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Topic: <b>Jeffersonian</b> <b>democracy<



  
 Encyclopedia: <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Republican
Additionally, this party should not be confused with <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy, a term used to indicate the period when the government was run by aristocratic learned men, as opposed to the period of Jacksonian democracy where the common man ran the government.
In addition, some refer to the party as the <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Republicans since Thomas Jefferson belonged to the party and had a major influence on its ideology; it is also referred to as simply the Republican Party, not to be confused with the modern Republican Party.
The Federalists and the <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Republicans held opposing views on many issues.
http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Jeffersonian-Republican   (583 words)

  
 Reader's Companion to American History - -<<b>bb>>JEFFERSONIANb>bb>> DEMOCRACY
The philosophical roots of <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Democracy are to be found in the ideas of the Enlightenment and in natural law that Jefferson expounded in the Declaration of Independence.
As a slaveholder who nevertheless opposed the institution of slavery, Jefferson drew support from both slaveholders and opponents of slavery; the <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Republicans, however, did not include emancipation in their democratic agenda.
But the embargo was repealed before Jefferson left office, and when he retired from political life, he left a legacy of faith in the people and a widening popular participation that continued to shape the development of American democracy.
http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/rcah/html/ah_047600_jeffersonian.htm   (874 words)

  
 <<b>bb>>jeffersonianb>bb>> - Books, journals, articles @ The Questia Online Library
Origins in <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Democracy When political alignments...functions of government and of society, the Jeffersonians advocated a society based on the small...Federalist party came to be known as <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy, based in large part on faith...
Scarsdale, N.Y. A leader of the <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> group in New York state, he was elected to Congress in 1804, but he preferred to accept an appointment to the New York supreme...
James Barbour, A <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Republican CHARLES D. LOWERY...arles D., 1937- James Barbour, a <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Republican.
http://www.questia.com/SM.qst?act=search&keywordsSearchType=1000&keywords=jeffersonian   (1654 words)

  
 Info and facts on '<<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy'
<<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy is named for American (A native or inhabitant of the United States) statesman Thomas Jefferson (3rd President of the United States; chief drafter of the Declaration of Independence; made the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 and sent out the Lewis and Clark Expedition to explore it (1743-1826)).
In its core ideals <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy (A political system in which the supreme power lies in a body of citizens who can elect people to represent them) is characterized by the following key elements:
http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/j/je/jeffersonian_democracy.htm   (225 words)

  
 The Thomas Jefferson Papers - American Sphinx - (American Memory from the Library of Congress)
For most of American history, Jefferson was cast in the lead role in the dramatic clash between democracy and aristocracy, with Alexander Hamilton usually playing the opposite lead.
Grass-roots Jeffersonianism, what we might also call <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> fundamentalism, has a long history of its own, but for our purposes its most instructive feature is the change in its character over the past 50 years.
As a cultural phenomenon, the <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> explosion was not a movement controlled or shaped by scholars or professional historians.
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/collections/jefferson_papers/mtjessay1.html   (6664 words)

  
 <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy. The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition. 2002
For example, where Jacksonian democracy held that the common citizen was the best judge of measures, <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy stressed the need for leadership by those of greatest ability, who would be chosen by the people.
<<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy was less radical than the later Jacksonian democracy.
The movement was led by President Thomas Jefferson.
http://www.bartleby.com/59/11/jeffersonian.html   (165 words)

  
 Democratic party -> Origins in <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Democracy on Encyclopedia.com 2002
Their ideals—opposed to those of the Federalist party —came to be known as <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy, based in large part on faith in the virtue and ability of the common man and the limitation of the powers of the federal government.
In the basic disagreement over the nature and functions of government and of society, the Jeffersonians advocated a society based on the small farmer; they opposed strong centralized government and were suspicious of urban commercial interests.
This group of Anti-Federalists, who called themselves Republicans or Democratic Republicans (the name was not fixed as Democratic until 1828), supported many of the ideals of the French Revolution and opposed close relations with Great Britain.
http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/section/Democrat_OriginsinJeffersonianDemocracy.asp   (818 words)

  
 TNI - Back Issues Archive of The National Interest
Jacksonian America performs an additional service: it makes a major, if unheralded, contribution to America’s vaunted "soft power." It is not simply the <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> commitment to liberty and equality, the Wilsonian record of benevolence, anti-colonialism and support for democracy, or even the commercial success resulting from Hamiltonian policies that attracts people to the United States.
Jacksonians are armed for defense: of the home and person against robbers; against usurpations of the federal government; and of the United States against its enemies.
Jacksonian America is a folk community with a strong sense of common values and common destiny; though periodically led by intellectually brilliant men—like Andrew Jackson himself—it is neither an ideology nor a self-conscious movement with a clear historical direction or political table of organization.
http://denbeste.nu/external/Mead01.html   (12163 words)

  
 <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy is a form of government named for American statesman Thomas Jefferson.
The <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Tradition in American Democracy (1935) very good analysis of TJ's political philosophy
Freedom of speech and the press is the best method to prevent the tyranny of the people by their own government.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffersonian_democracy   (202 words)

  
 Reader's Companion to American History - -<<b>bb>>JEFFERSONIANb>bb>> DEMOCRACY
The philosophical roots of <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Democracy are to be found in the ideas of the Enlightenment and in natural law that Jefferson expounded in the Declaration of Independence.
The departure from true republican principles, as he judged it, had begun with the economic policies of Alexander Hamilton favoring financial and manufacturing interests and the strengthening of the national government at the expense of the states.
The Republicans also reduced the army and the navy and the diplomatic establishment abroad.
http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/rcah/html/ah_047600_jeffersonian.htm   (874 words)

  
 Essay V: 1800-1848
Finally, although <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Republicans celebrated the growing democracy of America, they still conceived of politics and governance as concerns reserved for the educated, well-bred elite; the great body of the people were relegated to the role of appreciative observers who, at election time, would reward virtuous and public-spirited officials with re-election.
In this period, the rule of the "Virginia dynasty" (Jefferson, Madison, and Monroe) brought the triumph of the Republicans -- usually called the "<<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Republicans" to avoid confusion with the Republican Party that began in 1856 -- and spelled the end of the Federalist party.
Second, the Republicans tried to reduce the role of the federal government in public life, causing a corresponding rise in importance of state and local governments.
http://eduref.org/Virtual/Lessons/crossroads/sec2/essay05.html   (2929 words)

  
 H-Net Review: Richard Buel on Federalists Reconsidered
Finkelman argues that "<<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy led to racism, elevating all whites to equality on the backs of slaves and free blacks" in both North and South.
They argue that the scholarly preoccupation during the past thirty years with the transition from republicanism to liberal capitalism has focused disproportionate attention on the <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Republicans as agents of change.
After the Republican triumph of 1800, the Federalists as a party became more outspoken against slavery as they assumed the character of a northern-based minority.
http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.cgi?path=12596949617654   (2865 words)

  
 Essay V: 1800-1848
Finally, although <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Republicans celebrated the growing democracy of America, they still conceived of politics and governance as concerns reserved for the educated, well-bred elite; the great body of the people were relegated to the role of appreciative observers who, at election time, would reward virtuous and public-spirited officials with re-election.
Moreover, the elitist republic of the Revolutionary generation was about to be supplanted by a new kind of polity -- the Jacksonian democracy, in which ordinary Americans (that is, ordinary white male Americans) would shoulder their way into political and economic power despite protests by social and political elites.
The summary response to these questions is that, while the pendulum has swung decisively away from uncritical celebration of Andrew Jackson, his supporters, and his heirs, they are by no means the demonized villains that National Republicans such as John Quincy Adams thought them to be.
http://www.eduref.org/Virtual/Lessons/crossroads/sec2/essay05.html   (2929 words)

  
 <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Republicans
The <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Republicans placed their faith in the virtues of an agrarian democracy.
More books on <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Republicans can be found at Barnes & Noble.
Looking for a book on <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Republicans that you thought you'd never find?
http://www.u-s-history.com/pages/h446.html   (188 words)

  
 Reader's Companion to American History - -<<b>bb>>JEFFERSONIANb>bb>> DEMOCRACY
The philosophical roots of <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Democracy are to be found in the ideas of the Enlightenment and in natural law that Jefferson expounded in the Declaration of Independence.
As a slaveholder who nevertheless opposed the institution of slavery, Jefferson drew support from both slaveholders and opponents of slavery; the <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Republicans, however, did not include emancipation in their democratic agenda.
The departure from true republican principles, as he judged it, had begun with the economic policies of Alexander Hamilton favoring financial and manufacturing interests and the strengthening of the national government at the expense of the states.
http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/rcah/html/ah_047600_jeffersonian.htm   (874 words)

  
 Jacksonian - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jacksonian democracy – A political term characterizing government run by the "common man" (as opposed to <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy)
Jacksonian Democrats – Members of the U.S. Democratic-Republican Party who supported Andrew Jackson
Jacksonian school – One of four U.S. diplomatic schools as described by Walter R. Mead
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacksonian   (119 words)

  
 <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Democracy
History   Western Civilization  World Civilizations  The Reader's Companion to American History <<b>bb>>JEFFERSONIANb>bb>> DEMOCRACY Looking back on the election of 1800, Thomas Jefferson...
In its core ideals <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy is characterized by.....most conducive to...
Thomas Jefferson was a man who believed wholeheartedly in democracy...
http://www.bluedogdemocrats.com/jeffersonian-democracy.html   (184 words)

  
 Eagleton Centers and Programs
<<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> and Jacksonian Democracy, The History of the Early Republic, 1800-1845 (History 557.02) >>The Ohio State University
After 1828, the parties would run tickets for both president and vice president.
Cartoon lampooning President Jackson's imperious style in vetoing Congressional legislation.
http://www.eagleton.rutgers.edu/e-gov/e-politicalarchive-Jackson.htm   (2023 words)

  
 Jefferson s Empire: the Language of American Nationhood
<<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Democracy in New England Yale Historical Publications Miscellany Series No 3
<<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> America notes on the United States of America collected in the years 1805 - 6 - 7 and 11 - 12
http://www.booksbinding.com/28342_jeffersonian-america/peter-s-onuf.html   (92 words)

  
 The Triumphs and Travails of <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Democracy
Chapter 11: “The Triumphs and Travails of <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Democracy
Thus, a disunited America had to fight both Old England and New England in the War of 1812, since Britain was the enemy while New England tried everything that they could do to frustrate American ambitions in the war.
In the election of 1800, the Federalists had a host of enemies stemming from the Alien and Sedition Acts.
http://www.course-notes.org/chptoutlines/apusnotes/Chapter-11.htm   (2419 words)

  
 Unit III Notes: Jefferson to Jackson
In 1835 when John Marshall dies Jackson appoints new Chief Justice Roger Taney who brings key Jacksonian idea to the Supreme Court: the key to democracy was an expansion of economic opportunity
Unit III Notes: <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Era to Jacksonian Democracy
Martin Van Buren became the heir apparent to Jackson
http://members.aol.com/mrremm/private/USHIST/jeffersontojackson.html   (2768 words)

  
 Conversation with Walter Russell Mead, p. 3 of 6
So you look at somebody like Ralph Nader as a <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>>, who sees the Word Trade Organization (WTO) as a corporate, big-government plot against democracy at home and democracy abroad.
Then you've got its opposite, the <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> view, which says the United States government should not go hand-in-glove with corporations.
Wilsonians -- and I think we all intuitively know what that is -- hold the belief in the United Nations, international law.
http://globetrotter.berkeley.edu/people3/Mead/mead-con3.html   (1737 words)

  
 The Last <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>>: A Journal of Ronald Reagan, Democracy and Public Affairs
Thus was born The Last <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>>: A Journal of Democracy and Public Affairs.
The Last <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>>: A Journal of Ronald Reagan, Democracy and Public Affairs
Welcome to The Last <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>>, home of the premier publication about Ronald Reagan and his ideas.
http://www.thelastjeffersonian.com   (710 words)

  
 American America History - <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> and Jacksonian Democracy
<<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> and Jacksonian Democracy are the same in just about every regard.
With all the similarities in their policies, actions, and goals as president, you can see how <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> and Jacksonian Democracy are the same.
By obtaining these materials you agree to abide by the terms herein, by our Terms of Service as posted on the website and any and all alterations, revisions and amendments thereto.
http://www.123helpme.com/view.asp?id=23225   (1566 words)

  
 Dr. <<b>bb>>Bb>bb>>'s Homepage
This site contains lecture notes on <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Era to Jacksonian Democracy Growth of the Nation 1800-1840 by Dan Rankin.
This site contains a essay called "THE AMBIGUOUS DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA," 1800-1848 It's about <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Democracy and Jacksonians Democracy.
My favorite slide that is without an illustration is the one titled "'Factionalism." It simply displays the difference between federalists and republicans in two columns.
http://www.myschoolonline.com/page/0,1871,999-126152-1-101836,00.html   (178 words)

  
 OpinioNet Contributed Commentary
That is why that although their foundational literature abhors the Constitution in both subtle and direct language, their public statements focus almost exclusively on one thing - <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy - that is: the belief that direct or semi-direct democracy is best for America, best for Europe, and best for a high-tech, highly interconnected world.
Little surprise, then, that in short order the disorder of democracy set the stage for financial and military interests to combine in a scheme to anoint Washington as King George I of America so that "order, confidence and credit" might be restored.
What Jefferson meant by "the middle" was that the new United States rejected pure monarchy, pure oligarchy and pure democracy - for all three were known to produce tyranny (and democracy the worst of tyrannies) - and instead chose to mix the best elements of each, while placing checks upon the worst of them.
http://www.conservativetruth.org/opinionet/archives2/ccaf/ccsfo20.htm   (3040 words)

  
 Boston.com / News / Politics / Presidential candidates / George W. Bush / <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy
Boston.com / News / Politics / Presidential candidates / George W. Bush / <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy
Jefferson's political tactics were unworthy of the Sage of Monticello, but his reverence for the First Amendment stands the test of time.
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. -- The partisanship of this poisonous campaign season resonates here at the mountaintop retreat of Thomas Jefferson, a politician who never responded to personal attacks but never dissuaded surrogates from savaging his opponents on his behalf, either.
http://www.boston.com/news/politics/president/bush/articles/2004/08/22/jeffersonian_democracy   (627 words)

  
 <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> - definition of <<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia.
<<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> - relating to or characteristic of Thomas Jefferson or his principles or theories; "<<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy"
This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional.
Of, relating to, or characteristic of Thomas Jefferson or his political attitudes and theories.
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Jeffersonian   (106 words)

  
 Talk:US History:<<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Democracy - Wikibooks, collection of open-content textbooks
Talk:US History:<<b>bb>>Jeffersonianb>bb>> Democracy - Wikibooks, collection of open-content textbooks
During the war in 1812 section its said that the British burnt the whitehouse:
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Talk:US_History:Jeffersonian_Democracy   (134 words)

  
 <<b>bb>>jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy: professoressays.com- professor essays, professor term papers, professor research papers
professoressays.com is a website that has a wealth of free essay abstracts on <<b>bb>>jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy.
If you feel that the abstract matches what you're looking for, you can download the <<b>bb>>jeffersonianb>bb>> democracy abstract directly from professoressays.com.
Athenian democracy began with the rise of Cleisthenes in 510 <<b>bb>>Bb>bb>>.C. and the creation of the Council of 500 (Archaic pg).
http://www.professoressays.com/term-papers/2866/jeffersonian-democracy.html   (277 words)

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