BIOGRAPHIES
KARL MARX
(1818-1883)

(permission obtained from Steve Kriste by
email
Copyright Steve Kriste 2001)
Karl
Heinrich Marx was born into a comfortable middle-class home in Trier on the
river Moselle in Germany on May 5, 1818. He came a long line of rabbis on
both sides of his family and his father, a man who knew Voltaire and Lessing
by heart, had agreed to baptism as a Protestant so that he would not lose
his job as one of the most respected lawyers in Trier. At the age of seventeen,
Marx enrolled in the Faculty of Law at the University of Bonn. At Bonn he
became engaged to Jenny von Westphalen, the daughter of Baron von Westphalen
, a prominent member of Trier society, and man responsible for interesting
Marx in Romantic literature and Saint-Simonian politics. The following year
Marx's father sent him to the more serious University of Berlin where he remained
four years, at which time he abandoned his romanticism for the Hegelianism
which ruled in Berlin at the time.
Marx
became a member of the Young Hegelian movement. This group, which included
the theologians Bruno Bauer and David Friedrich Strauss, produced a radical
critique of Christianity and, by implication, the liberal opposition to the Prussian autocracy. Finding a university
career closed by the Prussian government, Marx moved into journalism and,
in October 1842, became editor, in Cologne, of the influential Rheinische
Zeitung, a liberal newspaper backed by industrialists. Marx's articles, particularly
those on economic questions, forced the Prussian government to close the paper.
Marx then emigrated to France.
Arriving
in Paris of the end of 1843, Marx rapidly make contact with organized groups
of émigré German workers and with various sects of French socialists. He also
edited the short-lived Deutsch-Französische Jahrbücher which was intended
to bridge French socialism and the German radical Hegelians. During his first
few months in Paris, Marx became a communist and set down his views in a series
of writings known as the Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts (1844), which
remained unpublished until the 1930s. In the Manuscripts, Marx outlined a
humanist conception of communism, influenced by the philosophy of Ludwig Feuerbach
and based on a contrast between the alienated nature of labor under capitalism
and a communist society in which human beings freely developed their nature
in cooperative production. It was also in Paris that Marx developed his lifelong
partnership with Friedrich Engels (1820-1895).

permission obtained from Steve Kriste by
email

Federick
Engels (1820-1895)- co-founder of the Marxism theology
(permission obtained from Steve Kriste by
email Copyright Steve Kriste 2001)
Marx
was expelled from Paris at the end of 1844 and with Engels, moved to Brussels
where he remained for the next three years, visiting England where Engels'
family had cottons spinning interests in Manchester. While in Brussels Marx
devoted himself to an intensive study of history and elaborated what came
to be known as the materialist conception of history. This he developed in
a manuscript (published posthumously as The German Ideology), of which the
basic thesis was that "the nature of individuals depends on the material
conditions determining their production." Marx traced the history of
the various modes of production and predicted the collapse of the present
one -- industrial capitalism -- and its replacement by communism.
Early in 1848 Marx moved back to Paris
when a revolution first broke out and onto Germany where he founded, again in Cologne, the Neue Rheinische Zeitung.
The paper supported a radical democratic line against the Prussian autocracy
and Marx devoted his main energies to its editorship since the Communist League
had been virtually disbanded. Marx's paper was suppressed and he sought refuge
in London in May 1849 to begin the "long, sleepless night of exile"
that was to last for the rest of his life.
Settling
in London, Marx was optimistic about the imminence of a new revolutionary
outbreak in Europe. He rejoined the
Communist League and wrote two lengthy pamphlets on the 1848 revolution in
France and its aftermath, The Class Struggles in France and The 18th Brumaire
of Louis Bonaparte. He was soon convinced that "a new revolution is possible
only in consequence of a new crisis" and then devoted himself to the
study of political economy in order to determine the causes and conditions
of this crisis.
Marx's major work on political economy
made slow progress. By 1857 he had produced a gigantic 800 page manuscript
on capital, landed property, wage labor, the state, foreign trade and the
world market. The Grundrisse (or Outlines) was not published until 1941. In
the early 1860s he broke off his work to compose three large volumes, Theories
of Surplus Value, which discussed the theoreticians of political economy,
particularly Adam Smith and David Ricardo. It was not until 1867 that Marx
was able to publish the first results of his work in volume 1 of Capital,
a work which analyzed the capitalist process of production. In Capital, Marx
elaborated his version of the labor theory value and his conception of surplus
value and exploitation which would ultimately lead to a falling rate of profit
in the collapse of industrial capitalism. Volumes II and III were finished during the 1860s but Marx
worked on the manuscripts for the rest of his life and they were published
osthumously by Engels.
One
reason why Marx was so slow to publish Capital was that he was devoting his
time and energy to the First International, to whose General Council he was
elected at its inception in 1864. He was particularly active in preparing
for the

The Tomb of Karl Marx
(Permission
obtained from Steve Kriste by email
Marx's
health did not improve. He traveled to Europeans spas and even to Algeria
in search of recuperation. The deaths of his eldest daughter and his wife
clouded the last years of his life. Marx died March 14, 1883 and was buried
at Highgate Cemetery in North London.