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The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution
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"The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution" Quotes

"The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution" explores the intellectual and political roots of the American Revolution.

Quotes

The Revolution did not just destroy British authority, but also the traditional institutions and values of the colonies.

Bernard Bailyn

revolutiontradition

The colonists sought to reclaim a lost freedom, not to create a new one.

Bernard Bailyn

freedomrevolution

The Revolution was a movement of the mind and spirit, as well as of the body and institutions.

Bernard Bailyn

revolutionspirituality

The Revolution was fundamentally a struggle over the meaning and character of the political community.

Bernard Bailyn

revolutionpolitics

The colonists' political ideas were deeply rooted in the past, and they drew on historical examples to justify their actions.

Bernard Bailyn

historypolitics

The colonists' resistance to British authority was driven by a profound fear of the loss of their traditional liberties.

Bernard Bailyn

resistanceliberty

The Revolution was as much a conflict of ideas as it was of armies and governments.

Bernard Bailyn

revolutionideas

The colonists' understanding of their rights and liberties was deeply influenced by the intellectual currents of the Enlightenment.

Bernard Bailyn

enlightenmentliberty

The American Revolution was a product of a long evolution of ideas and institutions.

Bernard Bailyn

revolutionideas

The Revolution was not a sudden eruption, but the result of a gradual process of change and transformation.

Bernard Bailyn

revolutionchange