Abstract

The significance of the Paris Commune "lay in the fact that it was essentially a government of the working class" (Marx). The Parisian workers give the revolution a social impetus. Karl Marx from gloomy London sends greetings to Paris. The bourgeoisie, once progressive, which earlier spoke with pride the names of Pinel and Holbach, in the days of the Paris Commune, mobilizes and organizes counterrevolution.

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