Hey everyone,
This is a thread I've been wanting to do for a while. I don't really have a "point" for this thread beyond highlighting how selective our understanding of Communism's history is as well as sharing some historical curiosities that may be of interest. I could say alot but I kept it to five that cover some of the more interesting or unexpected areas. They aren't in any particular order.
Enjoy.
1. Communists fought in the US Civil War
Several members of the Communist league fought on the Union side in the US civil war. The communist league was the "original" communist party of which Marx and Engels were members and published the communist manifesto for. After the 1848 revolution some of its members fled to the United States and eventually became involved in the US army.
August Willich - Wikipedia
Alexander Schimmelfennig - Wikipedia
2. Bismarck and the Anti-Socialist Laws
One of the earlier attempts to eliminate Communists (or Social Democrats as they were known at the time) was in Germany under Otto von Bismarck. From 1878 to 1890 significant restrictions were placed on the activities of Social Democrats in germany which only came to an end with Bismarck's fall from power. The laws ultimately failed to achieve their objective and the Social Democrats got 19.75% of the vote in 1890 elections going on to become the largest political party in germany in the elections in 1912 before world war I.
Anti-Socialist Laws - Wikipedia
3. The Third Marxist: Joseph Dietzgen
As Marx and Engels collaborated in developing their ideas, a third person named Joseph Dietzgen, developed ideas with a strongly resemblence to Marxism in the USA. Dietzgen coined the term "dialectical materialism" and was a popular philosopher amongst Marxists until the 1930's. Due to philosophical disputes amongst the bolsheviks, Dietzgen's work was sidelined by Lenin even as the term dialectical materialism gained currency in communist circles. Under Stalin the efforts to establish a coherent marxist orthodoxy meant that Dietzgen fell out of favour whilst Marx and Engels continued to be remeber for their collaboration.
Joseph Dietzgen - Wikipedia
4. The German Revolution and the Ruhr Uprising
Germany had a extremely long association with Communist and Marxist ideas and this made Hitler's eventual victory all the more surprising.
However, the fact germany didn't go Communist was not due to lack of trying. In the aftermath of the first world war the conditions in germany edged close to civil war with revolts from both the far left and the far right. In 1919, the Sparticist uprising was launched unsuccessfully in Berlin. Several small "soviet republics" were established in this period in saxony, bravaria and alsace-lorraine (the bit that changed hands between france and germany). This was at roughly the same time that a Hungarian and Slovak Soviet Republics in 1919. These efforts were sporadic.
Spartacist uprising - Wikipedia
Bavarian Soviet Republic - Wikipedia
November 1918 in Alsace-Lorraine - Wikipedia
One of the more serious attempts however in terms of its numbers was the Ruhr uprising in which a 50,000 to 80,000 strong Red Army was established in German territory in March to April 1920. This was a response to a failed right-wing military coup (the Kapp putsch) in which a general strike was organised to bring down the military dictatorship. The uprising was eventually put down and reduced to a foot note in european history.
Ruhr uprising - Wikipedia
Ruhr Red Army - Wikipedia
5. The Jewish Autonomous Region
Early in his career Joseph Stalin was the commissar of nationalities. The way he defined a "nation" was dependent on a group having a given territory. The Jewish ethnic minority in the Soviet Union did not have a territory and this (on top of demands for a jewish homeland and the fact it was a religion in an atheistic state), greatly complicated Soviet religions with the jewish people. so in the late 1920's the "Jewish Autonomous Region" was established in the hope of giving Soviet jews (as an ethnic group) a homeland. Aside from Israel, it remains the worlds only offically jewish territory.
Jewish Autonomous Oblast - Wikipedia
This is a thread I've been wanting to do for a while. I don't really have a "point" for this thread beyond highlighting how selective our understanding of Communism's history is as well as sharing some historical curiosities that may be of interest. I could say alot but I kept it to five that cover some of the more interesting or unexpected areas. They aren't in any particular order.
Enjoy.
1. Communists fought in the US Civil War
Several members of the Communist league fought on the Union side in the US civil war. The communist league was the "original" communist party of which Marx and Engels were members and published the communist manifesto for. After the 1848 revolution some of its members fled to the United States and eventually became involved in the US army.
August Willich - Wikipedia
Alexander Schimmelfennig - Wikipedia
2. Bismarck and the Anti-Socialist Laws
One of the earlier attempts to eliminate Communists (or Social Democrats as they were known at the time) was in Germany under Otto von Bismarck. From 1878 to 1890 significant restrictions were placed on the activities of Social Democrats in germany which only came to an end with Bismarck's fall from power. The laws ultimately failed to achieve their objective and the Social Democrats got 19.75% of the vote in 1890 elections going on to become the largest political party in germany in the elections in 1912 before world war I.
Anti-Socialist Laws - Wikipedia
3. The Third Marxist: Joseph Dietzgen
As Marx and Engels collaborated in developing their ideas, a third person named Joseph Dietzgen, developed ideas with a strongly resemblence to Marxism in the USA. Dietzgen coined the term "dialectical materialism" and was a popular philosopher amongst Marxists until the 1930's. Due to philosophical disputes amongst the bolsheviks, Dietzgen's work was sidelined by Lenin even as the term dialectical materialism gained currency in communist circles. Under Stalin the efforts to establish a coherent marxist orthodoxy meant that Dietzgen fell out of favour whilst Marx and Engels continued to be remeber for their collaboration.
Joseph Dietzgen - Wikipedia
4. The German Revolution and the Ruhr Uprising
Germany had a extremely long association with Communist and Marxist ideas and this made Hitler's eventual victory all the more surprising.
However, the fact germany didn't go Communist was not due to lack of trying. In the aftermath of the first world war the conditions in germany edged close to civil war with revolts from both the far left and the far right. In 1919, the Sparticist uprising was launched unsuccessfully in Berlin. Several small "soviet republics" were established in this period in saxony, bravaria and alsace-lorraine (the bit that changed hands between france and germany). This was at roughly the same time that a Hungarian and Slovak Soviet Republics in 1919. These efforts were sporadic.
Spartacist uprising - Wikipedia
Bavarian Soviet Republic - Wikipedia
November 1918 in Alsace-Lorraine - Wikipedia
One of the more serious attempts however in terms of its numbers was the Ruhr uprising in which a 50,000 to 80,000 strong Red Army was established in German territory in March to April 1920. This was a response to a failed right-wing military coup (the Kapp putsch) in which a general strike was organised to bring down the military dictatorship. The uprising was eventually put down and reduced to a foot note in european history.
Ruhr uprising - Wikipedia
Ruhr Red Army - Wikipedia
5. The Jewish Autonomous Region
Early in his career Joseph Stalin was the commissar of nationalities. The way he defined a "nation" was dependent on a group having a given territory. The Jewish ethnic minority in the Soviet Union did not have a territory and this (on top of demands for a jewish homeland and the fact it was a religion in an atheistic state), greatly complicated Soviet religions with the jewish people. so in the late 1920's the "Jewish Autonomous Region" was established in the hope of giving Soviet jews (as an ethnic group) a homeland. Aside from Israel, it remains the worlds only offically jewish territory.
Jewish Autonomous Oblast - Wikipedia