The Articles of Confederation: An Interpretation of the Social-constitutional History of the American Revolution, 1774-1781University of Wisconsin Press, 1940 - 284페이지 |
도서 본문에서
51개의 결과 중 1 - 3개
29 페이지
... South Carolina . The west was first recognized by the tidewater politicians when they began organized opposition to Great Britain in 1774 , but they so limited the participation of the west in the movement that it could do no more than ...
... South Carolina . The west was first recognized by the tidewater politicians when they began organized opposition to Great Britain in 1774 , but they so limited the participation of the west in the movement that it could do no more than ...
154 페이지
... South Sea were extravagant and founded on mistakes : that when the original charters had been granted it had been supposed that the South Sea was only a hundred miles from the Atlantic Ocean . He cited an opinion of Lord Camden's ...
... South Sea were extravagant and founded on mistakes : that when the original charters had been granted it had been supposed that the South Sea was only a hundred miles from the Atlantic Ocean . He cited an opinion of Lord Camden's ...
250 페이지
... south sea , from growing too great and powerful , so as to be dangerous to the rest . " A third dispute was over the basis of apportioning taxation . The Dickinson draft proposed that it should be according to total population . The South ...
... south sea , from growing too great and powerful , so as to be dangerous to the rest . " A third dispute was over the basis of apportioning taxation . The Dickinson draft proposed that it should be according to total population . The South ...
목차
The Problem of Interpretation | 3 |
Independence and Internal Revolution 17741776 | 54 |
The Problem of Union | 107 |
저작권 | |
표시되지 않은 섹션 9개
자주 나오는 단어 및 구문
agreed amendment American appointed argument Articles of Confederation Assembly authority Boston Britain British Burnett central charter claims colonies committee common Company Congress conservatives consideration considered constitution Continental Congress continued Convention Council Debates delegates desire determined Dickinson draft effect England established expressed final Force George give given Governor granted hand Historical hope House Ibid idea important independence Indians individual interests internal issue James John Adams Joseph Journals July June land laws legislature Letters liberty majority March Maryland Massachusetts matter measures meeting ment merchants movement necessary North Carolina Notes November October once opposed party Pennsylvania persons Philadelphia political present proposed question radicals ratify refused regulate reported result Revolution Revolutionary September South speculators Thomas tion town trade union United Virginia vote West Western Wilson Writings wrote York