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This article is about the Spartacist League which existed in post-First World War Germany. See International Communist League (Fourth Internationalist) for the group currently named the Spartacist League.
The Spartacist League or Spartakusbund was an extreme left-wing movement organized in Germany during and just after the politically volatile years of World War I. Its greatest period of activity was during the German Revolution of 1918 to 1919. The League was named after Spartacus, leader of the largest slave rebellion in the Roman Empire. It also sought to incite a revolution similar to that of the Bolsheviks in Russia by circulating illegal subversive publications such as the newspaper Spartacus Letters.
The organisation was led by Rosa Luxemburg (nicknamed "Red Rosa") and Karl Liebknecht, son of Wilhelm Liebknecht, both prominent members of the left wing of the German Social-Democratic Party (SPD), who moved to found an independent organization after the SPD supported the German government's decision to declare war on Russia in 1914, beginning what became World War I. Besides opposition to imperialist war, they maintained the need for revolutionary methods, in contrast to the leadership of the Social Democracy. After the Russian Revolution of 1917 they decided to agitate for a similar course, the forming of a government based on workers' councils (soviets) in Germany. After the November revolution which overthrew the Kaiser and led to the end of World War I and the beginning of a period of instability and revolutions lasting until 1923, Liebknecht declared a socialist republic in Germany, on the same night that the leaders of the SPD declared the Weimar Republic. In December 1918 the Spartakusbund became the German Communist Party (KPD), the German affiliate of the Communist International (Comintern). The two founders of the movement, Liebknecht and Luxemburg, were imprisoned from 1916 until 1918 for their roles in helping to organize a public demonstration in Berlin against German involvement in the war.
In January 1919 the KPD attempted to take control of Berlin in what came to be known as the Spartakus uprising. This occurred against the advice of Luxemburg who argued that an uprising was premature since the Spartakusbund was too weak and not enough of the working class had come over to its side. The attempted revolution was crushed by the combined forces of the SPD, the remnants of the German Army, and the right-wing paramilitary groups known as the Freikorps, on the orders of chancellor Friedrich Ebert. Luxembourg and Leibknecht, among many others, were killed while held prisoner by the Freikorps, and their bodies dumped in a river. Hundreds of Spartakists were executed in the weeks following the uprising.