Wikinventia — Atlas of discoveries and inventions · Exploration Age

United States Constitution — Philadelphia Convention

1787 AD · Transmission: Global
LawLegalNorth American

The Founding Fathers combined three European traditions: from Rousseau, popular sovereignty as the sole origin of power ("We the People"); from Montesquieu, explicitly cited by Madison in Federalist No. 47, the separation of powers; and from Blackstone, the concrete Common Law procedural rights — habeas corpus, jury trial — colonists had invoked against George III.

InstitutionPhiladelphia Convention
Historical regionUnited States of America
Primary sourceConstitution of the United States (Philadelphia, September 17, 1787)
Secondary sourceHamilton, A., Madison, J. and Jay, J. — The Federalist Papers (1787-1788), esp. No. 47
Original languageEnglish
View this entry in the interactive atlas → View in graph →