Skip to content
FREE SHIPPING ON ALL DOMESTIC ORDERS $35+
FREE SHIPPING ON ALL US ORDERS $35+

Armed Citizens: The Road from Ancient Rome to the Second Amendment

Availability:
in stock, ready to be shipped
Original price $39.50 - Original price $39.50
Original price $39.50
$54.99
$54.99 - $54.99
Current price $54.99
Although much has changed in the United States since the eighteenth century, our framework for gun laws still largely relies on the Second Amendment and the patterns that emerged in the colonial era. America has long been a heavily armed, and racially divided, society, yet few citizens understand either why militias appealed to the founding fathers or the role that militias played in North American rebellions, in which they often functioned as repressive—and racist—domestic forces.

In  Armed Citizens, Noah Shusterman explains for a general reader what eighteenth-century militias were and why the authors of the Constitution believed them to be necessary to the security of a free state. Suggesting that the question was never whether there was a right to bear arms, but rather, who had the right to bear arms, Shusterman begins with the lessons that the founding generation took from the history of Ancient Rome and Machiavelli’s reinterpretation of those myths during the Renaissance. He then turns to the rise of France’s professional army during seventeenth-century Europe and the fear that it inspired in England. Shusterman shows how this fear led British writers to begin praising citizens’ militias, at the same time that colonial America had come to rely on those militias as a means of defense and as a system to police enslaved peoples. Thus the start of the Revolution allowed Americans to portray their struggle as a war of citizens against professional soldiers, leading the authors of the Constitution to place their trust in citizen soldiers and a "well-regulated militia," an idea that persists to this day.

ISBN-13: 9780813944616

Media Type: Hardcover

Publisher: University of Virginia Press

Publication Date: 09-01-2020

Pages: 288

Product Dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.25(d)

Age Range: 18 Years

Noah Shusterman, Associate Professor of History at The Chinese University of Hong Kong, is author of The French Revolution: Faith, Desire, and Politics.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Long Road to the Second Amendment
1. Julius Caesar Crosses the Rubicon
2. Niccolò Machiavelli Retires to His Estate
3. The Fall of La Rochelle
4. England’s Parliament Debates the Militia Act
5. Bacon’s Rebels Burn Jamestown to the Ground
6. Andrew Fletcher of Saltoun Publishes A Discourse of Government with Relation to Militias
7. The Stono Rebels Head for Florida
8. The Minutemen Turn Back the Redcoats at Concord Bridge
9. Hamilton, Madison, and Jay Publish The Federalist
10. Congress Amends the Constitution
Epilogue: The Long Road from the Second Amendment
Notes
Index