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The American Revolution was perhaps the most significant event in modern history. It forever demonstrated the ability of a significantly smaller group of people to rebel against their oppressors. On top of that it also gave birth to what would become the most powerful country in the world. And while these feats were impressive, it was the drafting of a constitution, the forging of a union between divided states, and the fashioning of a truly democratic form of government that caused this event to go down in the annals of history.
Thus, the Historical Dictionary of Revolutionary America is not just about the grievances that led to war nor the actual war itself, but more particularly the subsequent period of trial and error - when success was far from certain and failure could never be ruled out - in which the thirteen states and those that followed were welded into the United States of America. To do this, Mays employs:
· an introductory essay and chronology outlining the events
· over 1100 dictionary entries on significant people as well as the political, economic, and social events of the era
· an extensive bibliography organized into nearly 100 different categories to facilitate additional research
· appendices documenting the signers of the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation, and the Constitution
· a fourth appendix lists all the Presidents of Congress under the Articles of Confederation
Published | Jun 09 2005 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 408 |
ISBN | 9780810853898 |
Imprint | Scarecrow Press |
Dimensions | 221 x 173 mm |
Series | Historical Dictionaries of U.S. Politics and Political Eras |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
The gem is the excellent, well-organized bibliography, which makes the dictionary an outstanding research tool....Recommended. Lower-level undergraduates through faculty/researchers; general readers.
Choice Reviews
This work is a well-researched volume.
American Reference Books Annual
Entries are concise and many are very good...
Reference Reviews
Mays (political science, The Citadel, South Carolina) covers not just the war of independence, but the political and social changes that led to it beginning in 1763, and the period between the end of hostilities and the implementation of the Constitution in 1789. In entries ranging from a sentence or two to the rare two pages, he identifies people, events, places, laws, institutions, and movements. His emphasis is on political, economic, and social issues; though some military matters are mentioned, he refers readers to more detailed military coverage in his Historical Dictionary of the American Revolution (1999). He includes extensive cross-referencing, but no index.
Reference and Research Book News
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