Early life On , Mikhail Aleksandrovich Bakunin was born into
Russian nobility. His family's
Priamukhino estate, in the
Tver region northwest of Moscow, had over 500 serfs. His father,
Alexander Mikhailovich Bakunin, was a Russian diplomat who had served in Italy. Upon returning to Priamukhino and marrying the much younger Varvara Aleksandrovna Muravyeva, the elder Bakunin raised his ten children in the
Rousseauan pedagogic model. Mikhail Bakunin, their third child and oldest son, read the languages, literature, and philosophy of the period and described his youth as idyllic and sheltered from the realities of Russian life. As an early teenager, he began training for a military career at the
St. Petersburg Artillery School, which he rejected. Becoming an officer in 1833, he availed himself of the freedom to participate in the city's social life, but was unfulfilled. Derelict in his studies, he was sent to Belarus and Lithuania as punishment in early 1834, where he read academic theory and philosophy. He deserted the school in 1835 and only escaped arrest through his familial influence. He was discharged at the end of the year and, despite his father's protests, left for Moscow to pursue a career as a mathematics teacher. Bakunin lived a bohemian, intellectual life in Moscow, where
German Romantic literature and
idealist philosophy were influential in the 1830s. In the intellectual circle of
Nikolai Stankevich, Bakunin read German philosophy, from
Kant to
Fichte to
Hegel, and published Russian translations of their works. Bakunin produced the first Russian translation of Hegel and was the foremost Russian expert on Hegel by 1837. Bakunin befriended Russian intellectuals including the literary critic
Vissarion Belinsky, the poet
Nikolay Ogarev, the novelist
Ivan Turgenev, and the writer
Alexander Herzen as youth prior to their careers. Herzen funded Bakunin to study at the
University of Berlin in 1840. Bakunin's plans to return to Moscow as a professor were soon abandoned. In Berlin, Bakunin gravitated towards the
Young Hegelians, an intellectual group with radical interpretations of Hegel's philosophy, and who drew Bakunin to political topics. He left Berlin in early 1842 for
Dresden and met the Hegelian
Arnold Ruge, who published Bakunin's first original publication. ("The Reaction in Germany") proposes a continuation of the
French Revolution to the rest of Europe and Russia. Though steeped in Hegelian jargon and published under a pseudonym, it marked Bakunin's transition from philosophy to revolutionary rhetoric.
Revolutionary activity and imprisonment Throughout the 1840s, Bakunin grew into revolutionary agitation. When his cadre aroused interest from Russian secret agents, Bakunin left for
Zürich in early 1843. He met the proto-communist
Wilhelm Weitling, whose arrest led
Bern's Russian embassy to distrust Bakunin. Defying Russian orders to return, the
Russian Senate stripped him of his rights as a nobleman and sentenced him
in absentia to
penal labor in Siberia. Without steady financial support, Bakunin became an itinerant, traveling Europe, meeting the people who had influenced him. He visited
Brussels and
Paris, where he joined international emigrants and socialists, befriended the anarchist
Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, and met the philosopher
Karl Marx, with whom he would later tussle. Bakunin only became personally active in political agitation in 1847, as Polish emigrants in Paris invited him to commemorate the
1830 Polish uprising with a speech. His call for Poles to overthrow czarism in alliance with Russian democrats made Bakunin known throughout Europe and led the Russian ambassador to successfully request Bakunin's deportation. When the French King
Louis Philippe I abdicated during the
February 1848 Revolution, Bakunin returned to Paris and basked in the revolutionary milieu. With the French government's support, he headed to Prussian Poland to agitate for revolt against Russia, but never arrived. He attended the 1848
Prague Slavic Congress to defend Slavic rights against German and Hungarian nationalism, and participated in
its impromptu insurrection against the
Austrian Habsburgs. Uncaptured, he wrote
Aufruf an die Slaven ("Appeal to the Slavs") at the end of the year, advocating for a Slavic federation and revolt against the Austrian, Prussian, Turkish, and Russian governments. It was widely read and translated. After participating in both the Prague uprising and the
1849 Dresden uprising, Bakunin was imprisoned, tried, sentenced to death, extradited multiple times, and ultimately placed in
solitary confinement in the
Peter and Paul Fortress of
St. Petersberg, Russia, in 1851. Three years later, he transferred to
Shlisselburg Fortress near St. Petersberg for another three years. Prison weathered but did not break Bakunin, who retained his revolutionary zeal through his release. He did, however, write an autobiographical, genuflecting
Confession to the Russian emperor, which proved to be a controversial document upon its public discovery some 70 years later. The letter did not improve his prison conditions. In 1857, Bakunin was permitted to transfer to permanent exile in Siberia. He married Antonia Kwiatkowska there before escaping in 1861, first to Japan, then to San Francisco, sailing to
Panama and then to New York and Boston, and arrived in London by the end of the year. Bakunin set foot in America just as the
Civil War was breaking out. Speaking with supporters of both sides, Bakunin stated that his sympathies were with the North, although he claimed hypocrisy in their stated goal of slave liberation while also forcing the South to remain in the Union. Though a fierce critic and enemy of slavery, Bakunin held a deep admiration for the United States as a whole, referring to the country as "the finest political organization that ever existed in history." In Paris at this time, famous photographer
Nadar took four famous photographs of him on August 7, 1862. After being photographed, he also signed Nadar's ''Livre d'Or'' (
autograph album), and wrote (leaf 161): "Watch out that liberty doesn't come to you from the north." In 1863, Bakunin joined in an unsuccessful effort to supply armed men for the Polish
January Uprising against Russia. Bakunin, reunited with his wife, moved to Italy the next year, where they stayed for three years. Bakunin, in his early 50s, developed his core anarchist thoughts in Italy. He continued to refine these ideas in his remaining 12 years. Among this ideology was the first of many conspiratorial revolutionary societies, though none of these participated in revolutionary actions, chiefly the revolutionary toppling of the state, to be replaced by a free federation between voluntarily associated economic producers. He moved to Switzerland in 1867, a more permissive environment for revolutionary literature. Bakunin's anarchist writings were fragmentary and prolific. With France's collapse in the 1870
Franco-Prussian War, Bakunin traveled to Lyon and participated in the fruitless
Lyon Commune in which the citizens briefly occupied the city hall. Bakunin retreated to Switzerland. In Switzerland, the Russian revolutionary
Sergey Nechayev sought out Bakunin for collaboration. Not knowing Nechayev's past betrayals, Bakunin warmed to Nechayev's revolutionary zeal and they together produced the 1869
Catechism of the Revolutionary, a tract that endorsed an ascetic life for revolutionaries without societal or moral bonds. Bakunin's connection with Nechayev hurt the former's reputation. More recent scholarship, however, challenges the catechism's authorship, crediting Nechayev as the primary or sole author. Bakunin ultimately disavowed their connection.
First International While Bakunin encountered
Karl Marx in Paris (1844) and London (1864), he came to know him through the
First International (International Working Men's Association), which Marx and
Friedrich Engels formed in the 1860s. Bakunin's relationship with Marx became strained in the early 1870s for both interpersonal and ideological differences. Bakunin respected Marx's erudition and passion for socialism but found his personality to be authoritarian and arrogant. In turn, Marx was skeptical of Russian reactionism and Bakunin's unruliness. As Bakunin developed his anarchist ideas in this period, he came to see federative social organization, led by the peasantry and poorest workers, as the primary post-revolution goal, whereas Marx believed in a
dictatorship of the proletariat, led by organized workers in industrially advanced countries, in which the workers use state infrastructure until
the state withers away. Bakunists abhorred the political organization for which Marx advocated. Marx had Bakunin and Bakunist anarchists ejected from the First International's
1872 Hague Congress. This breaking point split the Marxist socialist movement from the anarchist movement and led to the undoing of the International. Bakunin's ideas continued to spread nevertheless, to the labor movement in Spain and the watchmakers of the Swiss
Jura Federation. Bakunin wrote his last major work,
Statism and Anarchy (1873), anonymously in Russian to stir underground revolution in Russia. It restates his anarchist position, establishes the German Empire as the foremost centralized state in opposition to European anarchism, likens Marx to German authoritarianism, and warns of Marx's dictatorship of the proletariat being led by autocrats for their own gain in the name of the proletariat. This premonition furthered the gulf between the Marxists and Bakunist anarchists. In one final revolutionary act, Bakunin planned the unsuccessful
1874 Bologna insurrection with his Italian followers. Its failure was a major setback to the
Italian anarchist movement. Bakunin retreated to Switzerland, where he retired, dying in
Bern on 1 July 1876. == Thought ==