In the essay featured here, Eric Nelson argues that in the early 1770s patriots dropped their previous insistence that Parliament was sovereign over the colonies but simply lacked authority to impose internal taxes, and instead adopted the dominion theory, returning to the constitutional position of the Stuart monarchs James I and Charles I. Examining this remarkable turn toward royal power demonstrates the true drama of the republican turn in 1776 and highlights the persistent allure of prerogative powers in the formative period of American constitutionalism. Gordon S. Wood, Pauline Maier, and Daniel J. Hulsebosch assess Nelson’s thesis, and then Nelson replies to their critiques
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“Patriot Royalism” makes the case that American patriots of the early 1770s became the last Atlantic...
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This article describes a debate about the basis of allegiance to government that is obscured from vi...
After the end of the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, two parties in England, the Whigs and...
This study examines ways in which supporters of William III and his opponents used literature to but...
Great Britain and her colonies began their disagreements leading up to the American Revolution over ...
All political societies have peculiarities, and nothing special is to be concluded from the Anglopho...
Reviewing Eric Nelson, The Royalist Revolution: Monarchy and the American Founding (Harvard Universi...
In the aftermath of the Stamp Act, prominent American thinkers of otherwise unquestioned Whiggish af...
“Patriot Royalism” makes the case that American patriots of the early 1770s became the last Atlantic...
The Machiavellian Moment was largely responsible for establishing what remains the dominant understa...
Scholars-at first historians and political scientists, and more recently legal scholars-who have bec...
The English Civil War is one of the seminal events in Anglo-American constitutional history. Oceans ...
This study offers a new interpretation of the theoretical basis of the political alliance and ruptur...
This dissertation examines the constitutional ideas and attitudes which emerge from the North Briton...
This dissertation focuses on the constitutional politics of England, and then Britain’s, transatlant...
The purpose of this research is to provide an effective analysis of the role of Thomas Paine’s Commo...
This article describes a debate about the basis of allegiance to government that is obscured from vi...
After the end of the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, two parties in England, the Whigs and...
This study examines ways in which supporters of William III and his opponents used literature to but...
Great Britain and her colonies began their disagreements leading up to the American Revolution over ...
All political societies have peculiarities, and nothing special is to be concluded from the Anglopho...