Kazimierz Kelles-Krauz Explained

Kazimierz Kelles-Krauz
Birth Name:Kazimierz Radosław Elehard
Other Names:
  • Radosław
  • Michał Luśnia
Birth Date:27 March 1872
Birth Place:Szczebrzeszyn, Russian Empire
Death Place:Pernitz, Austria-Hungary
Spouse:Maria Katarzyna
Children:Janina
Family:Kelles-Krauz szlachta
Relatives:Piotr Wysocki
Education:
Alma Mater:
Era:Belle Époque
Region:Central Europe
School Tradition:Marxism
Institutions:International Institute of Sociology
Notable Ideas:Law of retrospective revolution

Kazimierz Radosław Elehard baron Kelles-Krauz (22 March 1872  - 24 June 1905) was a Polish philosopher and sociologist, member of the Polish Socialist Party. He was one of the most significant Marxist thinkers at the end of the 19th century.

Kelles-Krauz was born in Szczebrzeszyn, Russian Empire and died in Pernitz, Austria-Hungary.

His greatest contribution to sociology is the "law of retrospective revolution" according to which "the ideals with which each reform movement tries to replace existing social norms are always similar to the norms of a more or less distant past".

Yale's Timothy Snyder argues that Kelles-Krauz, writing two decades before Hans Kohn and Carlton Hayes, ought to be among the small cluster of turn-of-the-century thinkers regarded as the pioneers of the modern study of nationalism.

Family

He was the son of nobleman and landowner and Matylda Daniewska. He had three younger brothers, Jan Jakub, Bohdan, Stanisław Maciej and sister Matylda.[1] His youngest brother was also a PPS activist, senator of the Second Polish Republic (1928-30) and Polish ambassador to Denmark after the Second World War, married to PPS activist .

Kazimierz married PPS activist, with whom he had a daughter, Janina, a workers' activist and employee of the Ossolineum.

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kazimierz Radosław Elehard bar. Kelles-Krauz . 2023-10-24 . Wielka Genealogia Minakowskiego - M.J. Minakowski.