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The age of the democratic revolution: a political history of Europe and America, 1760-1800, Vol. 1
R. R. Palmer
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Frontmatter
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Preface
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I. The Age of the Democratic Revolution (page 3)
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The Revolution of Western Civilization (page 5)
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A "Democratic" Revolution: "Democrat" and "Aristocrat" in European Languages (page 13)
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A Preview of What Follows (page 20)
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II. Aristocracy about 1760: The Constituted Bodies (page 27)
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The Diets of Eastern Europe (page 30)
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Councils and Estates of the Middle Zone (page 33)
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The Provincial Estates and Parlements of France (page 41)
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Parliaments and Assemblies in the British Isles and America (page 44)
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III. Aristocracy about 1760: Theory and Practice (page 55)
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Montesquieu, Real de Curban, Blackstone, Warburton (page 56)
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Uses and Abuses of Social Rank (page 67)
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Problems of Administration, Recruitment, Taxation, and Class Consciousness (page 74)
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IV. Clashes with Monarchy (page 85)
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The Quasi-Revolution in France, 1763-1774 (page 86)
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The Monarchist Coup d'Etat of 1772 in Sweden (page 99)
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The Hapsburg Empire (page 103)
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V. A Clash with Democracy: Geneva and Jean-Jacques Rousseau (page 111)
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Rousseau, Voltaire, and Geneva to 1762 (page 112)
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The Social Contract, 1762 (page 119)
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The Genevese Revolution of 1768 (page 127)
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VI. The British Parliament between King and People (page 143)
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The British Constitution (page 143)
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The First American Crisis: The Stamp Act (page 153)
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Tribulations of Parliament, 1766-1774 (page 164)
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The Second American Crisis: The Coercive Acts and the Continental Congress (page 173)
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VII. The American Revolution: The Forces in Conflict (page 185)
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The Revolution: Was There Any? (page 185)
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Anglo-America before the Revolution (page 190)
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The Revolution: Democracy and Aristocracy (page 197)
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The Revolution: Britain and Europe (page 206)
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VIII. The American Revolution: The People as Constituent Power (page 213)
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The Distinctiveness of American Political Ideas (page 214)
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Constitution-making in North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Massachusetts (page 217)
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A Word on the Constitution of the United States (page 228)
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Ambivalence of the American Revolution (page 232)
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IX. Europe and the American Revolution (page 239)
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The Sense of a New Era (page 239)
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Channels of Communication (page 242)
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The Depths of Feeling (page 253)
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The American Constitutions: An International Argument (page 263)
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X. Two Parliaments Escape Reform (page 285)
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The Arming of Ireland: "Grattan's Parliament" (page 287)
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The "Association" Movement in England (page 294)
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The Reform Bills and Their Failure (page 302)
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The Conservatism of Edmund Burke (page 308)
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The "Appellation of Citizen" vs. the Test Act (page 317)
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XI. Democrats and Aristocrats--Dutch, Belgian, and Swiss (page 323)
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The Dutch Patriot Movement (page 324)
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The Belgian Revolution (page 341)
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A View of Switzerland (page 358)
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Reflections on the Foregoing (page 364)
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XII. The Limitations of Enlightened Despotism (page 373)
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Joseph II: The Attempted Revolution from Above (page 374)
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Leopold II: The Aristocratic Counterattack (page 384)
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Three Charters of the North (page 397)
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XIII. The Lessons of Poland (page 411)
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The Gentry Republic (page 412)
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The Polish Revolution: The Constitution of 1791 (page 422)
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A Game of Ideological Football (page 429)
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XIV. The French Revolution: The Aristocratic Resurgence (page 439)
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The Problem of the French Revolution (page 442)
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Ministers and Parlements, 1774-1788 (page 448)
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The Aristocratic Revolt (page 458)
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XV. The French Revolution: The Explosion of 1789 (page 469)
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The Formation of a Revolutionary Psychology (page 470)
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The Overturn: May to August 1789 (page 479)
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The Constitution: Mounier and Sieyes (page 489)
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Appendices (page 503)
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I. References for the Quotations at Heads of Chapters (page 505)
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II. Translations of Metrical Passages (page 506)
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III. Excerpts from Certain Basic Legal Documents (page 508)
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1. The Russian Charter of Nobility, 1785 (page 508)
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2. The Prussian General Code, 1791 (page 509)
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3. The Swedish Act of Union and Security, 1789 (page 512)
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4. The Polish Constitution of 1791 (page 513)
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5. The Hungarian Coronation Oath of 1790 (page 514)
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6. The Brabant Declaration of Independence, 1789 (page 514)
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7. The Geneva Edict of Pacification, 1782 (page 515)
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8. The Canada Act, 1791 (page 515)
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9. The Constitutions of the United States, 1787, and of Pennsylvania, 1790 (page 516)
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10. The French Constitution of 1789-1791 (page 517)
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IV. The Virgina Declaration of Rights of 1776, and the French Declaration of Rights of 1789 (page 518)
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V. "Democratic" and "Bourgeois" Characteristics in the French Constitution of 1791: Property Qualifications in France, Britain, and America (page 522)
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Index (page 529)
Journal Abbreviation | Label | URL |
---|---|---|
JMH | 37.3 (Sep. 1965): 373-374 | http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0022-2801%28196509%2937%3A3%3C373%3ATAOTDR%3E2.0.CO%3B2-R |
AHR | 70.4 (Jul. 1965): 1076-1077 | http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0002-8762%28196507%2970%3A4%3C1076%3ATAOTDR%3E2.0.CO%3B2-%23 |
WMQ | 3.22.3 (Jul. 1965): 498-504 | http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0043-5597%28196507%293%3A22%3A3%3C498%3AGITWOH%3E2.0.CO%3B2-8 |
PSQ | 75.3 (Sep. 1960): 424-425 | http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0032-3195%28196009%2975%3A3%3C424%3ATAOTDR%3E2.0.CO%3B2-H |
JMH | 32.2 (Jun. 1960): 164 | http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0022-2801%28196006%2932%3A2%3C164%3ATAOTDR%3E2.0.CO%3B2-O |
JP | 22.2 (May 1960): 346-347 | http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0022-3816%28196005%2922%3A2%3C346%3ATAOTDR%3E2.0.CO%3B2-L |
JSH | 26.2 (Feb. 1960): 100-102 | http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0022-4642%28196002%2926%3A1%3C100%3ATAODRA%3E2.0.CO%3B2-F |
Citable Link
Published: 1959
Publisher: Princeton University Press
- 9780691005690 (paper)
- 9780691005706 (ebook)
- 9780691045009 (hardcover)