1st Edition

The Roots of American Politics From Antiquity to the Early Republic

By John Frederick Martin Copyright 2025
434 Pages
by Routledge

434 Pages
by Routledge

This book examines the ways in which American habits and politics replaced the traditional European republican canon. Before the modern era, European republics relied on procedural complexity in office-filling to arrive at neutral government. They did so with such technical consistency over a long span of time as to create a republican procedural tradition. That tradition collided with... Read more

1. Electoral Procedures of Antiquity  2. Medieval Stirrings  3. City Republics in Medieval Italy  4. The Great Detour  5. Experiments in Early America  6. The Republican Procedural Tradition and Philadelphia 7. Two Consequences of Philadelphia 8. Aftermath Conclusion             

Biography

John Frederick Martin received his undergraduate and graduate degrees in history from Harvard University. His current affiliation is The Bancroft Group, LP, founded in 1989. He has worked in the White House as a speechwriter and in three presidential campaigns. His published works include Profits in the Wilderness: Entrepreneurship and the Founding of New England Towns in the Seventeenth Century (1991) (Pulitzer history finalist in 1992); Civil Rights and the Crisis of Liberalism: The Democratic Party 1945-1976 (1979); and “Fixing the Presidential Nominating System: Past and Present” (2018).