The Articles of Confederation: An Interpretation of the Social-constitutional History of the American Revolution, 1774-1781University of Wisconsin Press, 1940 - 284페이지 |
도서 본문에서
29개의 결과 중 1 - 3개
109 페이지
... central body , was still primarily concerned with frontier prob- lems . The ... government . Independence , nominal if not actual , placed before the ... government would be transferred to the Continental Congress . The ultimate decision ...
... central body , was still primarily concerned with frontier prob- lems . The ... government . Independence , nominal if not actual , placed before the ... government would be transferred to the Continental Congress . The ultimate decision ...
110 페이지
... central government by many of those conservatives who became revolu- tionists were the chief forces behind the movement for a political union of the thirteen states . On the whole the radicals were indif- ferent to union after 1776 ...
... central government by many of those conservatives who became revolu- tionists were the chief forces behind the movement for a political union of the thirteen states . On the whole the radicals were indif- ferent to union after 1776 ...
241 페이지
... central government would still have been a federal government and therefore inadequate in conservative opinion . The alterations proposed during the Con- federation period were not fundamental , for they did not touch the vital question ...
... central government would still have been a federal government and therefore inadequate in conservative opinion . The alterations proposed during the Con- federation period were not fundamental , for they did not touch the vital question ...
목차
The Problem of Interpretation | 3 |
Independence and Internal Revolution 17741776 | 54 |
The Problem of Union | 107 |
저작권 | |
표시되지 않은 섹션 9개
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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