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  1. Hugo Eberlein (Saalfeld, 4 de mayo de 1887 - Moscú 16 de octubre de 1941), fue un político alemán, de ideología comunista. Biografía. El diseñador industrial Hugo Eberlein se unió en 1906 al SPD (partido en ese momento marxista revolucionario).

  2. Communist Party of Germany. Occupation. Politician. Max Albert Hugo Eberlein (4 May 1887 – 16 October 1941) was a German Communist politician. He took part of the founding congress of the Communist Party of Germany ("KPD") in December 1918 and January 1919), and then in the First Congress of the Comintern (2–6 March 1919), [1 ...

  3. Max Albert Hugo Eberlein (* 4. Mai 1887 in Saalfeld/Saale; † 16. Oktober 1941 in Moskau) war ein deutscher kommunistischer Politiker. Im Rahmen des Großen Terrors in der Sowjetunion wurde er 1941 hingerichtet. Er verwendete auch das Pseudonym Max Albert.

  4. 13 de ago. de 2014 · En septiembre de 1915, Ernst Meyer, Hugo Eberlein y, después, Franz Mehring, con 70 años de edad, y muchos más son también encarcelados. A pesar de ser minoría la derecha impuso su política. El centro, representado por Kautsky, que en los Congresos anteriores había reafirmado la posición revolucionaria frente a la guerra ...

  5. Hugo Eberlein : Biography. Primary Sources . Hugo Eberlein was born in 1887. As a young man he joined the Social Democratic Party (SDP). Eberlein was a leading figure in the anti-militarist section of the SDP. Karl Liebknecht was the only member of the Reichstag who voted against Germany's participation in the First World War.

  6. Born in 1887, Hugo Eberlein was a founding member of the KPD. He had replaced Rosa Luxemburg as the party’s representative at the founding congress of the Communist International in 1919. Eberlein arrived in the Soviet Union in 1936, but he was arrested the following year for allegedly engaging in “terrorist activity” on behalf of the Nazis.

  7. Google Scholar The official German communist delegate Hugo Eberlein told the founding congress of the Communist International in March 1919 that the German worker' councils were in trouble because the Social Democrats, “who in questions of organization are far superior to the workers, have managed to sneak into the government…and subvert ...