On June 4, 1844, Petterswald and Langgen-Bierra, two textile towns and foothills at the foot of the Öhlin in Silesia, Germany, spontaneously invaded the textile workers against the exploitation and oppression of capitalists. The uprising was to raise wages. The workers were uprising to 3,000 people. The workers sent out their opposition to private ownership. They sang the bloody slaughter of war songs and denounced the cruel exploitation of capitalists: "We all know what is your Greed, exploit the last of the poor, and dry their five organs of heart, liver and liver! "The workers smashed the homes and machinery of the factory owners, burned notes, books and warehouses and used primitive weapons to fight the cavalry and artillery Of the government forces, launched a fight, performance was very tenacious and courageous, insisted on June 6, the uprising was suppressed. This uprising shows that the young German proletariat has started to politically grow up. It marks the path taken by the German proletariat to an independent political struggle after the proletariat of Britain and France. Hein, the most important poet in Germany after Goethe, wrote The Silesian Weaving Song (1844) in support of the Silesian textile workers' revolt and also a great achievement for Heine in this period. Engels once wrote that it "propagated socialism," saying that Heinrich was "one of the most outstanding German contemporary poets," and that he "joined our ranks." The textile workers' rebellion in Silesia, Germany, coincided with the Charter Movement of the United Kingdom, the workers in Lyon, France Uprising is the birth and development of the proletariat which is the basis of the class produced by Marxist philosophy.