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| 1800 |
| | Welsh industrialist Robert Owen takes charge of a mill at New Lanark and develops it as an experiment in paternalistic socialism | |
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| 1804 |
| | George Rapp and his followers establish a utopian community in Pennsylvania and call it Harmony | |
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| 1825 |
| | The English socialist Robert Owen purchases New Harmony from the Rappists, to test his utopian theories in a new context | |
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| 1842 |
| | The young Friedrich Engels is sent from Germany to manage the family cotton-spinning factory in Manchester | |
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| 1844 |
| | Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels meet in Paris and become life-long friends | |
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| 1845 |
| | Friedrich Engels, after running a textile factory in Manchester, publishes The Condition of the Working Class in England | |
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| 1847 |
| | At a congress in London Engels persuades a group of radical Germans to adopt the name Communist League | |
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| 1848 |
| | The Communist Manifesto, by Marx and Engels, is published in Paris with the ringing slogan: 'Workers of the world, unite!' | |
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| 1848 |
| | A utopian community dedicated to the sharing of both property and sexual favours is established by John Humphrey Noyes near Oneida, New York | |
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| 1849 |
| | Expelled from Germany after the year of revolutions, Marx makes his home in tolerant London | |
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