Friedrich Engels
November 28, 2012
On this date in 1820, Friedrich Engels
was born in Germany into a wealthy family. Managing a branch of his
father's business in Manchester, England, from 1842-1845, Engels became
appalled at the poverty of the workers. He wrote his first socialist
work, Conditions of the Working Class in England. After their meeting in 1844, Engels and Karl Marx
became lifelong colleagues. While co-writing an article with Engels
called "The Holy Family," Marx was expelled from France at Prussian
insistence. Engels followed him to Belgium. They founded the Communist
League in London in 1846 and co-wrote The Communist Manifesto. A
month after it was published in 1848, Marx was expelled from Belgium.
Engels became a primary financial supporter of the Marx family,
returning to work in Germany with his father while Marx lived in
England. Prime Minister John Russell had refused to expel Marx or Engels
on principles of freedom of thought. Engels' books include Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State.
After Marx' death in 1883, Engels edited and translated his writings.
According to freethought encyclopedist Joseph McCabe, Engels'
acquaintance, Belfort Bax, called him "the devout Atheist" (A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists). D. 1895.
Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor - www.ffrf.org
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