The Encyclopedia Americana (1920)/Liebknecht, Karl
LIEBKNECHT, lēp'knĕht, Karl (Paul
August Ferdinand), German Socialist leader:
b. Leipzig, 13 Aug. 1871; d. 15 Jan. 1919. The
eldest son of the famous Socialist, Wilhelm Liebknecht (q.v.),
he was a lawyer by profession
and, since 1912, a member of the
Reichstag representing the constitutency
wherein the ex-Kaiser resided — Potsdam. A
fearless and outspoken critic of the government
militarist policy, he came into frequent collisions
with the authorities. He earned considerable
notoriety by bringing grave charges of
corruption against the Krupp firm at Essen,
charging it with tampering with petty officials
of the German War Office and Admiralty. He
was sentenced to 18 months' imprisonment in
1907 for publishing an anti-militaristic
pamphlet, and in 1912 attacked the government for
permitting the Tsar of Russia to visit Germany.
He was the only member of the Reichstag to
oppose the war, which he condemned with
fiery eloquence from the beginning. Much has
been written on the failure of the German
Social Democratic party to live up to their
principles in supporting the government policy of
aggressive war. But it is only just to bear in
mind that the storm fell upon the German
Socialists as suddenly as upon France and
England; they knew less of the causes of that
storm than the French or British knew; like
those two peoples, they saw that their country
was in danger and resolved, as they also did,
to subordinate everything to the pressing duty
of saving it from ruin. The isolation of
Liebknecht, therefore, was more apparent than real.
Though he alone uttered his thoughts, they
were shared by many of his colleagues. Early
in the war he visited Belgium and explained to
the Belgian Socialists that, although the vast
majority of German Socialists were in favor
of fighting the war to the bitter end, there were
numerous representatives of the party in the
Reichstag who maintained that the misguided
foreign policy of their country had been largely
responsible for the war. When Liebknecht's
father and August Bebel (q.v.) resisted in the
Reichstag the proposal in 1870 to annex
Alsace-Lorraine, both were thrown into prison. Karl
went much further than his father. It was
he, who, when the German press was
fanning the flame of hatred against the Belgians
by stories of atrocities committed against German
soldiers, hunted the stories to their source
in hospitals and elsewhere, proved them to be
baseless and denounced them as such in
Vorwärts. On 2 Dec. 1914, while those of his fellow Socialists who opposed the war walked out
of the Reichstag while the credits were voted,
Liebknecht remained to utter his protest. The
president would not allow him to speak and
when he handed in his speech in writing the
president refused to insert it in the records.
In that undelivered speech, later published in
England, he denounced the war as having been
“prepared by the German and Austrian war
parties” and wound up with a scathing indictment
of the violation of Belgium and Luxemburg.
In March 1915 he spoke against the
government repudiation of its promise to abolish
the property suffrage in Prussia, but the Diet
fled at his rising. With the death of Bebel in
1913 Liebknecht became the foremost figure in
the most powerful party in Germany, his
opinions uncompromising, his honesty unquestioned,
his courage equal to any occasion. In June 1916
he was charged with attempted high treason and
sentenced to 30 months' imprisonment. He had
been expelled from his party five months earlier
by a vote of 60 against 25; he was now
dismissed from the army, in which he was serving
as a private. He was liberated in November
1918. In the same month a volume of his
speeches was published in New York entitled
‘The Future belongs to the People.’
Liebknecht led the radical Spartacus group against
the Ebert government during the disorders
following on the Kaiser's flight. He was arrested
and later shot down by a soldier on the
alleged grounds of attempting to escape.