Statue of Karl Marx, for article on communist manifesto

Karl Marx publishes The Communist Manifesto, one of history’s most influential pamphlets

On a gray February morning in London in 1848 C.E., a 40-page pamphlet written in German rolled off the presses — and landed in a world already trembling with unrest. Within days, revolution had broken out in France. Within decades, the ideas in that pamphlet had reshaped governments on every inhabited continent.

Key facts

  • Communist Manifesto: Published February 21, 1848 C.E. in London by the Communist League, a group of German-born revolutionary workers — written by Karl Marx with significant assistance from Friedrich Engels.
  • Class struggle theory: The pamphlet argued that all of recorded human history was driven by conflict between economic classes, and that the industrial working class — the proletariat — would inevitably rise to end that cycle.
  • Global reach: Originally written in German, the Manifesto has since been translated into hundreds of languages and remains one of the most widely printed political documents ever produced.

How the Manifesto came to exist

Karl Marx was born in Trier, Prussia, in 1818 C.E., the son of a Jewish lawyer who converted to Lutheranism. He studied law and philosophy, edited a liberal newspaper in Cologne until Prussian authorities shut it down for being too outspoken, and eventually made his way to Paris — then the beating heart of European socialist thought.

It was in Paris that Marx met Friedrich Engels, a fellow Prussian who would become his closest collaborator for the rest of his life. Together they sharpened their analysis of capitalism, labor, and history into something harder and more systematic than anything that had come before.

In 1847 C.E., a secret society of revolutionary German workers in London — the League of the Just — invited Marx to join. He and Engels renamed it the Communist League and were commissioned to write a statement of its principles. Marx drafted the bulk of the Manifesto in Brussels in January 1848 C.E., drawing on an earlier draft Engels had written and synthesizing years of shared intellectual work. The League adopted it immediately upon receiving it.

What made it different

Many of the ideas in The Communist Manifesto were not entirely new. Critiques of capitalism, calls for workers’ solidarity, and theories of historical change had circulated in European radical circles for years. What Marx achieved was a powerful synthesis — a single, coherent framework that connected economics, history, and political action into one urgent argument.

The pamphlet opens with one of the most famous sentences in political literature: “A spectre is haunting Europe — the spectre of communism.” It closes with an equally famous call: “Workers of the world, unite!” Between those two lines, Marx laid out a theory of history built on material conditions and class conflict, predicted the collapse of the capitalist system, and called for organized working-class revolution as the path forward.

The timing was electric. The ink was barely dry when France erupted in revolution on February 22, 1848 C.E. — just one day after publication. King Louis-Philippe abdicated within days. Revolution swept across continental Europe. The Manifesto had not caused these uprisings, but it gave them a common intellectual vocabulary.

Those revolutions were ultimately crushed by 1849 C.E. Marx fled to London, where he spent the rest of his life writing, organizing, and building what would become the First International — a network linking workers’ movements across Europe and the Americas. His major theoretical work, Das Kapital, followed in 1867 C.E.

Lasting impact

The Communist Manifesto is arguably the most consequential political pamphlet ever written. Its direct influence shaped the Russian Revolution of 1917 C.E., the Chinese Revolution of 1949 C.E., and liberation movements across Africa, Latin America, and Asia throughout the 20th century. By 1950 C.E., roughly half the world’s population lived under governments that claimed Marxist foundations.

But its impact runs deeper than any particular government. The Manifesto fundamentally changed how people think about labor, inequality, and power. Concepts like class consciousness, surplus value, and the critique of capital entered the mainstream of global political thought — influencing not just committed Marxists but also social democrats, labor unionists, anti-colonial leaders, and liberation theologians who drew selectively from Marx’s framework.

The document also accelerated global conversations about workers’ rights that led to child labor laws, the eight-hour workday, occupational safety standards, and the right to organize — reforms that reshaped daily life for hundreds of millions of people, including many who never read a word of Marx.

Scholars in the Global South have noted that Marxist frameworks provided essential analytical tools for understanding colonial exploitation — from Frantz Fanon in Algeria to José Carlos Mariátegui in Peru — even as Marx himself held complicated and sometimes contradictory views on colonized peoples and non-European societies.

Blindspots and limits

The Manifesto‘s record demands honesty. Governments that claimed Marx’s legacy committed some of the 20th century’s worst atrocities — including forced collectivization, political purges, and the suppression of dissent on a massive scale. Whether those outcomes were inherent to the ideas or products of their particular historical conditions remains one of the most debated questions in modern political philosophy.

Marx’s own framework had significant blindspots. His analysis centered on European industrial capitalism and the male industrial worker, often marginalizing the labor of women, the experience of enslaved people, and the economic systems of non-European societies. Later thinkers — feminist economists, post-colonial theorists, scholars of race — have spent more than a century extending, challenging, and revising his framework in response.

The Manifesto also predicted imminent, inevitable revolution — a prediction that has not unfolded as Marx described. Capitalism has proven more adaptable, and the working class more internally divided, than the pamphlet anticipated.

None of that erases what the document set in motion: a global, sustained, still-unfinished conversation about who benefits from economic systems, who bears the costs, and what a more equitable arrangement might look like. That conversation — however contested — has made the world pay attention to questions it might otherwise have ignored. For that reason alone, February 21, 1848 C.E. belongs in any serious account of human intellectual history.

For further context on the political economy of Marx’s era, see Britannica’s overview of the Revolutions of 1848, the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy’s entry on Karl Marx, and the full text of The Communist Manifesto at Marxists.org. For broader context on the labor movement that grew from these ideas, see the International Labour Organization’s history.

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For more on this story, see: History.com — Marx publishes Manifesto

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