American Revolution

Overview

The American Revolution (1765-89) was a period of political upheaval in Great Britain's 13 North American colonies. It culminated in a seven-year war, the Declaration of Independence, and the formation of the world's earliest modern republic through the US Constitution.

The conflict came during the Age of Enlightenment, a century-long intellectual movement emphasizing reason over tradition and authority. Delegates at the Second Continental Congress framed critiques of British actions as violations of universal human rights and laws. Such principles would form the basis of the Declaration of Independence in 1776.

Independence forced the Americans to develop their own system of government, first with the Articles of Confederation, whose lack of tax power and weak central authority led to a more robust US Constitution in 1789—and inspired independence movements around the world.

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