Frederick Engels
Prefaces to the Communist Manifesto
Prefaces to different editions of the Communist Manifesto.
The 1872 German Edition
The Communist Manifesto - Marx and Engels
The Manifesto of the Communist Party Communist Manifesto was commissioned by the Communist League and published in 1848, and remains one of the world's most influential political tracts.
While we do not agree with all of it we reproduce it for reference, and readers should bear in mind that it was commissioned propaganda for the League.
Introduction
The Demands of the Communist Party in Germany - Marx and Engels
The Demands of the Communist Party in Germany
Karl Marx and Frederick Engels [1]
Proletarians of all countries, unite!
1. The whole of Germany shall be declared a single and indivisible republic.
2. Every German over twenty-one years of age shall be able to vote and be elected, provided he has no criminal record.
Karl Marx - For Poland
FOR POLAND
Speeches by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, as reported by Friedrich Engels. 24 March, 1875
Marx and Engels - Heroes of the Exile
HEROES OF THE EXILE
KARL MARX and FREDERICK ENGELS
Written between May and June 1852. First published in 1930 by Marx-Engels Institute in Moscow in Vol. 5 of the Marx-Engels Archive. This edition was in Russian translation; the first edition of the German original had to wait for the German Werke Vol. 8, of 1960.
Not often one can use a word like hilarious with Karl and Fred (though Fred was usually a much more lively and rapid writer), but Heroes of the Exile can be very funny. Wasn't published in his lifetime, though he intended it to be... (that is, it wasn't an "unfinished work" in the sense the Economic and Philsophical Manuscripts were, say). Written in 1852.
On the History of the Communist League, 1836-1852 - Engels
London, October 8th 1885
Bruno Bauer and Early Christianity - Engels
published May 4-11, 1882 in Sozialdemokrat
In Berlin, on April 13, a man died who once played a role as a philosopher and a theologian, but was hardly heard of for years, only attracting the attention of the public from time to time as a "literary eccentric". Official theologians, including Renan, wrote him off and, therefore, maintained a silence of death about him. And yet he was worth more than them all and did more than all of them in a question which interests us Socialists, too: the question of the historical origin of Christianity.
On the History of Early Christianity - Engels
From Die Neue Zeit Vol. 1, 1894-95, pp. 4-13 and 36-43 ONLINE VERSION: Translated by the Institute of Marxism-Leninism, USSR, 1957 from the newspaper copy. Transcribed for the Internet by director@marx.org.
I
1891 Introduction - Engels
The 1891 Introduction to The Civil War in France, written by Frederick Engels on the 20th Anniversary of the Paris Commune
I did not anticipate that I would be asked to prepare a new edition of the Address of the General Council of the International on The Civil War in France, and to write an introduction to it. Therefore I can only touch briefly here on the most important points.
Socialism: Utopian and Scientific
Written: Between January and March of 1880 Source: Marx/Engels Selected Works, Volume 3, p. 95 -151 Publisher: Progress Publishers, 1970 First Published: March, April, and May issues of Revue Socialiste in 1880 Translated: from the French by Paul Lafargue in 1892 (authorised by Engels)
The Origin of The Family, Private Property and the State
After Marx's death, in rumaging through Marx's manuscripts, Engels came upon Marx's precis of Ancient Society -- a book by progressive US scholar Lewis Henry Morgan and published in London 1877. The precis was written between 1880-81 and contained Marx's numerous remarks on Morgan as well as passages from other sources.
Principles of Communism
Principles of Communism was Engels' first draft of a declarative, defining document for the communist movement. It was written when Engels was 27, and just prior to the great Europe-wide revolutions of 1848-9. As such, the passionate certainty of youth, coupled with the expectant exuberance of the times, results in a piece bursting with confidence, if not, at times, naivete.
Anti-Duhring
Written: September 1876 - June 1878
Published: In German in Vorwärts, January 3 1877 to July 7 1878
Published: As book, Leipzig 1878.
Translation: Emile Burns (from the 1894 Stuttgart third edition)
Transcribed for the Internet: meia@marx.org, August 1996
The Peasant War in Germany
The 1848 uprisings in Germany put Engels in mind of the last great peasant rebellions of of 1500s. As he would later write: "The parallel between the German Revolution of 1525 and that of 1848-49 was too obvious to be altogether ignored at that time."
Wilhelm Wolff
Written between June and September 1876 First published in Die Neue Welt Nos. 27, 28, 30, 31, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45 and 47 July 1, 8, 22, 29; Sept 30; Oct. 7, 14, 21, 28; Nov. 4, 25, 1876
Shorter reprint appeared in the 1886 book "Die schlesische Milliarde". Von Wilhelm Wolff. Mit Einleitung von Friedrich Engels Hottingen-Zürich, 1886
Synopsis of Capital
This is a synopsis of Capital, Volume I, written by Engels in 1868. Upon Capital's release, Engels began constructing a comprehensive summation
Jenny Marx obituary by Frederick Engels
Jenny Longuet, Nee Marx
by Frederick Engels
Jenny, the eldest daughter of Karl Marx, died at Argenteuil near Paris on January 11. About eight years ago she married Charles Longuet a former member of the Paris Commune and at present co-editor of the Justice.
Dialectics of Nature
Engels' last major work




