Thomas paine bibliography
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Thomas Paine
American philosopher and author (–)
For other people with the same name, see Thomas Paine (disambiguation).
Thomas Paine (born Thomas Pain;[1] February 9, [O.S. January 29, ][Note 1] – June 8, ) was an English-born American Founding Father, French Revolutionary, inventor, and political philosopher.[2][3] He authored Common Sense () and The American Crisis (–), two of the most influential pamphlets at the start of the American Revolution, and he helped to inspire the colonial erapatriots in to declare independence from Great Britain.[4] His ideas reflected Enlightenment-era ideals of human rights.[5]
Paine was born in Thetford, Norfolk, and immigrated to the British American colonies in with the help of Benjamin Franklin, arriving just in time to participate in the American Revolution. Virtually every American Patriot read his page pamphlet Common Sense,[6][7] which
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Thomas Paine
1. Life
Thomas Paine was born on January 29, to a family of moderate means in Norfolk, England. His father was a Quaker and his mother an Anglican, and it is likely Paine was baptized into the Anglican church. He had some schooling, although his father forbade him to learn Latin, and at the age of twelve he was withdrawn from school and apprenticed to his father to learn the craft of staymaking. When he was in his mid-teens, inspired by the romantic stories of naval life bygd one of his teachers, Paine twice ran away from home to sea. The first time he was intercepted. The second time he enlisted on the privateer, the King of Prussia. The exact sequence of events over the subsequent ten to fifteen years is unclear. He lived in London on and off, but also had periods in Sandwich and in Margate. He continued periodically to ply his skills as a staymaker; he may have done some preaching (in the Methodist persuasion); and in he married a Mary Lambert, who died the follow
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Thomas Paine - LAST REVIEWED: 26 September
- LAST MODIFIED: 26 September
- DOI: /obo/
- LAST REVIEWED: 26 September
- LAST MODIFIED: 26 September
- DOI: /obo/
Aldridge, A. Owen. Thomas Paine’s American Ideology. Wilmington: University of Delaware Press,
A serious look at the American roots of Paine’s political thought. The book expertly weaves a number of narratives in revealing Paine’s American ideology: part political summary, part biography, part textual adventure. This most underappreciated of Paine scholars simultaneously reveals new pieces of Paine’s biography, unearths some of Paine’s contributions to the Pennsylvania Magazine, and makes Paine an indelible yet underappreciated figure in the formation of American political thinking.
Caron, Nathalie. “Lincoln, Paine and the American Free-Thought Tradition.” American Studies Journal 60 ().
DOI: /
A good, precise overview of the modern renewal of free thought as a specifically American phenomena. The article hangs its expl