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  1. Anti-Federalism was a late-18th-century political movement that opposed the creation of a stronger U.S. federal government and which later opposed the ratification of the 1787 Constitution. The previous constitution, called the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union , gave state governments more authority.

    • 1787; 236 years ago
    • Patriots
  2. Jul 13, 2018 · The Anti-Federalists considered the Federalists to overstress devising governing structures that best control people and their potential worst impulses. By contrast, Anti-Federalist philosophy stressed that small self-governing republics served as natural fonts of virtue, and the abundance of virtue would exert sufficient control on individuals.

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  4. The name, Antifederalists, captures both an attachment to certain political principles as well as standing in favor and against trends that were appearing in late 18th century America. It will help in our understanding of who the Antifederalists were to know that in 1787, the word “federal” had two meanings.

  5. Nov 20, 2022 · Hardcover, 536 pages, $55. Reviewed by Adam L. Tate. The battle over ratification of the United States Constitution between 1787 and 1789 was, Michael J. Faber tells us in his book An Anti-Federalist Constitution, “perhaps the most contentious and divisive war of words in the history of the United States.”. Faber tackles this battle of ...

  6. Virginia and New York became vociferous theaters of partisan campaigning. Federalists John Jay, Alexander Hamilton, and James Madison wrote eighty-five essays that were published in favor of the Constitution. These would become known as The Federalist Papers. To counter, several antifederalists penned their own essays in defense of the ...

  7. Jul 1, 2016 · Hamilton’s Federalist ideology was opposed by the more radical-liberal, individualist, and Nationalist sentiment of the south (a sentiment which is reflected in the Anti-Federalist ideology). The Anti-Federalists, who formed and published their papers shortly before the Federalists, and were led by Henry and Jefferson (and later Madison, he ...

  8. Saul Cornell. The Other Founders: Anti-Federalism & the Dissenting America, 1788-1828. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina. xvi + 327 pp. Appendixes and index. $55.00 (cloth); $19.95. Saul Cornell has been studying Anti-Federalist thought for decade. The first fruits of his efforts appeared ten years published an essay tracing the ...

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