In 1776, America became the first nation in the modern world to declare its independence from the mother country. In doing so, it also created a new political ideology that was later interwoven into the American identity. In declaring its independence, America also illustrated traces of the social, intellectual, political and religious components that were blossoming before and during the 18th century. An in-depth study of this intricate period shows the incongruous yet linked strings of thought that came together to form the ideological backbone of one of the most revolutionary periods in human history. This unique ideology was a combination of classical literature (both Greek and Roman), Enlightenment, Protestant Ethic that were linked to...
In his Classical Republicanism and the American Revolution, Professor Wood outlines the evolution of...
From 1763 to 1828 Americans rebelled against England\u27s imperial policies, fought that nation for ...
This dissertation uses the reading patterns of New York’s earliest elites, including a significant p...
This important study of the Declaration of Independence compares early drafts of the Declaration wit...
As America’s political conscience was forming during the eighteenth century, British political ideas...
As the United States of America approaches the 250 year anniversary of the Declaration of Independen...
The purpose of this thesis was to come to a better understanding of the American mind at the time of...
Bachelor thesis with its subject of Ideological background of American Revolution deals with ideolog...
This dissertation explores the American political thought and development in the period 1765-1850. I...
When thinking about the American Revolution, one is soon confronted by the puzzle of precisely which...
The long-range causes for the American Revolution may be found in the different social environment d...
Much of the traditional scholarship of the Early American Republic agrees that the national identity...
Reflection on the meaning of the American Revolution began even before independence was declared and...
Hardcover, 378 S.: 36,00 €Hardcover, 17x24The three essays and the collection of documents focus on ...
Though little known to most students of the American Revolution, the British Radicals of the 1770s c...
In his Classical Republicanism and the American Revolution, Professor Wood outlines the evolution of...
From 1763 to 1828 Americans rebelled against England\u27s imperial policies, fought that nation for ...
This dissertation uses the reading patterns of New York’s earliest elites, including a significant p...
This important study of the Declaration of Independence compares early drafts of the Declaration wit...
As America’s political conscience was forming during the eighteenth century, British political ideas...
As the United States of America approaches the 250 year anniversary of the Declaration of Independen...
The purpose of this thesis was to come to a better understanding of the American mind at the time of...
Bachelor thesis with its subject of Ideological background of American Revolution deals with ideolog...
This dissertation explores the American political thought and development in the period 1765-1850. I...
When thinking about the American Revolution, one is soon confronted by the puzzle of precisely which...
The long-range causes for the American Revolution may be found in the different social environment d...
Much of the traditional scholarship of the Early American Republic agrees that the national identity...
Reflection on the meaning of the American Revolution began even before independence was declared and...
Hardcover, 378 S.: 36,00 €Hardcover, 17x24The three essays and the collection of documents focus on ...
Though little known to most students of the American Revolution, the British Radicals of the 1770s c...
In his Classical Republicanism and the American Revolution, Professor Wood outlines the evolution of...
From 1763 to 1828 Americans rebelled against England\u27s imperial policies, fought that nation for ...
This dissertation uses the reading patterns of New York’s earliest elites, including a significant p...