Neue Rheinische Zeitung. Politisch-ökonomische Revue

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 Texts published in Neue Rheinische Zeitung. Politisch-ökonomische RevueAuthorDate
 Announcement (Neue Rheinische Zeitung, Politisch-Ökonomische Revue, December 1849)Friedrich EngelsDec 1849
 The Campaign for the German Imperial ConstitutionFriedrich EngelsJan 1850
 The Peasant War in GermanyFriedrich EngelsJan 1850
 Review, January-February 1850Karl Marx
Friedrich Engels
Feb 1850
 Announcement (Neue Rheinische Zeitung, Politisch-ökonomische Revue, January 1850)Karl Marx
Friedrich Engels
Feb 1850
 G. Fr Daumer, Die Religion des neuen Weltalters. Versuch einer combinatorisch-aphoristischen GrundlegungKarl MarxFeb 1850
 England’s 17th Century RevolutionKarl MarxFeb 1850
 Ludwig Simon of Trier, Ein des Rechts fur alle Reichsverfassungskampfer an die deutschen GeschwornenKarl MarxFeb 1850
 The Ten Hours' BillFriedrich EngelsMar 1850
 Le socialisme et l'impôt, par Emile de GirardinKarl MarxApr 1850
 Les Conspirateurs (A. Chenu); La naissance de la Republique en fevrier 1848 (Lucien de la Hodde)Karl MarxApr 1850
 Latter-Day Pamphlets, Edited by Thomas Carlyle-No. I, The Present Time, No. II, Model PrisonsKarl MarxApr 1850
 Editorial Note (Neue Rheinische Zeitung Revue)Karl MarxApr 1850
 Gottfried KinkelKarl Marx
Friedrich Engels
Apr 1850
 Louis Napoleon and FouldKarl MarxApr 1850
 Review, March-April 1850Karl Marx
Friedrich Engels
Apr 1850
 On the Slogan of the Abolition of the State and the German “Friends of Anarchy”Friedrich EngelsOct 1850
 The Class Struggles in France, 1848 to 1850Karl MarxOct 1850
 Review, May-October 1850Karl MarxOct 1850
 Statement, Neue Rheinische Zeitung Revue, January 1851Karl MarxJan 1851


 Texts mentioning Neue Rheinische Zeitung. Politisch-ökonomische RevueAuthorDate
 Preliminaries to Issue of Shares in the Neue Rheinische Zeitung Politisch-okonomische Revue, Edited by Karl MarxKarl Marx
Friedrich Engels
Jan 1850
 On Germany. Note for the "Review" (May-October 1850)Karl MarxSep 1850

In May 1849, when the counter-revolution was on the upsurge, the Prussian Government issued an order expelling Marx and the other editors of the Neue Rheinische Zeitung from Prussia. This measure, prepared well in advance, was applied when the main uprisings in the Rhine Province had been virtually suppressed. On his return to Cologne in April 1848, Marx applied for Prussian citizenship which he had been forced to renounce in 1845 when he was living in Belgium as an emigrant. Despite the Cologne Magistrate’s favourable reply to his application, however, the Cologne royal district authorities and the Minister of the Interior refused to grant it, and Marx remained a “foreigner”, who could at any moment be accused of abusing hospitality and expelled. The royal district authorities’ note to this effect followed on May 11, 1849, and on May 16 Marx was given 24 hours to leave Prussia. Weerth and Dronke, who did not enjoy Prussian citizenship either, received similar orders. Legal proceedings were instituted against Engels for his part in the Elberfeld uprising.

After the Neue Rheinische Zeitung, which had been published by Marx and Engels in Cologne from June 1, 1848, till May 19, 1849, was banned Marx did not give up the idea of resuming, in one way or another, the publication of a paper that would continue the revolutionary traditions of the Neue Rheinische Zeitung. He wrote about this to Engels in Switzerland on August 1, 1849, inviting him to London to help start one up. Marx succeeded in raising funds and finding a publisher, and in mid-December 1849 a contract to publish the Neue Rheinische Zeitung. Politisch-ökonomische Revue was signed between the responsible publisher Konrad Schramm and Schuberth and Co., a Hamburg bookselling firm. The periodical’s aims were to assess the results of the 1848-49 revolution, to reveal the nature of the new historical situation, and to develop further the party’s tactics. Most of the articles and literary and international reviews were written by Marx and Engels, who also drew contributions to the Revue from their supporters Wilhelm Wolff, Joseph Weydemeyer, and Johann Georg Eccarius. Issue No. 1 also carried an item by Karl Blind, “Oesterreichische und preussische Parteien in Baden”, and issue No. 4, verses by the French democrat Louis Ménard.

The cover named the places of publication as London, where Marx and Engels lived at the time, Hamburg, where the journal was printed, and New York since a great number of those who had participated in the 1848-49 revolution in Germany, emigrated to America, and Marx and Engels hoped to find suitable ground there for distributing the journal. Presuming the possibility of a new revolutionary upsurge, they intended shortly to make their publication a weekly, and later a daily newspaper. This plan was not, however, carried out. Altogether six issues were published; the last issue, a double one (5-6),came out at the end of November 1850. All further attempts to continue publication were blocked by police persecution in Germany and lack of funds.

Marx sent the text of the Announcement to Joseph Weydemeyer in Frankfurt am Main on December 19, 1849, with a request to publish it in the Neue Deutsche Zeitung. It was printed on January 16 and 26, and February 5, 1850.

It was also printed in the Berner Zeitung of December 27, 1849; in the Westdeutsche Zeitung (published by Hermann Becker in Cologne) on January 8, 9, 11 (supplement), 12 and 13 (supplement), 1850; in the Schweizerische National-Zeitung, Basle, January 10, 1850; in the Dusseldorfer Zeitung, January 10, 1850; in the Norddeutsche Freie Presse, Hamburg-Altona, January 18, 1850; in Der Volksfreund, Lemgo, January 18, 1850.