Marx, Karl

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Basic data

  1. May 5, 1818 in Trier
  2. March 14, 1883 in London
  3. Politiker

Iconography

Marx in 1875 (Source: Wikimedia)
Marx's birthplace, now Brückenstraße 10, in Trier. The family occupied two rooms on the ground floor and three on the first floor.[13] Purchased by the Social Democratic Party of Germany in 1928, it now houses a museum devoted to him.[14] (Source: Wikimedia)
Jenny von Westphalen in the 1830s (Source: Wikimedia)
Inscription at the University of Jena commemorating the PhD he was awarded there in 1841. (Source: Wikimedia)
Friedrich Engels, whom Marx met in 1844; the two became lifelong friends and collaborators. (Source: Wikimedia)
Marx with his daughters and Engels (Source: Wikimedia)
The first edition of The Manifesto of the Communist Party, published in German in 1848 (Source: Wikimedia)
Marx and Engels in the printing house of the Neue Rheinische Zeitung. E. Capiro, 1895 (Source: Wikimedia)
The first volume of Das Kapital (Source: Wikimedia)
Marx photographed by John Mayall, 1875 (Source: Wikimedia)
Marx in 1882 (Source: Wikimedia)
Jenny Carolina and Jenny Laura Marx (1869): all the Marx daughters were named Jenny in honour of their mother, Jenny von Westphalen. (Source: Wikimedia)
Tomb of Karl Marx, East Highgate Cemetery, London (Source: Wikimedia)
A monument dedicated to Marx and Engels in Shanghai, China (Source: Wikimedia)
Outside a factory in Oldham, 1900. Marx believed that industrial workers, the proletariat, would rise up around the world. (Source: Wikimedia)
Karl Marx Monument in Chemnitz, known as Karl-Marx-Stadt from 1953 to 1990 (Source: Wikimedia)
A CPI(M) poster in Kerala, India (Source: Wikimedia)
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels monument in Marx-Engels Forum, Berlin-Mitte, Germany (Source: Wikimedia)
1948 Soviet Union stamp, featuring Marx and Engels, commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Manifesto (Source: Wikimedia)
Marx statue in Trier, Germany (Source: Wikimedia)
A map of countries that declared themselves to be socialist states under the Marxist–Leninist definition between 1979 and 1983, which marked the greatest territorial extent of socialist states (Source: Wikimedia)

Biographical information from Henze-Digital

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