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Mikhail Bakunin
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=== First International === [[File:Bakunin Monument Bern EN.webm|thumb|Video of Bakunin's grave]] While Bakunin encountered [[Karl Marx]] in Paris (1844) and London (1864), he came to know him through the [[First International]] (International Working Men's Association), which Marx and [[Friedrich Engels]] formed in the 1860s. Bakunin's relationship with Marx became strained in the early 1870s for both interpersonal and ideological differences. Bakunin respected Marx's erudition and passion for socialism but found his personality to be authoritarian and arrogant. In turn, Marx was skeptical towards Russian reactionism and Bakunin's unruliness.{{sfn|Shatz|2003|p=39}} As Bakunin developed his anarchist ideas in this period, he came to see federative social organization, led by the peasantry and poorest workers, as the primary post-revolution goal, whereas Marx believed in a [[dictatorship of the proletariat]], led by organized workers in industrially advanced countries, in which the workers use state infrastructure until [[withering away of the state|the state withers away]]. Bakunists abhorred the political organization for which Marx advocated.{{sfn|Shatz|2003|pp=39β40}} Marx had Bakunin and Bakunist anarchists ejected from the First International's [[Hague Congress (1872)|1872 Hague Congress]]. This breaking point split the Marxist socialist movement from the anarchist movement and led to the undoing of the International. Bakunin's ideas continued to spread nevertheless to the labor movement in Spain and the watchmakers of the Swiss [[Jura Federation]].{{sfn|Shatz|2003|p=40}} Bakunin wrote his last major work, ''Statism and Anarchy'' (1873), anonymously in Russian to stir underground revolution in Russia. It restates his anarchist position, establishes the German Empire as the foremost centralized state in opposition to European anarchism, likens Marx to German authoritarianism, and warns of Marx's dictatorship of the proletariat being led by autocrats for their own gain in the name of the proletariat. This premonition furthered the gulf between the Marxists and Bakunist anarchists.{{sfn|Shatz|2003|p=40}} In one final revolutionary act, Bakunin planned the unsuccessful [[1874 Bologna insurrection]] with his Italian followers. Its failure was a major setback to the [[anarchism in Italy|Italian anarchist movement]]. Bakunin retreated to Switzerland,{{sfn|Drake|2009|pp=35β36}} where he retired, dying in [[Bern]] on 1 July 1876.{{sfn|Shatz|2003|p=41}}
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