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League of Communists

Communist League
Bund der Kommunisten
Leader Karl Schapper
Founder Karl Marx
Friedrich Engels
Karl Schapper
Founded 1847
Dissolved 1852
Preceded by League of the Just
Communist Correspondence Committee
Succeeded by First International
Headquarters London
Cologne (after 1848)
Newspaper Kommunistische Zeitschrift (1847)
Neue Rheinische Zeitung (1848-1849)
Neue Rheinische Zeitung Revue (1850)
Ideology Revolutionary socialism
Communism
Marxism
Political position Far-left
Colours      Red
Party flag
Red flag.svg

The Communist League (German: Bund der Kommunisten) was an international political party established in June 1847 in London, England. The organisation was formed through the merger of the League of the Just, headed by Karl Schapper and the Communist Correspondence Committee of Brussels, Belgium, in which Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels were the dominant personalities. The Communist League is regarded as the first Marxist political party and it was on behalf of this group that Marx and Engels wrote the Communist Manifesto late in 1847. The Communist League was formally disbanded in 1852, following the Cologne Communist Trial.

During the decade of the 1840s the word "communist" came into general use to describe those who hailed the left wing of the Jacobin Club of the French Revolution as their ideological forefathers. This political tendency saw itself as egalitarian inheritors of the 1795 Conspiracy of Equals headed by Gracchus Babeuf. The sans-culottes of Paris which had decades earlier been the base of support for Babeuf — artisans, journeymen, and the urban unemployed — was seen as a potential foundation for a new social system based upon the modern machine production of the day.

The French thinker Étienne Cabet inspired the imagination with a novel about a utopian society based upon communal machine production, Voyage en Icarie (1839). The revolutionary Louis Auguste Blanqui argued in favor of an elite organising the overwhelming majority of the population against the "rich," seizing the government in a coup d'état, and instituting a new egalitarian economic order.


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