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Manifesto of the Sixteen

Document NameManifesto of the Sixteen
Date Created1916
WriterJean Grave
Peter Kropotkin
SignersSee below
PurposeTo promote anarchist support for the victory of the Allied Powers over the Central Powers during the First World War.

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The 'Manifesto of the Sixteen' ( ), or 'Proclamation of the Sixteen', was a document drafted in 1916 by eminent anarchists Peter Kropotkin and Jean Grave which advocated an Allied victory over Germany and the Central Powers during the First World War. At the outbreak of the war, Kropotkin and other anarchist supporters of the Allied cause advocated their position in the pages of the Freedom newspaper, provoking sharply critical responses. As the war continued, anarchists across Europe campaigned in anti-war movements and wrote denunciations of the war in pamphlets and statements, including one February 1916 statement signed by prominent anarchists such as Emma Goldman and Rudolf Rocker.

At this time, Kropotkin was in frequent correspondence with those who shared his position, and was convinced by one of their number, Jean Grave, to draft a document encouraging anarchist support for the Allies. The resulting manifesto was published in the pages of the pro-war socialist periodical La Bataille on March 14, 1916, and republished in other European anarchist periodicals shortly thereafter. The manifesto declared that supporting the war was an act of resistance against the aggression of the German Empire, and that the war had to be pursued until its defeat. At this point, the authors conjectured, the ruling political parties of Germany would be overthrown and the anarchist goal of the emancipation of Europe and of the German people would be advanced.

Contrary to its misleading title, the Manifesto of the Sixteen had originally fifteen signatories-among them some of the most eminent anarchists in Europe-and was later countersigned by another hundred. The position of the Manifesto was in stark contrast to that of most anarchists of the day, many of whom denounced its signatories and their sympathizers, and accused them of betraying anarchist principles. In the fallout over the war, Kropotkin became increasingly isolated, with many former friends cutting their ties to him. The Russian anarchist movement was split into two, with a faction supporting Kropotkin's position to the strong criticism of the Bolsheviks. Elsewhere in Europe, including in the Spanish and Swiss anarchist movements, the dismissal of the Manifesto was overwhelming, with supporters being angrily denounced and marginalized.

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Anarchism

Schools of
thought
Buddhist * Christian * Collectivist * Communist * Egoist * Feminist * Green * Immediatist * Individualist * Info * Insurrectionary * Leftist * Mutualist * Nihilist * Pacifist * Philosophical * Platformist * Post-anarchism * Post-colonial * Post-left * Primitivist * Queer * Social * Syndicalist * Vegan * Zenarchy * Without adjectives
Theory and
practice
Anarchy * Black bloc * Class struggle * Communes * Co-operatives * Counter-economics * Direct action * Direct democracy * Expropriative anarchism * Economics * Especifismo * Individualism * individual reclamation * Ilegalism * Propaganda of the deed * Self-ownership * Social ecology * Spontaneous order * Squatting * Workers' self-management
PeopleWilliam Godwin * Josiah Warren * Max Stirner * Lysander Spooner * Johann Most * Pierre-Joseph Proudhon * Mikhail Bakunin * Henry David Thoreau * Peter Kropotkin * Errico Malatesta * Benjamin Tucker * Emma Goldman * Alexander Berkman * Émile Armand * Murray Bookchin * Noam Chomsky * John Zerzan
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CultureAnarcho-punk * Arts * Black anarchism * Culture jamming * DIY culture * Freeganism * Free school * Free store * Independent Media Center * Infoshop * Jewish anarchism * Popular education * Really Really Free Market * Symbolism * Terminology * A las barricadas
Economics Collectivism * Communism * Co-operatives * Counter-economics * Free school * Free store * Gift economy * Market abolitionism * Mutual aid * Mutualism * Participatory economics * Really Really Free Market * Syndicalism * Wage slavery * Workers' self-management
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Lists Books * Communities * Fictional characters * Jewish anarchists * Musicians * Movements by region * Organizations * Periodicals * Poets * Anarcho-punk bands * Russian anarchists
Related topicsAnti-capitalism * Anti-Communism * Anti-consumerism * Anti-corporatism * Anti-fascism * Anti-globalization * Antimilitarism * Anti-statism * Anti-war * Autarchism * Autonomism * Labour movement * Left Communism * Libertarianism * Libertarian socialism * Situationist International * Transcendental Students

World War I

Major participants
(People)
Entente PowersRussian Empire/Republic * French Empire: France, Vietnam * British Empire: United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, India, New Zealand, Newfoundland, South Africa * Italy * Romania * United States * Serbia * Portugal * China * Japan * Belgium * Montenegro * Greece * Armenia * Brazil
Central PowersGermany * Austria �Hungary * Ottoman Empire * Bulgaria
Timeline
Pre-conflictsMexican Revolution (1910 �1920) * Italo-Turkish War (1911 �1912) * First Balkan War (1912 �1913) * Second Balkan War (1913)
PreludeOrigins * Sarajevo assassination * July Crisis
1914Battle of the Frontiers * Battle of Cer * First Battle of the Marne * Battle of Tannenberg * Battle of Galicia * Battle of the Masurian Lakes * Battle of Kolubara * Battle of Sarıkamış * Race to the Sea * First Battle of Ypres
1915Second Battle of Ypres * Battle of Gallipoli * Battles of the Isonzo * Great Retreat * Conquest of Serbia * Siege of Kut
1916Erzerum Offensive * Battle of Verdun * Lake Naroch Offensive * Battle of Asiago * Battle of Jutland * Battle of the Somme * Brusilov Offensive * Conquest of Romania
1917Capture of Baghdad * Second Battle of Arras * Kerensky Offensive * Third Battle of Ypres * Battle of Caporetto * Battle of Cambrai
1918Armistice of Erzincan * Treaty of Brest-Litovsk * Spring Offensive * Hundred Days Offensive * Meuse-Argonne Offensive * Battle of Megiddo * Battle of Vittorio Veneto * Armistice with Germany * Armistice with Ottoman Empire
Other conflictsMaritz Rebellion (1914 �1915) * Indo-German Conspiracy (1914 �1919) * Easter Rising (1916) * Russian Revolution (1917) * Finnish Civil War (1918)
Post-conflictsRussian Civil War (1917 �1921) * Ukrainian War of Independence (1917 �1921) * Armenian �Azerbaijani War (1918 �1920) * Georgian �Armenian War (1918) * German Revolution (1918 �1919) * Hungarian �Romanian War (1918 �1919) * Greater Poland Uprising (1918 �1919) * Estonian War of Independence (1918 �1920) * Latvian War of Independence (1918 �1920) * Lithuanian Wars of Independence (1918 �1920) * Third Anglo-Afghan War (1919) * Polish �Soviet War (1919 �1921) * Irish War of Independence (1919 �1921) * Turkish War of Independence including the Greco-Turkish War (1919 �1923) * Polish �Lithuanian War (1920) * Russian invasion of Georgia (1921) * Irish Civil War (1922 �1923)
Aspects
WarfareMilitary engagements * Naval warfare * Air warfare * Cryptography * Horse use * Poison gas * Railways * Technology * Trench warfare * Total war * Surviving veterans
Civilian impact /
atrocities
Casualties * Spanish flu * Rape of Belgium * Ottoman People: (Armenian Genocide * Assyrian Genocide * Pontic Greek Genocide) * Female roles * Literature
Agreements /
Treaties
Partitioning of the Ottoman Empire * Sykes-Picot * St.-Jean-de-Maurienne * French-Armenian * Damascus * Paris Peace Conference * Treaty of Brest-Litovsk * Treaty of Lausanne * Treaty of London * Treaty of Neuilly * Treaty of St. Germain * Treaty of Sèvres * Treaty of Trianon * Treaty of Versailles
ConsequencesAftermath * "Fourteen Points" * League of Nations



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