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Author Morgan, Edmund S. (Edmund Sears), 1916-2013, editor.

Title Puritan political ideas, 1558-1794, edited by Edmund S. Morgan.

Imprint Indianapolis : Bobbs-Merrill, ©1965.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe Kansas Collection J Schick  320 M821p 1965    ---  Lib Use Only
Description liii, 404 pages 21 cm.
text txt rdacontent
unmediated n rdamedia
volume nc rdacarrier
Series American heritage series ; 33
American heritage series (New York, N.Y.) ; no. 33.
Bibliography "Collateral reading": pages xlix-lii and index.
Contents Christopher Goodman on resistance to tyrants (1558)-- Henry Bullinger on the duties of rulers and subjects (1587) -- William Perkins on callings (1603) -- William Perkins on Christian equity (1604) -- A model of Christian charity / John Winthrop (1630) -- The journal of John Winthrop (1630-1645) -- John Winthrop on restriction of immigration (1637) -- John Winthrop on arbitrary government (1644) -- John Cotton on church and state(1636) -- John Cotton on limitation of government (1655) -- The Massachusetts body of liberties (1641)-- The bloudy tenent of persecution / Roger Williams(1644) -- The bloody tenent yet more bloody (1652) -- Letters of Roger Williams (1636-1681) -- Provoking evils (1675) -- The people of God (1690) -- John Wise on the principles of government (1717) -- The inalienable rights of conscience (1744) -- Jonathan Mayhew on the right of revolution (1750) -- From the social ladder to the separation of powers (1762) -- Government corrupted by vice (1775) -- Ezra Stiles on the rights of the people (1794).
Summary Professor Morgan, in this unique collection, focuses upon three ideas that lay at the root of Puritan political theory and have had a continuing significance in our history: calling, covenant, and the separate spheres of church and state. The selections show the origin of these ideas in the writings of the early English Puritans before the colonization of America, in seventeenth century New England, and finally in new contexts in the eighteenth century. One may read these documents as primary sources of Puritan thought per se, as sources of American intellectual history, or as sources of a political theory that flowered in the early years of the new constitutional republic. - Foreword.
Subject Political science -- United States -- History.
United States -- Politics and government -- Sources.
Politics and government (OCoLC)fst01919741
Political science. (OCoLC)fst01069781
United States. (OCoLC)fst01204155
Genre/Form History. (OCoLC)fst01411628
Sources. (OCoLC)fst01423900

 
    
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