The League of the Just had participated …
Years: 1839 - 1839
May
The League of the Just had participated in the Blanquist uprising of May 1839 in Paris, and will hereafter be expelled from France.
Founded by German workers in Paris in 1836, the League was initially a utopian socialist and Christian communist grouping devoted to the ideas of Gracchus Babeuf. (It will later become an international organization that Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, and Johann Eccarius will join.)
The motto of the League of the Just (Bund der Gerechten) is "All Men are Brothers" and its goals are "the establishment of the Kingdom of God on Earth, based on the ideals of love of one's neighbor, equality and justice.”
The League of the Just is itself a splinter group from the League of Outlaws (Bund der Geaechteten) created in Paris in 1834 by Theodore Schuster, Wilhelm Weitling, and other German emigrants, mostly journeymen.
The works of Philippe Buonarroti had inspired Schuste.
The latter league has a pyramidal structure inspired by the secret society of the Republican Carbonari, and shares ideas with Saint-Simon and Charles Fourier's utopian socialism.
Their aim is to establish in the German states a "Social Republic" that will respect "freedom,” "equality," and "civic virtue.
