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  1. Marx Family: Biography. Eleanor Marx. Born: 1855. Died: 1898. Youngest daughter of Karl and Jenny. Active in British politics and the international working-class movement. Founder of the Socialist League in 1884. Was active in founding trade unions for unskilled workers in England. From 1884 on, lived in common law with Edward Aveling.

  2. Karl Marx [A 1] (auch Carl Marx; * 5. Mai 1818 in Trier, Rheinprovinz, Preußen; † 14. März 1883 in London) war ein deutscher Philosoph, Ökonom, Gesellschaftstheoretiker, politischer Journalist, Historiker, Protagonist der Arbeiterbewegung sowie Kritiker des Kapitalismus und der Religion . Seinen politischen Lebenslauf begann er 1842 als ...

  3. Also known as. English. Eleanor Marx. English-born activist and daughter of Karl Marx (1855–1898) Eleanor Marx Aveling. Jenny Julia Eleanor Marx. Jenny Julia Eleanor "Tussy" Marx.

  4. 22. Nov. 2018 · Eleanor Marx, third living daughter of Karl Marx and Jenny von Westphalen, was ‘‘dramatic to the depths of her being’’, wilful and unusually brilliant. She yearned for love and freedom and wanted to be an actress, but instead devoted herself to another sort of vagabondage – political agitation. An excellent linguist, she earned her living as a translator, lecturer and writer, and ...

  5. In the frame of Eleanor Marx’s textual legacy, Shakespeare appears in her groundbreaking socialist-feminist tract, “The Woman Question: From a Socialist Point of View”, first published in the Westminster Review in 1886. The polyphony of voices in “The Woman Question” makes it a rich and pleasing read.

  6. Eleanor Marx (16 January 1855 – 31 March 1898) was an English socialist activist and writer. She was also a literary translator. She was the youngest daughter of Karl Marx. She committed suicide using poison, aged 43. Categories: 1855 births. 1898 deaths. British activists.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Lizzie_BurnsLizzie Burns - Wikipedia

    Eleanor Marx wrote that [Lizzie] was illiterate and could not read or write but she was true, honest and in some ways as fine-souled a woman as you could meet. Rachel Holmes notes that "Like her sister, Lizzie Burns was a dedicated player in the Irish Republican movement, and the house she shared with Engels at 86 Mornington Street was a meeting place and a safe house for Fenian activists.