SUMMARY: Thomas Paine's book "Common Sense" was the written word that inflamed and drove the people of the colonies to the cause of the American Revolution. It was a clear and passionate document for freedom from the English Crown. Over 500,000 ccopies were sold in just a few months from when it was
Common sense, the rights of man and other essential writings of thomas paine
โ Scribed by Appleby, Joyce Oldham;Paine, Thomas
- Publisher
- Barnes & Noble Classics
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 652 KB
- Series
- Barnes & Noble classics
- Edition
- Barnes & Noble Classics edition
- Category
- Fiction
- City
- New York
- ISBN
- 1411431944
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
African slavery in America (1775) -- Common sense (1776) -- The American crisis papers (selected) (1776, 1783, 1783) -- Rights of man (selections) (1791-1792) -- The age of reason (selections) (1794) -- Agrarian Justice(1795) -- Letters to the citizens of the United States (selected) (1802, 1803).
โฆ Subjects
Political science -- Early works to 1800
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
SUMMARY: Thomas Paine's book "Common Sense" was the written word that inflamed and drove the people of the colonies to the cause of the American Revolution. It was a clear and passionate document for freedom from the English Crown. Over 500,000 ccopies were sold in just a few months from when it w
SUMMARY: Thomas Paine's book "Common Sense" was the written word that inflamed and drove the people of the colonies to the cause of the American Revolution. It was a clear and passionate document for freedom from the English Crown. Over 500,000 ccopies were sold in just a few months from when it w
Thomas Paine's book "Common Sense" was the written word that inflamed and drove the people of the colonies to the cause of the American Revolution. It was a clear and passionate document for freedom from the English Crown. Over 500,000 ccopies were sold in just a few months from when it was written
SUMMARY: Thomas Paine's book "Common Sense" was the written word that inflamed and drove the people of the colonies to the cause of the American Revolution. It was a clear and passionate document for freedom from the English Crown. Over 500,000 ccopies were sold in just a few months from when it was
SUMMARY: Thomas Paine was the first international revolutionary. His Common Sense (1776) was the most widely read pamphlet of the American Revolution--and his Rights of Man (1791-2), the most famous defense of the French Revolution, sent out a clarion call for revolution throughout the world. Pain