'Étienne Cabet' (
January 1,
1788 –
November 9,
1856) was a
French philosopher and
utopian socialist.
In 1831, he was elected to the
Chamber of Deputies, but due to his bitter attacks on the government he was sentenced for treason in 1834 and fled to
England. Influenced by
Robert Owen, he wrote the book ''Voyage et aventures de lord William Carisdall en Icarie'' ("Travel and Adventures of Lord William Carisdall in
Icaria") (1840) which depicted an ideal society in which an elected government controlled all economic activity and supervised social affairs, the family remaining the only other independent unit. He was the founder of the '
Icarian movement', named after a
utopian society described in his book.
In 1839, Cabet returned to France to advocate a communitarian social movement, for which he invented the term "''communisme''".
[1] Cabet's notion of a communal society influenced other utopian writers and philosophers, notably
Karl Marx and
Friedrich Engels [2] [3]. Some of these other writers ignored the Cabet's Christian influences, as described in Cabet's book
Vrai Christianisme.
In
1848, Cabet gave up on the notion of reforming French society. He led a group of followers from across France to the
United States to organize an Icarian community. They came first to Texas, then moved to
Nauvoo, Illinois to a site recently vacated by the
Mormons. A new colony was established in "Icaria, Iowa" (near what is now
Corning, Iowa). After disputes within the Nauvoo community, Cabet was expelled and he went to
St. Louis,
Missouri in 1855, where he died in 1856. The last Icarian colony at Corning disbanded in 1898.
References
1. CABET, Etienne (1788-1856) Fondateur du communisme en France
2. Engels To Marx
3. Engels To Étienne Cabet 5 April 1848
External links
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University Library, Western Illinois University
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Encyclopaedia Britannica Etienne Cabet