Writings on the Paris Commune

 

Karl Marx, Mikhail Bakunin, Peter Kropotkin

 

 

 

Red and Black Publishers, St Petersburg, Florida

 

 

                            Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

 

Writings on the Paris Commune / Karl Marx ... [et al.].

             p. cm.

      ISBN 978-1-934941-28-7

   1.  Paris (France)--History--Commune, 1871--Foreign public opinion.

      I. Marx, Karl, 1818-1883.

      DC317.W75 2008

      944'.361081--dc22

                                                                                                       2008021860

 

Red and Black Publishers, PO Box 7542, St Petersburg, Florida,  33734

Contact us at: info@RedandBlackPublishers.com

Printed and manufactured in the United States of America

 

 

 

 

Contents

Timeline of the Paris Commune          5

Excerpts from The Civil War in France 1871, Karl Marx          9

The Paris Commune and the Idea of the State, Mikhail Bakunin        75

The Commune of Paris, Peter Kropotkin          89

Excerpts from State and Revolution, Vladimir Lenin           103

 

  

 

Timeline of the Paris Commune

 

1789

June 17 – Anti-royalist forces opposed to King Louis XVI of France meet in Paris and establish the National Assembly.

July 14 – Bastille Day.  A crowd of Parisians storms the Bastille Prison and releases everyone held by the King of France.

October 5 – King Louis is taken from his palace at Versailles and is held in Paris as a virtual prisoner.

1793

January 21 – King Louis is executed by guillotine.

September 21 – the First Republic is declared.

1799

November 9 – Military leader Napoleon Bonaparte is declared First Consul and assumes near dictatorial powers.

1804

December 2 – Bonaparte crowns himself Emperor of France.

1815

June 18 – Napoleon Bonaparte is defeated at Waterloo.  France returns to rule by a constitutional monarch.

1848

February 20 – King Louis Phillipe of France is overthrown, and the Second Republic is established.

December 10 – Louis Bonaparte, the nephew of the former Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte, wins election as President of the Second Republic.

1852

December 2 -– Bonaparte stages a coup and seizes total power from the Republic, declaring himself as Emperor Napoleon III.

1870

January 10 --  After journalist Victor Noir, a pro-democracy Republican, is killed by Bonaparte’s cousin, massive demonstrations occur in Paris against the Second Empire.

July 19 – Bonaparte, in an attempt to rally support to his regime, declares war on Prussia, which is under the rule of Otto von Bismarck.  The Franco-Prussian War begins.

September 2 – 83,000 French troops led by Bonaparte and Marshal MacMahon are defeated at Sedan and surrender.

September 4 – Upon hearing of Bonaparte’s capture by the Prussians, a crowd of French people take over the Legislative Assembly in Paris, and proclaim the Third Republic.  A Government of National Defense is established, which blames the war on Bonaparte but refuses to end the war until Prussia agrees to withdraw from the Alsace-Lorraine region.

September 19 – The Prussian Army reaches Paris and lays siege to the city.

October 27-30 – The French army is defeated in a series of battles and surrenders, leaving only  the National Guard citizen militia to defend Paris.

October 31 --  Militant French workers led by Louis Auguste Blanqui seize City Hall (Hotel de Ville) and establish a Committee of Public Safety to serve as a shadow government.

November 1 – After promising to hold elections, the Government of National Defense seizes the Hotel de Ville and arrests Blanqui for treason.

1871

January 22 – Blanquists and other demonstrators gather outside the Hotel de Ville, and are fired upon by French troops.

January 28 – Paris is officially surrendered to the Prussians.  The National Guard citizen militia, however, is allowed to retain its weapons, and they restrict the Prussian troops to a small section of the city.  Paris workers hold demonstrations demanding that power be passed from the Government of National Defense to an elected city government (a commune).

February 8 – Elections are held for a new National Assembly to replace the Government of National Defense.  No elections are held for a local commune government in Paris.

February 16 – Adolphe Thiers is elected President of the new National Assembly.

February 26 – Peace treaty is signed between the Thiers government and von Bismarck, ceding the Alsace-Lorraine region to Prussia.

March 11 – Fearing more riots and demonstrations by Paris workers, the National Assembly moves from the city to nearby Versailles.

March 18 – Thiers sends French army troops to Paris to disarm the National Guard.  Instead, the French troops kill their own generals, Claude Martin Lecomte and Jacques Leonard Clement Thomas, and join the insurrectionaries.

March 26 – Paris workers organize their own elections for a municipal government (Paris Commune),  and elect 92 trade unionists, socialists, anarchists and other radicals to the new government.  Blanqui is elected as President of the Commune, despite the fact that he is still being held in prison by the National Assembly.  The Commune declares revolutionary aims, noting that “the flag of the Commune is the flag of the World Republic”.  In a series of proclamations over the next few weeks, the Commune abolishes the draft, establishes the National Guard (consisting of all citizens capable of bearing arms) as the sole armed body, allows women the right to vote, freezes all payment of rents for two years, limits the salary of all government officials, decrees the separation of church and state, postpones all debts for three years, closes all pawnshops and returns all items to their owners, and abolishes interest on those debts, and proclaimed that workplaces that had been abandoned by their owners were now to be run by councils elected by the workers.

April 2 – Thiers asks Bismarck to release French prisoners of war to help take Paris and crush the Commune.  French troops begin a siege of Paris.  Communards move cannons to the heights of Montmartre.

April 7 – Theirs’ forces capture the bridge at Neuilly, giving them an entryway into Paris.

April 11 – French army troops enter southern Paris, but are driven back with heavy losses by the National Guard, under the command of General Eudes.

May 16 – Paris workers pull down the Vendome Column, which celebrated the victories of Napoleon Bonaparte and was made out of bronze from captured guns.

May 21 – Prussian troops surrounding Paris allow National Assembly forces under Marshal MacMahon to enter Paris.  They defeat the National Guard militia and the Commune is crushed.

May 21-28 --- La Semaine Sanglante (“Bloody Week”). MacMahon orders the summary execution of over 30,000 Communards, while another 38,000 are jailed and 7,000 are deported.

 

 

 

The Civil War in France 1871

Karl Marx

 

Historical Background & Overview of the Civil War

Thanks to the economic and political development of France since  1789, for 50 years the position of Paris has been such that no revolutions could break out there without assuming a proletarian character, that is to say, the proletariat, which had bought victory with its blood, would advance its own demands after victory. These demands were more or less unclear and even confused, corresponding to the state of evolution reached by the workers of Paris at the particular period, but in the last resort they all amounted to the abolition of the class antagonism between capitalist and workers. It is true that no one knew how this was to be brought about. But the demand itself, however indefinite it still was in its formulation, contained a threat to the existing order of society; the workers who put it forward were still armed; therefore the disarming of the workers was the first commandment for the bourgeois at the helm of the state. Hence, after every revolution won by the workers, a new struggle, ending with the defeat of the workers.

This happened for the first time in 1848. The liberal bourgeoisie of the parliamentary opposition held banquets for securing reform of the franchise, which was to ensure supremacy for their party. Forced more and more, in their struggle with the government, to appeal to the people, they had to allow the radical and republican strata of the bourgeoisie and petty bourgeoisie gradually to take the lead. But behind these stood the revolutionary workers, and since 1830, these had acquired far more political independence than the bourgeoisie, and even the republicans, suspected. At the moment of the crisis between the government and the opposition, the workers opened battle on the streets; King Louis Philippe vanished, and with him the franchise reform; and in its place arose the republic, and indeed one which the victorious workers themselves designated as a “social” republic. No one, however, was clear as to what this social republic was to imply; not even the workers themselves. But they now had arms in their hands, and were a power in the state. Therefore, as soon as the bourgeois republicans in control felt something like firm ground under their feet, their first aim was to disarm the workers. This took place by driving them into the insurrection of June 1848 by direct breach of faith, by open defiance and the attempt to banish the unemployed to a distant province. The government had taken care to have an overwhelming superiority of force. After five days’ heroic struggle, the workers were defeated. And then followed a blood-bath of the defenceless prisoners, the likes of which as not been seen since the days of the civil wars which ushered in the downfall of the Roman republic. It was the first time that the bourgeoisie showed to what insane cruelties of revenge with will be goaded the moment the proletariat dares to take its stand against them as a separate class, with its own interests and demands. And yet 1848 was only child’s play compared with their frenzy in 1871.

Punishment followed hard at heel. If the proletariat was not yet able to rule France, the bourgeoisie could no longer do so. At least not at that period, when the greater part of it was still monarchically inclined, and it was divided into three dynastic parties [Legitimists, Orleanists and Bonapartists] and a fourth republican party. Its internal dissensions allowed the adventurer Louis Bonaparte to take possession of all the commanding points – army, police, administrative machinery – and, on December 2, 1851, to explode the last stronghold of the bourgeoisie, the National Assembly. The Second Empire opened the exploitation of France by a gang of political and financial adventurers, but at the same time also an industrial development such as had never been possible under the narrow-minded and timorous system of Louis Philippe, with its exclusive domination by only a small section of the big bourgeoisie. Louis Bonaparte took the political power from the capitalists under the pretext of protecting them, the bourgeoisie, from the workers, and on the other hand the workers from them; but in return his rule encouraged speculation and industrial activity – in a word the rise and enrichment of the whole bourgeoisie to an extent hitherto unknown. To an even greater extent, it is true, corruption and mass robbery developed, clustering around the imperial court, and drawing their heavy percentages from this enrichment.

But the Second Empire was the appeal to the French chauvinism, the demand for the restoration of the frontiers of the First Empire, which had been lost in 1814, or at least those of the First Republic. A French empire within the frontiers of the old monarchy and, in fact, within the even more amputated frontiers of 1815 – such a thing was impossible for any long duration of time. Hence the necessity for brief wars and extension of frontiers. But no extension of frontiers was so dazzling to the imagination of the French chauvinists as the extension to the German left bank of the Rhine. One square mile on the Rhine was more to them than ten in the Alps or anywhere else. Given the Second Empire, the demand for the restoration to France of the left bank of the Rhine, either all at once or piecemeal, was merely a question of time. The time came with the Austro-Prussian War of 1866; cheated of the anticipated “territorial compensation” by Bismarck, and by his own over-cunning, hesitating policy, there was not nothing left for Napoleon but war, which broke out in 1870 and drove him first to Sedan, and then to Wilhelmshohe prison.

The inevitable result was the Paris Revolution of September 4, 1870. The empire collapsed like a house of cards, and the republic was again proclaimed. But the enemy was standing at the gates of Paris; the armies of the empire were either hopelessly beleaguered in Metz or held captive in Germany. In this emergency the people allowed the Paris Deputies to the former legislative body to constitute themselves into a “Government of National Defence.” This was the more readily conceded, since, for the purpose of defence, all Parisians capable of bearing arms had enrolled in the National Guard and were armed, so that now the workers constituted a great majority. But almost at once the antagonism between the almost completely bourgeois government and the armed proletariat broke into open conflict. On October 31, workers’ battalions stormed the town hall, and captured some members of the government. Treachery, the government’s direct breach of its undertakings, and the interventions of some petty-bourgeois battalions set them free again, and in order not to occasion the outbreak of civil war inside a city which was already beleaguered by a foreign power, the former government was left in office.

At last on January 28, 1871, Paris, almost starving, capitulated but with honors unprecedented in the history of war. The forts were surrendered, the outer wall disarmed, the weapons of the regiments of the line and of the Mobile Guard were handed over, and they themselves considered prisoners of war. But the National Guard kept its weapons and guns, and only entered into an armistice with the victors, who themselves did not dare enter Paris in triumph. They only dared to occupy a tiny corner of Paris, which, into the bargain, consisted partly of public parks, and even this they only occupied for a few days! And during this time they, who had maintained their encirclement of Paris for 131 days, were themselves encircled by the armed workers of Paris, who kept a sharp watch that no “Prussian” should overstep the narrow bounds of the corner ceded to the foreign conquerors. Such was the respect which the Paris workers inspired in the army before which all the armies of the empire had laid down their arms; and the Prussian Junkers, who had come to take revenge at the very centre of the revolution, were compelled to stand by respectfully, and salute just precisely this armed revolution!

During the war the Paris workers had confined themselves to demanding the vigorous prosecution of the fight. But now, when peace had come after the capitulation of Paris, now, Thiers, the new head of government, was compelled to realize that the supremacy of the propertied classes – large landowners and capitalists – was in constant danger so long as the workers of Paris had arms in their hands. His first action was to attempt to disarm them. On March 18, he sent troops of the line with orders to rob the National Guard of the artillery belonging to it, which had been constructed during the siege of Paris and had been paid for by public subscription. The attempt failed; Paris mobilized as one man in defence of the guns, and war between Paris and the French government sitting at Versailles was declared. On March 26 the Paris Commune was elected and on March 28 it was proclaimed. The Central Committee of the National Guard, which up to then had carried on the government, handed in its resignation to the National Guard, after it had first decreed the abolition of the scandalous Paris “Morality Police.” On March 30 the Commune abolished conscription and the standing army, and declared that the National Guard, in which all citizens capable of bearing arms were to be enrolled, was to be the sole armed force. It remitted all payments of rent for dwelling houses from October 1870 until April, the amounts already paid to be reckoned to a future rental period, and stopped all sales of article pledged in the municipal pawnshops. On the same day the foreigners elected to the Commune were confirmed in office, because “the flag of the Commune is the flag of the World Republic.”

On April 1 it was decided that the highest salary received by any employee of the Commune, and therefore also by its members themselves, might not exceed 6,000 francs. On the following day the Commune decreed the separation of the Church from the State, and the abolition of all state payments for religious purposes as well as the transformation of all Church property into national property; as a result of which, on April 8, a decree excluding from the schools all religious symbols, pictures, dogmas, prayers – in a word, “all that belongs to the sphere of the individual’s conscience” – was ordered to be excluded from the schools, and this decree was gradually applied. On the 5th, day after day, in reply to the shooting of the Commune’s fighters captured by the Versailles troops, a decree was issued for imprisonment of hostages, but it was never carried into effect. On the 6th, the guillotine was brought out by the 137th battalion of the National Guard, and publicly burnt, amid great popular rejoicing. On the 12th, the Commune decided that the Victory Column on the Place Vendôme, which had been cast from guns captured by Napoleon after the war of 1809, should be demolished as a symbol of chauvinism and incitement to national hatred. This decree was carried out on May 16. On April 16 the Commune ordered a statistical tabulation of factories which had been closed down by the manufacturers, and the working out of plans for the carrying on of these factories by workers formerly employed in them, who were to be organized in co-operative societies, and also plans for the organization of these co-operatives in one great union. On the 20th the Commune abolished night work for bakers, and also the workers’ registration cards, which since the Second Empire had been run as a monopoly by police nominees – exploiters of the first rank; the issuing of these registration cards was transferred to the mayors of the 20 arrondissements of Paris. On April 30, the Commune ordered the closing of the pawnshops, on the ground that they were a private exploitation of labor, and were in contradiction with the right of the workers to their instruments of labor and to credit. On May 5 it ordered the demolition of the Chapel of Atonement, which had been built in expiation of the execution of Louis XVI.

Thus, from March 18 onwards the class character of the Paris movement, which had previously been pushed into the background by the fight against the foreign invaders, emerged sharply and clearly. As almost without exception, workers, or recognized representatives of the workers, sat in the Commune, its decision bore a decidedly proletarian character. Either they decreed reforms which the republican bourgeoisie had failed to pass solely out of cowardice, but which provided a necessary basis for the free activity of the working class – such as the realization of the principle that in relation to the state, religion is a purely private matter – or they promulgated decrees which were in the direct interests of the working class and to some extent cut deeply into the old order of society. In a beleaguered city, however, it was possible at most to make a start in the realization of all these measures. And from the beginning of May onwards all their energies were taken up by the fight against the ever-growing armies assembled by the Versailles government.