Basel Congress (1869)

{{Short description|4th Congress of the International Workingmen's Association (IWA)}}File:IWA Basel section banner.jpg

The Basel Congress of 1869 is the common name assigned to the 4th General Congress of the International Workingmen's Association (IWA), commonly known as the First International. The meeting was held in the city of Basel, Switzerland from September 6 to 12, 1869 and was attended by 75 delegates, representing the socialist and labor movements of United States, England France, Belgium, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Italy, and Spain.{{cite book|last1=Mollin|first1=Gabriel|title=Rapport sur le congrès de Bâle|date=1870|publisher=A. Le Chevalier|location=Paris|page=37}}

The conference was mainly noted for the confrontation between the Proudhonist mutualists and the collectivist position, defended by Marx's envoy for the General Council and Bakunin both. But the Belgian socialist de Paepe played a decisive role in bringing the Belgian delegation across to the collectivist side and isolating the mainly French Proudhonists.

Delegates

According to G. M. Stekloff's account,{{cite book |last1=Steklov |first1=Yuri Mikhailovich |title=History of the First International Chapter 10 The Basle Conference |date=1928 |publisher=M. Lawrence |location=London |url=http://www.marxists.org/archive/steklov/history-first-international/ch10.htm |accessdate=27 February 2019}} in attendance were:

Seventy-five delegates assembled: from Great Britain, the 6 members of the General Council, Applegarth, Eccarius, Cowell Stepney, Lessner, Lucraft, and Jung; from France, which sent 26 delegates, among whom we may mention Dereure, Landrin, Chémalé, Murat, Aubry, Tolain, A. Richard, Palix, Varlin, and Bakunin: Belgium sent 5 delegates, among whom were Hins, Brismée, and De Paepe; Austria 2 delegates, Neumayer and Oberwinder; Germany sent 10 delegates, among whom were Becker, Liebknecht (Member of Parliament), Rittinghausen, Spier (Party chairman) and Hess; Switzerland had 22 representatives, among whom were Burkly, Greulich, Fritz Robert, Guillaume, Schwitzguébel, and Perret; Italy sent but one delegate, Caporusso; from Spain there came Farga-Pellicer and Sentinon; and the United States of America was represented by Cameron. Jung was elected chairman of the congress.

class="sortable" cellspacing="2" style="width:80%" border="1"
style="background-color:#ccccee;"

! Name

! Affiliation

! Country

! Perspective

! Notes

Andrew Cameron

|National Labor Union

|United States of America

|

|

Robert Applegarth

|Amalgamated Society of Carpenters and Joiners

|Great Britain

|

|Delegate of the General Council

Benjamin Lucraft

|

|Great Britain

|

|

John Cowell-Stepney

|Delegate of General Council

|Great Britain

|

|Editor of Social Economist

Hermann Jung

|Delegate of General Council

|Great Britain

|

|Elected chair of congress

Johann Eccarius

|

|Great Britain

|

|

Frederick Lessner

|

|Great Britain

|

|

Émile Aubry

|

|France

|

|

Jean-Claude Creusot

|

|France

|

|

Eugène Pieton

|

|France

|

|

Wilhelm Liebknecht

|Social Democratic Workers' Party of Germany

|Prussia

|

|

{{cite book |last1=McLellan |first1=David |title=Karl Marx A Biography |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |page=357 }}

References