The Anglo-Saxon Century and the Unification of the English-Speaking People

audiobook

The Anglo-Saxon Century and the Unification of the English-Speaking People

by John R. (John Randolph) Dos Passos

EN·~6 hours·36 chapters

Chapters

36 total

THE ANGLO-SAXON CENTURY - AND - THE UNIFICATION OF THE ENGLISH-SPEAKING PEOPLES - BY - JOHN R. DOS PASSOS - OF THE NEW YORK BAR

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COPYRIGHT, 1903 - BY - JOHN R. DOS PASSOS

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ANALYSIS - CHAPTER PAGE Introduction ……………………………………….vii I. Two events which mark the close of the nineteenth century.1 I. By the Spanish War, the relations of the United States to Europe and the East were suddenly transformed…………..3 II. The effect of the war in Africa upon the relations and power of England…………………………………….5 III. The present diplomatic and political map of the world.8 IV. Russia, China, France—their relations to each other and to the world……………………………………….10 V. The Spanish and Portuguese people………………….31

4:29

INTRODUCTION - TO THE SECOND EDITION

2:27

J. R. D. P.

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INTRODUCTION

2:54:44

PRESIDENTS

0:57

STATESMEN

0:32

JURISTS

0:19

SOLDIERS

0:29

Description

A sweeping study of the forces that have drawn the English‑speaking world together, this work traces the evolution of a shared heritage from the early Christianization of England through the unification of its kingdoms, the influence of Roman law, and the expansion across the Atlantic. By weaving together political, legal, and cultural milestones, the author shows how centuries of intertwined development have laid a foundation for a common identity.

The narrative then turns to the practical ties that bind the two nations: a common language, literature, legal traditions, and similar political institutions. It examines how commerce, finance, and mutual security interests have created a natural inclination toward cooperation, highlighting the ways everyday interactions reinforce a deeper bond.

Finally, the book explores the contemporary debate over formalizing this relationship. It outlines three possible paths—absorption, federation, or treaty—and weighs their advantages, offering a thoughtful look at the arguments shaping public opinion at the turn of the twentieth century.

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Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (397K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2014-03-11

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

John R. (John Randolph) Dos Passos

John R. (John Randolph) Dos Passos

1844–1917

A prominent New York lawyer of the Gilded Age, he built a reputation in corporate and financial law and wrote legal works that were widely used in his time. He is also remembered as the father of novelist John Dos Passos, whose fiction often pushed back against the world his father defended.

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