As director of the Il Lavoratore from Trieste, he came in Fiume to give “organisational support” from the Communist Party of Italy in building the Communist Party of Fiume, where he died in his sleep of gas intoxication on November 15, 1921.
He was not related to Samuel Maylender, a physician and socialist leader in Fiume, who later joined the Communist Party of Fiume in 1921.
Republican Party (United States) | Democratic Party (United States) | Australian Labor Party | Democratic Party | Liberal Party of Canada | Liberal Party of Australia | Republican Party | Liberal Party (UK) | Social Democratic Party of Germany | Liberal Party | Nazi Party | communist | New Democratic Party | Progressive Conservative Party of Canada | Democratic-Republican Party | Communist | Green Party | Democratic-Republican Party (United States) | Social Democratic Party | Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario | Conservative Party of Canada | Ontario Liberal Party | Communist Party | Communist Party of China | political party | Socialist Party | Republican Party (U.S.) | Labor Party | Federalist Party | Federalist Party (United States) |
One of its first editors was Cesare Seassaro from Pavia, who died in Fiume on 15 November 1921, where he came to give "organisational support" from the Communist Party of Italy in building the Communist Party of Fiume.