‘Our Bonaparte?’: Republicanism, Religion, and Paranoia in New England and the Mid-Atlantic, 1789-1830
"‘Our Bonaparte’: Republicanism, Religion, and Paranoia in New England and the Mid-Atlantic, 1789-1830," examines how American politicians used the idea of Napoleon Bonaparte to reflect (or distort) contemporary political issues in the New England and Mid-Atlantic a...
Other Authors: | Luke, Tarah L. (Tarah Lorraine) (authoraut) |
---|---|
Format: | Others |
Language: | English English |
Published: |
Florida State University
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_FA2016_Luke_fsu_0071E_13559 |
Similar Items
-
Republican jurisprudence: Virginia law and the new order, 1776-1830
by: Wren, John Thomas
Published: (1988) -
Religion, Politics, Print and Public Discourse in Mid-Seventeenth Century England and New England: Two Studies
by: Gant, Amy
Published: (2015) -
The popular religious tract in England 1790-1830
by: Knickerbocker, D. R.
Published: (1981) -
Studies in the popularisation of science in England, 1800-1830
by: Kitteringham, G. S.
Published: (1981) -
The Right to Sail: the Atlantic World and the Development of Maritime Policy, 1789-1812
by: Gelesky, Ryan T.
Published: (2014)