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  1. Avalon Home: Document Collections: Ancient 4000bce - 399: Medieval 400 - 1399: 15 th Century 1400 - 1499: 16 th Century 1500 - 1599: 17 th Century 1600 - 1699: 18 th Century 1700 - 1799: 19 th Century

  2. FEDERALIST No. 1. General Introduction FEDERALIST No. 2. Concerning Dangers from Foreign Force and Influence FEDERALIST No. 3. The Same Subject Continued (Concerning Dangers From Foreign Force and Influence) FEDERALIST No. 4.

  3. 4 de sept. de 2020 · Positioning Federalist No. 1 within modern debates on polarization and civility, my new essay just published last week by the Southern California Law Review’s online companion, Postscript, breathes new life into lessons from Alexander Hamilton on the nature of civil discourse that are as much relevant today as they were when they were written in 1787.

  4. The Federalist Papers (Federalist No. 1) Lyrics. General Introduction. For the Independent Journal. Saturday, October 27, 1787. HAMILTON. To the People of the State of New York: AFTER an ...

  5. 12 de mar. de 2024 · Federalist 1 is Hamilton's expression of American exceptionalism and the enlightenment principles that girded the American political experiment.

  6. Federalist No. 51 was an essay published by American politician and statesman, James Madison, on February 6, 1788. It was the fifty-first paper in a series of 85 articles that are collectively known as the Federalist Papers. These articles were aimed at modifying public opinion in favor of ratifying the new US Constitution.

  7. Concluding Remarks. No. 85 (Hamilton) Book Edition, Volume II, 28 May 1788. Appearing in New York newspapers as the New York Ratification Convention met in Poughkeepsie, John Jay, Alexander Hamilton and James Madison wrote as Publius and addressed the citizens of New York through the Federalist Papers. These essays subsequently circulated and ...