Louis-Auguste Blanqui (1805-1881) is sometimes grouped with the followers of Babeuf. Babouvists and Blanquists were often allies - such as in the Paris Commune. However, Blanqui regarded himself as a political descendant of Jacques Hébert (1757-1794) and his followers, not of Babeuf. Blanqui also had no organisational ties to the societies of the Babouvists and lacked the clear commitment to economic communism of the Babouvists. The writings of Buonarroti and through them the doctrines of Babeuf also had a considerable influence on some socialists, such as those within the British Chartist movement of 1838-1858,[5]
notably on James Bronterre O'Brien (1804-1864).[citation needed]
^Kautsky, Karl (1 October 2019) [1905]. "The Republic and Social Democracy in France: The Second Republic and the Socialists". In Lewis, Ben (ed.). Karl Kautsky on Democracy and Republicanism. Historical Materialism Book Series - volume 196. Translated by Lewis, Ben. Leiden: Brill. p. 175. ISBN9789004392847. Retrieved 25 November 2024. [...] Babeufism was nothing more than the continuation of Jacobinism translated from a petty-bourgeois outlook to a proletarian one.
^Billington, James H. (24 October 2017) [1980]. "The Objects of Belief". Fire in the Minds of Men: Origins of the Revolutionary Faith. New Brunswick. New Jersey: Transaction Publishers. p. 78. ISBN9781351519816. Retrieved 25 November 2024. Frustrated in Piedmont, Babeuvist activists moved on to Milan, where they briefly help organize a local militia and introduced the Italian tricolor prior to the arrival of Napoleon. The Babeuvists helpd form the hierarchical revolutionary organization the Society of Lights (or Black League), founded by Cerise and others in Bologna late in 1798. [...] The echo of Babeuvism from occupied Poland was more distant and muffled. [...] Within France, there were flickers of revival among the surviving Babeuvists - notably in July 1799, when they gathered to form a Society of the Friends of Equality and Freedom. Such activity was snuffed out with the arrival of Napoleon later that year.
^Balibar, E. (1999). "The Notion of Class politics in Marx". In Jessop, Bob; Wheatley, Russell (eds.). Karl Marx's Social and Political Thought. Critical assessments of leading political philosophers, Second Series, ISBN 0415193265, 9780415193269 - volume 6: Modes of Production, the World System, Classes, and Class Struggle. London: Taylor & Francis. p. 494. ISBN9780415193283. Retrieved 25 November 2024. [...] Marx defines for the first time the revolution as proletarian politics which is, as we know, the key to the Communist Manifesto, for Marx the direct link to the experience which seems to him the furthest from the 'utopianism' of those advocating the 'end of the political': neo-Babouvism and Blanquism.
^
Fried, Albert; Sanders, Ronald (eds.). "Early French Communism: 'Gracchus' Babeuf". Socialist Thought: A Documentary History. Morningside Books (revised ed.). New York: Columbia University Press. p. 44. ISBN9780231082655. Retrieved 25 November 2024. [Buonaroti wrote] an account [...] that transformed Babouvism into a legend. The book became a source of inspiration for such middle-class revolutionary movements as the Carbonari, as well as for socialist movements such as Chartism. Babeuf can be said to be the bridge between eighteenth-century communism and modern socialism.