American Institutions and Their Preservation, Volume 1Norwood Press, 1929 - 833 pagina's |
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Pagina 265
... origin , in the same sense that the British Constitution is of Norman and Germanic origin ; but there is hardly a clause in it which cannot be traced to state constitutions , or to colonial practice . Theories that the Federal ...
... origin , in the same sense that the British Constitution is of Norman and Germanic origin ; but there is hardly a clause in it which cannot be traced to state constitutions , or to colonial practice . Theories that the Federal ...
Pagina 289
... origin of New England towns . The theory of Germanic origin traces the New England towns directly back to the Mark in the primeval forest of Germany ; the primordial germ theory finds the New England towns already organized in England ...
... origin of New England towns . The theory of Germanic origin traces the New England towns directly back to the Mark in the primeval forest of Germany ; the primordial germ theory finds the New England towns already organized in England ...
Pagina 301
... origin of American nationality , carried back to a point before that nationality de- clared itself politically independent . The new race , which , despite itself , has at last attained imperial power , is the same English - speaking ...
... origin of American nationality , carried back to a point before that nationality de- clared itself politically independent . The new race , which , despite itself , has at last attained imperial power , is the same English - speaking ...
Inhoudsopgave
CHAPTER | 1 |
WHAT ARE AMERICAN INSTITUTIONS? | 16 |
1 A written constitution | 18 |
Copyright | |
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Adams Ameri American institutions American Revolution aristocracy Boston British Bryce Catholic Celts century character Chronicles of America church civilization colonies Congress Constitution democracy Dutch economic edited emigration Encyclopædia Britannica England English equality Europe fact federal Fiske foreign form of government France freedom French George George Bancroft German Henry Cabot Lodge Hildreth History Huguenots hundred idea immigration industry influence Ireland Irish James Jewish Jews John Kentucky King labor land Langdon Mitchell legislative legislature liberty living Lord Acton Massachusetts ment million monarchy Morison nation nature negro never North Ohio Pennsylvania political population practically President principles Professor Puritans Quakers race railroad religion religious republic Revolution Revolutionary Richard Hildreth Roman rule Russian says schools Scotch Scotch-Irish settlers ships social South Carolina Southern sovereignty Supreme Court thousand tion trade Ulster unions United Virginia vote wealth West western writer wrote