Princeton University Press
The Age of the Democratic Revolution
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R. R. Palmer
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Preface by:
David Armitage
About this book
For the Western world, the period from 1760 to 1800 was the great revolutionary era in which the outlines of the modern democratic state came into being. Here for the first time in one volume is R. R. Palmer's magisterial account of this incendiary age. Palmer argues that the American, French, and Polish revolutions—and the movements for political change in Britain, Ireland, Holland, and elsewhere—were manifestations of similar political ideas, needs, and conflicts. Palmer traces the clash between an older form of society, marked by legalized social rank and hereditary or self-perpetuating elites, and a new form of society that placed a greater value on social mobility and legal equality.
Featuring a new foreword by David Armitage, this Princeton Classics edition of The Age of the Democratic Revolution introduces a new generation of readers to this enduring work of political history.
Author / Editor information
Reviews
"Praise for the previous Volume 2 edition: "With the publication of this second volume of The Age of the Democratic Revolution, R. R. Palmer concludes his patient and magisterial reassessment of the revolutionary ferment that stirred Europe and America between 1760 and 1800. . . . While Volume I covered thirty-two years, Volume II covers only eight, and the detail is correspondingly enriched. The stage remains the same, a vast stage extending from Scotland to Sicily and from Moscow to the Mississippi. Manipulating the spotlight of attention with skill and precision, Palmer shifts the focus from country to country, clarifying the particular conditions and specific developments in each. Despite the frequent changes of scene the drama is saved from incoherence by its dominant theme, a theme that emerges more strongly with each chapter as the evidence supporting it becomes more cumulative and convincing.""---Geoffrey Bruun, Journal of Modern History
"Praise for the previous Volume 1 edition: "It is a stimulating and provocative book in explicit defense of a position--a moral, political, if not quite religious position--which is the relatively unexamined position of the great majority of Americans. A reading of this book should help many to an explicit examination of their beliefs that may strengthen them and should certainly clarify them.""---Crane Brinton, New York Herald Tribune
"Praise for the previous Volume 1 edition: "Professor Palmer presents his historical synthesis with meticulous scholarship, pungent clarity, and emphatic conviction. . . . He has the rare gift of analyzing a historical situation in a manner that reveals, at the same time, both its past and its present significance.""---J. Salwyn Schapiro, Saturday Review
"Praise for the previous Volume 2 edition: ". . . This is the most important book on the Europe of the French Revolution published in English for more than a generation. It marks the turn of the tide, demonstrating as it does the hollowness of the current conservative interpretation of the Revolution and it will discredit for the future all sloppy generalizations about Jacobins, demagogues, and revolutionary mobs. . . . [Professor Palmer's] knowledge of printed sources is exceptionally thorough, ancient as well as modern, and his judgment of what is good and reliable seems unerring.""---J. H. Plumb, New York Review of Books
"Praise for the previous Volume 1 edition: "Robert Palmer possesses the combination of patient scholarship and broad philosophical inquiry the task demands. . . . This book will enlarge and clarify our understanding of modern Western history. It will do more than that. It will re-emphasize the strength and vitality of the roots that supported the growth of democracy in the Old and New Worlds.""---Geoffrey Bruun, The New York Times
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Frontmatter
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CONTENTS
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List of Maps
xiii -
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Foreword
xv - Part 1: The Challenge
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Preface to Part 1
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I. The Age of the Democratic Revolution
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II. Aristocracy about 1760: The Constituted Bodies
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III. Aristocracy about 1760: Theory and Practice
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IV. Clashes with Monarchy
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V. A Clash with Democracy: Geneva and Jean-Jacques Rousseau
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VI. The British Parliament between King and People
106 -
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VII. The American Revolution: The Forces in Conflict
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VIII. The American Revolution: The People as Constituent Power
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IX. Europe and the American Revolution
177 -
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X. Two Parliaments Escape Reform
214 -
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XI. Democrats and Aristocrats—Dutch, Belgian, and Swiss
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XII. The Limitations of Enlightened Despotism
280 -
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XIII. The Lessons of Poland
307 -
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XIV. The French Revolution: The Aristocratic Resurgence
326 -
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XV. The French Revolution: The Explosion of 1789
347 - Part 2: The Struggle
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Preface to Part 2
375 -
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XVI. The Issues and the Adversaries
377 -
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XVII. The Revolutionizing of the Revolution
400 -
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XVIII. Liberation and Annexation: 1792–1793
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XIX. The Survival of the Revolution in France
447 -
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XX. Victories of the Counter-Revolution in Eastern Europe
473 -
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XXI. The Batavian Republic
505 -
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XXII. The French Directory: Mirage of the Moderates
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XXIII. The French Directory between Extremes
544 -
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XXIV. The Revolution Comes to Italy
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XXV. The Cisalpine Republic
589 -
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XXVI. 1798: The High Tide of Revolutionary Democracy
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XXVII. The Republics at Rome and Naples
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XXVIII. The Helvetic Republic
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XXIX. Germany: The Revolution of the Mind
684 -
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XXX. Britain: Republicanism and the Establishment
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XXXI. America: Democracy Native and Imported
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XXXII. Climax and Dénouement
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Appendixes I. References for the Quotations at Heads of Chapters
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Appendixes II. Translations of Metrical Passages
798 -
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Appendixes III. Excerpts from Certain Basic Legal Documents
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Appendixes IV. The Virginia Declaration of Rights of 1776, and the French Declaration of Rights of 1789
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Appendixes V. “Democratic” and “Bourgeois” Characteristics in the French Constitution of 1791: Property Qualifications in France, Britain, and America
815 -
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Index
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