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Feudal System: The Manifesto Of The Communist Party

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feudal system was the main obstacle for the further development of capitalism in Germany. Political fragmentation, internal customs, craftsmanship, the dependence of peasants on landlords, the rule of the nobility, the arbitrariness of officials and police, the absolute monarchy in Prussia and most other states of Germany have become major obstacles to the growth of industry and trade. This was the main reason for the revolution in Germany. Unification in a bourgeois national state and the abolition of feudal order were the main issues of the revolutionary transformation of the country. K. Marx and F. Engels took an active part in the revolution. Marx and Engels participated in the activities of the "Union of Communists", for which they wrote …show more content…

In it, for the first time, all the constituent parts of the great teachings of Marx and Engels were systematically and intimately presented. In this work, a new world outlook, consecutive materialism, covering both the sphere of social life and dialectics, as the most comprehensive and profound doctrine of development, the theory of the class struggle and the world-historic revolutionary role of the proletariat, is depicted with brilliant clarity and brilliance, creator of a new, communist society. In a concise form, the Manifesto formulated the main provisions of the materialist understanding of history, the objective laws of the development of society, the patterns of transition from one mode of production to another. The Manifesto described the history of all the class societies that still existed as a history of class struggle. "Free and slave, patrician and plebeian, landowner and serf, master and apprentice, in short, oppressing and oppressed, were in eternal antagonism to each other, waging a continuous, sometimes hidden, now obvious struggle, always ending with a revolutionary reorganization of the entire public building or a general ruin fighting classes "(Marx and F. Engels, Manifesto of the Communist Party, Works, vol. 4, p. 123) . Marx and Engels pointed out in the Manifesto that the bourgeois society that emerged from the depths of feudalism did not abolish class contradictions, it "only set new classes, new conditions for oppression and new forms of struggle for the old age" (Marx and F. Engels, Manifesto of the Communist Party, Works, vol. 4, p.

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