guards Artillery, based in the capital Berlin.
In Berlin, he came into contact with the radical Young Hegelian movement who were inspired by the revolutionary essence of the German idealist
philosopher George Hegel, and attracted by his dialectical method which
espoused constant development and change through contradiction. Engel's embraced these ideas.
Engels said of the Young Hegelians that some, including himself,
‘contended for the insufficiency of political change and declared their
opinion to be that a social revolution based upon common property, was
the only state of mankind agreeing with their abstract principles.’
After some free-lance journalism, part of it under the
pseudonym of F. Oswald, in November 1842 Engels moved to Manchester,
England, to help manage his father's cotton-factory in Manchester. Several months prior to Engels’ arrival, the Chartist movement reached
its peak. With 70,000 members, it was the first mass political movement
of the working class anywhere in the world. The Chartists collected 3.3
million signatures on a petition presented to the House of Commons
calling for universal suffrage for all men over the age of 21 and a
series of social reforms. The rejection of the petition by the House of
Commons triggered a series of strikes that were brutally suppressed.
Engels supported the cause and became friends with the left-wing Chartist leader Julian Harney
and wrote for his newspaper, the Northern Star. He also had contact with the followers of Robert Owen’s utopian socialism.
Manchester in the 1840s was a crucible of the industrial revolution and
Engels found himself working and living in a community dominated by the
cotton manufacturers.
Here he came face to face with unbridled capitalist exploitation and the degradation of the working class.
He wrote later: ‘A few days in my old man’s factory have sufficed to bring me face to face with its beastliness, which I had rather overlooked.’
Although forced to work alongside the bourgeoisie, he made a point of not socialising with them. He wrote: ‘I forsook the company and the dinner parties, the port wine and champagne of the middle classes, and devoted my leisure hours almost exclusively to the intercourse with plain working men.’
Aged just 24, Engels, guided by Mary Burns a radical young working class Irishwoman who became his lifelong companion, witnessed capitalist industrialisation more extensive, repressive and exploitative than any he had seen in Germany.
In his first major book, ‘The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844’, Engels reports in excruciating detail the miseries of child labour, starvation wages and appalling working conditions, resulting in crippling injuries or deformities even among the youngest workers.
He called living conditions in English industrial towns ‘the highest and most unconcealed pinnacle of social misery existing in our day’.
Accompanied by Mary, he witnessed and heard from their own mouths the conditions endured by workers and their families.
Engels wrote: ‘It is utterly indifferent to the English bourgeois whether his working-men starve or not, if only he makes money. All the conditions of life are measured by money, and what brings no money is nonsense, unpractical, idealistic bosh.’
Engels observed the rapid rise of illegal trade unionism.
He wrote: ‘The incredible frequency of these strikes proves best of all to what extent the social war has broken out all over England.
‘No week passes, scarcely a day, indeed, when there is not a strike in some direction.’
Many liberals had bemoaned the wretched inhuman conditions of the working class but they saw it as a helpless class that deserved the ‘help’ of their liberal superiors.
But ‘Condition of the Working Class in England’ was much more than just an exposé of the inhumanity of capitalism.
Engels was the first to understand that this oppressed mass was not just an exploited working class but the only class that could liberate mankind from capitalism – capitalism for Engels had created in the working class its own ‘gravedigger’.
The book created an immediate sensation in German radical circles (it was at first only published in Germany). Karl Marx was particularly enthusiastic about it.
Here he came face to face with unbridled capitalist exploitation and the degradation of the working class.
He wrote later: ‘A few days in my old man’s factory have sufficed to bring me face to face with its beastliness, which I had rather overlooked.’
Although forced to work alongside the bourgeoisie, he made a point of not socialising with them. He wrote: ‘I forsook the company and the dinner parties, the port wine and champagne of the middle classes, and devoted my leisure hours almost exclusively to the intercourse with plain working men.’
Aged just 24, Engels, guided by Mary Burns a radical young working class Irishwoman who became his lifelong companion, witnessed capitalist industrialisation more extensive, repressive and exploitative than any he had seen in Germany.
In his first major book, ‘The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844’, Engels reports in excruciating detail the miseries of child labour, starvation wages and appalling working conditions, resulting in crippling injuries or deformities even among the youngest workers.
He called living conditions in English industrial towns ‘the highest and most unconcealed pinnacle of social misery existing in our day’.
Accompanied by Mary, he witnessed and heard from their own mouths the conditions endured by workers and their families.
Engels wrote: ‘It is utterly indifferent to the English bourgeois whether his working-men starve or not, if only he makes money. All the conditions of life are measured by money, and what brings no money is nonsense, unpractical, idealistic bosh.’
Engels observed the rapid rise of illegal trade unionism.
He wrote: ‘The incredible frequency of these strikes proves best of all to what extent the social war has broken out all over England.
‘No week passes, scarcely a day, indeed, when there is not a strike in some direction.’
Many liberals had bemoaned the wretched inhuman conditions of the working class but they saw it as a helpless class that deserved the ‘help’ of their liberal superiors.
But ‘Condition of the Working Class in England’ was much more than just an exposé of the inhumanity of capitalism.
Engels was the first to understand that this oppressed mass was not just an exploited working class but the only class that could liberate mankind from capitalism – capitalism for Engels had created in the working class its own ‘gravedigger’.
The book created an immediate sensation in German radical circles (it was at first only published in Germany). Karl Marx was particularly enthusiastic about it.
In 1844 Engels began contributing to a radical journal called Franco-German Annals
that was being edited by Karl Marx in Paris. In the same year1844, Engels contributed an article, ‘Outline of a Critique of
Political Economy’. In this, Engels laid the foundational principles for
the critique of bourgeois political economy. Engels demonstrated that
all important phenomena in the bourgeois economic system arise
inevitably from the rules of private ownership of the means of
production and a society without poverty could only be a society without
this private ownership. This immensely fascinated Marx. He came to the
conclusion that through a critique of bourgeois political economy,
another thinker had come, independently, to the same conclusion that he
had come to with his critique of Hegelian philosophy. The pioneering
work by Engels, ‘The Condition of the Working Class in England’, also greatly
influenced Marx’s line of thinking on the beginnings of the industrial
revolution that was taking place in England. During ten days of
exchanges in August 1844, Marx’s admiration for Engels grew enormously.
He admired Engels’ courage, dedication, single-mindedness and noted that
both were in agreement on all theoretical questions of the day. Later that year Engels met
Marx and the two men became close friends. A lifelong intellectual rapport and camararderie was established between
them. Finding they were of the same opinion about nearly everything, Marx and Engels decided to collaborate on their writing. It was a good partnership. Whereas Marx was at his best
when dealing with difficult abstract concepts, Engels had the ability to
write for a mass audience.
While working on their first article together, The Holy Family,
the Prussian authorities put pressure on the French government to expel
Karl Marx from the country. On 25th January 1845, Marx received an
order deporting him from France. Marx and Engels decided to move to
Belgium, a country that permitted greater freedom of expression than any
other European state. Friedrich Engels helped to financially support
Marx and his family. Engels gave Marx the royalties of his book, The Condition of the Working Class in England
and arranged for other sympathizers to make donations. This enabled
Marx to study and develop his economic and political theories.
In July 1845 Engels took Karl Marx to England. They spent most of the
time consulting books in Manchester Library. Engels and Marx returned
to Brussels and in January 1846 they set up a Communist Correspondence
Committee. Engels returned to England in December 1847 where he attended
a meeting of the Communist League's Central Committee in London. At the
meeting it was decided that the aims of the organisation was "the
overthrow of the bourgeoisie, the domination of the proletariat, the
abolition of the old bourgeois society based on class antagonisms, and
the establishment of a new society without classes and without private
property".
Engels and Marx began writing a pamphlet together. Based on a first draft produced by Engels called the Principles of Communism,
Marx finished the 12,000 word pamphlet in six weeks. Unlike most of
Marx's work, it was an accessible account of communist ideology. Written
for a mass audience, The Communist Manifesto summarised the forthcoming revolution and the nature of the communist society that would be established by the proletariat. The Communist Manifesto was published in February, t opens with the words: ‘A spectre is haunting Europe – the spectre of
Communism’ and then it declares proudly: ‘Of all the classes that stand
face to face with the bourgeoisie today, the proletariat alone is a
really revolutionary class. The other classes decay and finally
disappear in the face of modern industry; the proletariat is its special
and essential product.’
It goes on: ‘What the bourgeoisie therefore produces, above all, are its own gravediggers. Its fall and the victory of the proletariat are equally inevitable.’
The Manifesto concludes: ‘Let the ruling classes tremble at a Communist revolution. The proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains. They have a world to win. Working men of all countries, unite!’
Three days later, a revolutionary uprising in France overthrew the monarchy. The revolution spread to Germany in March and rapidly expanded across Europe. The feudal rulers of the German states were forced to abdicate in droves or accept parliaments and constitutions. In May, the National Assembly began meeting in the Paulskirche in Frankfurt, where it was to draft a constitution for a united Germany.
It goes on: ‘What the bourgeoisie therefore produces, above all, are its own gravediggers. Its fall and the victory of the proletariat are equally inevitable.’
The Manifesto concludes: ‘Let the ruling classes tremble at a Communist revolution. The proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains. They have a world to win. Working men of all countries, unite!’
Three days later, a revolutionary uprising in France overthrew the monarchy. The revolution spread to Germany in March and rapidly expanded across Europe. The feudal rulers of the German states were forced to abdicate in droves or accept parliaments and constitutions. In May, the National Assembly began meeting in the Paulskirche in Frankfurt, where it was to draft a constitution for a united Germany.
Marx and Engels did not hesitate for a moment to participate in the revolution. Drawing on the tradition of the Rheinische Zeitung, which was banned in 1843, Marx and Engels founded the Neue Rheinische Zeitung
(NRZ) in Cologne.The men hoped to use the newspaper to encourage the revolutionary
atmosphere that they had witnessed in Paris. Three hundred and one editions of the paper appeared
between June 1, 1848 and May 19, 1849, and the publication reached a
circulation of 6,000, a considerable number at the time. The newspaper
saw itself as the left wing of the democratic camp and its task as
pushing forward the bourgeois revolution, which, as the Communist Manifesto had declared, “will be but the prelude of an immediately following proletarian revolution.”
Engels helped form an
organisation called the Rhineland Democrats. On 25th September, 1848,
several of the leaders of the group were arrested. Engels managed to
escape but was forced to leave the country. Karl Marx continued to
publish the New Rhenish Gazette until he was expelled in May, 1849. Engels and Marx then moved to London.
In November 1850, unable to make a living as a writer in London and
anxious to help support the penniless Marx, Engels returned to his
father’s business in Manchester. All the time, the two men kept an almost daily correspondence,
exchanging ideas and opinions and collaborating in developing the theory
of scientific socialism. Friedrich Engels sent postal orders or £1 or £5 notes,
cut in half and sent in separate envelopes. In this way the Marx family
was able to survive.
At the same time, they took a leading role in the struggle of workers in Britain and across the world.
In 1864, Marx and Engels founded the International Working Men’s Association which, in accordance with their idea of uniting workers of all countries, was to have a tremendous significance in the development of the international working class movement.
At the same time, they took a leading role in the struggle of workers in Britain and across the world.
In 1864, Marx and Engels founded the International Working Men’s Association which, in accordance with their idea of uniting workers of all countries, was to have a tremendous significance in the development of the international working class movement.
In September 1870 Engels moved to London, settling near the home of
Marx, whom he saw daily. A generous
friend and gay host, the fun-loving Engels spent the remaining 25 years
of his life in London, enjoying good food, good wine, and good company.
He also worked hard, doing the things he loved: writing, maintaining
contact and a voluminous correspondence with radicals everywhere.
After Marx’s death, Engels continued alone as the counsellor and
leader of the European socialist movement, which had become a mass
force. His advice was eagerly sought after, and he drew on his vast
knowledge and experience in his old age.
Like Marx, Engels knew
many foreign languages, he could converse freely in English, French, Italian, and could read Spanish and almost all Slavic and Scandanavian languages. He and Marx conducted a massive correspondence on a host
of questions. Incredibly, this covers 13 volumes of the Collected Works,
amounting to 3,957 letters. These reveal the fascinating close bond
between them and their joint work.
Marx died before he could put
the final touches to his vast work on political economy. Using the
drafts left by Marx, Engels put his own research aside and took on the
colossal task of completing Marx’s work, editing and publishing volumes
two and three of Capital. Only he could decipher Marx’s unintelligible handwriting.
Engels continued to write prefaces to the ‘Communist Manifesto’ and
other newer editions of their works on the basis of contemporary
developments enriching the international working class struggles and
urging its forward movement. As Lenin said, “Engels taught the working
class to know itself and be conscious of itself and he substituted
science for dreams.”
On Aug. 14, 1889, the 100th anniversary of the French Revolution, the
Second International was founded in Paris at Engels’ initiative. Around
300 parties and organisations from 20 countries were represented. Engels
was in particularly close contact with the leaders of the German Social
Democracy, who regularly sought his advice. He attended the Third Congress of the International in Zurich. In the
closing session, he addressed the delegates first in English, then in
French, then in German.
Engels died of cancer in London on Aug. 5, 1895 a revolutionary communist to the very core. His ashes were cast into the
sea off Beachy Head in Eastbourne.
Engels’ masterful command of language, his ability to present complex
material in an understandable way, his encyclopedic knowledge, and his
humour, which shone through even in connection with the most serious
topics, make the reading of his works a pleasure to this day.Without him, Marx's work would gave been impossible and would not have been preserved. Marxism was originally an Engels-Marx-ism Whoever speaks of socialism today must not forget Engels for the vital contribution that he made to developing the ideas of Marxism, for which we owe him an enormous debt of gratitude.
I will acknowledge we should not forget those that twisted communism into tyranny's that Marx and Engel's could not have anticipated. In none of his writings did Engel's condone, mass murder, torture or show trials.
Today I remember a man who dedicated his life to the revolutionary struggle of the proletariat to free itself from the chains of capitalism and usher in a new era of history. On the bicentenary of his birth, without doubt his towering revolutionary
spirit lives on in the Marxist tendency, which defends his legacy, and
the struggle for world socialism. 200 years after Engel's birth Britain is still, sadly a country that murders it's poor, if we really want to remember him we should continue to fight against poverty and austerity that creates it.
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