Vladimir Ilyich Lenin

NOTEBOOK “EGELHAAF”


EGELHAAF, HISTORY OF RECENT TIMES [1]

Gottlob Egelhaaf, History of Recent Times from the Peace of Frankfurt to the Present Day, 4th edition, Stuttgart, 1913.

Preface, November 1912

The author is a scoundrel, a Bismarckian. But the book is nonetheless very useful as a summary of facts and reference source. His simple summary provides a picture of imperialism a n d democratic movements as the chief distinguishing features of the epoch. (N.B. extremely important for an understanding of the epoch!!). Very little about socialism, owing to the author’s hidebound reactionariness.

 Has a number of historical works, including
a bulky volume on Wilhelm I and on Bis-
marck
; also Outlines of History—in three
parts: ancient times, the Middle Ages, and the
recent period, 1905-1909 (published in Leipzig),
and Annual Political Surveys, 1908 etc. up to
1912.
N.B.
N.B.

It is highly characteristic that this idiot of an author,
who with pedantic accuracy gives the dates, etc. of all
minor monarchs, their relatives, the miscarriages of the
Queen of the Netherlands (sic! p. 440), etc., has not
a word about the 1907 peasant uprising in Rumania (*)!!



(*) Incidentally. In the Europäischer Geschichtskalender for 1907 there are only government reports about the uprising (p. 340), which state that Russian sailors from the battleship Potemkin were “a dangerous element of ferment” (sic!!)....




The “Chronological Table” appended to the book has been compiled in an idiotic way, being a dry, unsystematic enumeration.

The following merits attention (outside the general system):

p. 5: Out of 5,000 million francs of the French indemnity (1871), the Germans used 120 million for the “war fund”

12 million—“for monetary rewards
    (grants) to 28 meritorious
    generals and to the Presi-
    dent of the Imperial Chan-
    cellery, Delbrück”.
sic!
monetary
rewards for

generals,
etc.
 

350 million—for fortresses and bar-
    racks....
17 million—to “shipowners who suf-
    fered losses owing to the
    war”, etc
civilised
war and
plunder
 

p. 7... “In the 1874 Reichstag elec-
tions, ten ultramontanes and five
opponents of union were elected (in
Alsace-Lorraine). On February 18 they
attempted post factum to secure the
holding of a popular referendum on
whether the area should be part of
France or Germany; the proposal was
rejected without a debate by all against
23 votes.”
N.B.


!!

!!
on the
question
of self-
deter-
mination
((Interesting to know who were
these 23? In the Reichstag elected
on January 1, 1874, there were 15
“Alsace autonomists” + 9 Social-
Democrats. 15 + 9 = 24?? (there
was one Dane, 14 Poles, 4 Welfs).
Probably the Alsatians + the
Social-Democrats voted for. Find
out! Where? From Bebel?))



results of
colonial
wars
:








(rob the
land and
become
landowners!)
 The revolt of the Hereros (South-
West Africa)—1904-December 1905.
Their song: “To whom does Hereroland
belong?” and the refrain: “Hereroland
belongs to us.” The German troops
numbered up to 17,000 (pp. 298-99).
The Hereros were “for the most part
wiped out” (sic!)—“a serious loss
for them and for us” (299), for “work-
ing hands” are lacking (!!)....
 “That the country is not without
value and attraction is shown by the
fact that, according to an official
report of October 1906, 591 men
of the colonial army decided not to
return to Germany, but to remain in
the country as farmers and cattle-
breeders. The number increased con-
siderably in the following months, and
since on May 10, 1907 the new Reich-
stag voted the farmers 5 million
marks compensation for war losses,
rehabilitation could begin” (299).

1908, the
British
together
with Germans
in a colonial
war!!
 The uprising of the Hottentots (also
in South-West Africa) from September
1904 to 1907. Some bands continued
to resist until late December 1908
“necessitating renewed joint punitive
measured by the German and British
authorities” (300).

 The French Republic’s hatred of
Italy (because of the Pope, among
other reasons) (and also this example):
“in August 1893 Italian workers
in Aigues Mortes were beaten
half dead by their French competitors”
(345).
(workers of
different
countries)


Number
of voters
(millions)
Electoral Reforms
in Britain
0.4
0.8 ...1st 1832 (abolition of the “rotten
boroughs”. Electoral
qualification. Increase
in the number of voters
from about 400,000 to
800,000)
Electo-
ral re-
forms
in
Britain
1.5 ...2nd 1867 (number of voters in-
creased from 1,056,000
to 1½ million. House-
owners and householders).
4 ...3rd 1884 (number of voters in-
creased 75%), from 1½
to 4 million. Qualifica-
tion—annual payment
of rates. Domestic ser-
vants, lodgers and oth-
ers excluded. “Thus,
out of about six million
adult males in Britain,
about two million were
still voteless until 1912”
(368).
6.5 ...4th 1912 (all males over 21
years of age, without
the former distinctions;
qualification—half-
yearly
payment of
rates (p. 377) (cf. Schul-
thess’s Europäischer Ge-
schichtskalender
))
  Introduced June 17, 1912
( passed July 12, 1912 to come )
  into force June 1, 1914
  ((1832-1912, i.e., 80 years!))

criminal
activity
 A “trifle”: Edward VII (1841-1910) “in
early years was insatiable in dissipation
often of a punishable kind (sic!!) and in
sport” (425).

 The military campaign (1900-01) against
the Boxer uprising in China (of the allied
forces of Russia, Japan, Ger-
many, France , Britain and the
United States
) was appraised by
the French general Frey as follows:
this campaign “has for the first
States time translated into reality
the dream of idealist
politi-
cians—a United States of the
civilised world” (469).... ((Letters of
the Social-Democrats—“Huns’ letters”—
were, he says, lies or forgeries! (467) Well,
of course!))
gem!!
“United
States
of the
civilised
world”
(!!!)

 When the Korean prince (Yi Yong) ap-
peared before the Second Hague Conference
(which opened on June 15, 1907) with a
complaint against the Japanese and a
declaration of the independence of Korea,
the Japanese deposed the Korean emperor,
put his son on the throne, and on July 24,
1907, concluded a “treaty” with him, pro-
viding that all diplomatic relations shall
be through the Japanese ambassador in
Seoul.
The
Hague
Conference
and
Korea!!!!

 Concerning the defeat of the revisionists
at the Nuremberg Congress (1908) (258 to
119 against voting for the budget), the
author, Egelhaaf, remarks:
 “The revisionists, however, only
differ from the radical Social-Democrats
in their cautious tactics, meant not to
frighten away the bourgeois masses and to go
as far as possible with the bourgeois Lefts.
They do not differ as regards the ultimate
goal; complete socialisation, and because
they claim to be moderate, they are
basically more dangerous
than the ‘wild men’ of the
extreme Left
” (523).
Bismarck favoured a republic in France
for the sake of separating (N.B.)
her from monarchical Russia—and the
ambassador Count Harry Arnim, who “oper-
ated” in Paris for restoration of the
monarchy, was recalled in 1874 (March 1874)
and in 1875 was condemned to five
years’ penal servitude (!) for publishing
a secret state document (he fled to Nice)
(p. 93).
[N.B.]
opinion of
a bourgeois:
revisionists
are “more
dangerous
than radical
Social-
Democrats”
[N.B.]
Bismarck
for a
republic
in France

 Ireland: in December 1796 General Hoche
with an army of 20,000 appeared before the island
and only storms prevented a landing (p. 380).
(The French revolution evoked a movement in
Ireland.)
N.B.!!

United States: 1775-83—war of liberation
“with the help of France and Spain”.
1819—“Spain sold her possession ... the
peninsula of Florida to the United States
for five million dollars” (p. 453).
not bad!
(“ally”—
and “buyer”)

Literature cited: Gilbert, The South African War, Paris, 1902.


Notes

[1] Lenin obtained Egelhaaf’s book from the Zurich Cantonal Library. Two request cards filled in by Lenin establish the approximate date of his work on this book. He made his request for the book on August 4, 1916; the library answered that it could supply it “towards the end of October”. On October 4, 1916, Lenin asked for another (1908) edition and received the same answer. The time of his work on the book can be put as October-November 1916.


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