Search results for " republicanism"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Neville, Henry

2021

A descendant of a noble English family, Henry Neville (1620–1694) was an influential political figure and a prominent intellectual in the tumultuous phase from the execution of Charles I in 1649 to the Glorious Revolution of 1688, that is to say, the period when England went through the crucial stages of the civil war by ending royal absolutism, followed by the republican interlude and the Restoration, and the laying of the foundations of European constitutionalism.

Henry Neville English republicanismSettore SPS/02 - Storia Delle Dottrine Politicheconstitutionalism Political theorySettore SPS/03 - Storia Delle Istituzioni Politiche
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El Nacional Republicanismo

1999

Pensamiento únicoSocialdemócratasLe MondeVidal-Beneyto JoséMovimientos ciudadanosClubs de opiniónDimensión públicaEUROPAEstados-naciónPensamiento blandoPublicaciones: Obra periodística: Columnas y artículos de opiniónCiudadaníaDerrotismo socialLiberalesConstrucción política europeaManipulación oligopólicaCandidatura europeaGlobalizaciónElecciones europeasIntelectualesExplotación del SurDemocraciaConstrucción europeaPOLÍTICANacional RepublicanismoExclusión socialPolíticosEjercicio democráticoRepúblicaPolítica francesaPartidos políticosMercantilización
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Francis Osborne. Repubblicanesimo e Ragion di Stato durante la Rivoluzione Inglese

2009

Francis Osborne (1593-1659) was the celebrated author of The Advice to a Son, a very popular book in his days. He also wrote some tracts and pamphlets during the so called “Engagement Controversy”, that led to the publication of many republican writings to support the new regime. Osborn’s intellectual and ideological contribution was peculiar, because his condemn of tyranny was carried on in a political language that used Machiavellian ideas, the republican concept of liberty and the new and well-known expression “reason of state”.

Settore SPS/02 - Storia Delle Dottrine PoliticheFrancis Osborne republicanism English revolution reason of state intellectual history.
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