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David Livingston: Africa’s Trailblazer




















             Karl Marx,  1818-83, 105  as founder of Marxism an influential political science which was highly
             critical of capitalism. The ideology of Marx and Communism shaped the Twentieth Century.


             Karl Marx was born 5 May 1818, in Trier in western Germany. His father was a successful lawyer
             who had converted from Judaism to Christianity in order to help his law career.

             At the age of 17, Karl Marx enrolled in the University of Bonn to study Law. He was not the most
             diligent student, enjoying drinking societies and meeting friends. His father eventually had him
             transferred to the University of Berlin, which had a stricter reputation. During his time at
             University, Marx increasingly became attracted to radical ideas and philosophies. For a time he
             associated with a group known as the ‘Young Hegels,’ those students who rejected the ideas of Hegel.

             Karl Marx married Jenny von Westphalen, the educated daughter of a Prussian baron, on June 19, 1843. Shortly
             after this, he moved to Paris to escape the censorship of the Prussian government who were increasingly
             cracking down on left-wing agitators.
             Paris in the 1840s was a hotbed of revolutionary activity. Here, Marx met many revolutionaries such as Frederick
             Engels – an English radical. These two were to become lifelong friends and supporters; Engels would later
             become the chief financial support for Marx.

             Engels wrote an influential book The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844. This helped Marx
             develop his idea of a proletarian revolution. This led to Marx’s first work – Communism Economic and
             Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844. This philosophical work sought to show Communism as a moral force for
             good to overcome the alienation of labor under capitalism.

             Marx also became interested in the development of history and the changes which inevitably passed through
             society. He termed this idea – historical materialism. Marx increasingly began to believe that a Proletarian
             (Communist revolution) was not just desirable, but, an inevitable consequence of historical evolution.



             105  https://www.biographyonline.net/writers/karl-marx.html
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