Enlightenment.
the English parliament
The Confederation government did not survive the decade of post-war adjustments after the Revolution mainly because it was weak and unable to effectively govern the newly formed United States. It lacked the power to enforce laws, raise revenue, and regulate commerce, leading to economic instability and internal conflicts among the states. The experience of a weak central government under the Articles of Confederation ultimately convinced many Americans of the need for a stronger federal government, which led to the drafting of the Constitution.
The Constitution had to be written because the original organization of the new states under the Articles of Confederation failed to turn the individual colonies into a true nation. Under the Articles of Confederation the individual states retained their own sovereignty, freedom and independence from each other and more importantly from a federal government. States were free to issue their own money, fix their own tariffs, and maintain their own militia. There was no president or federal judiciary. There was a need to stop the states from acting in their own self interests rather than in the interests of the states as a nation. The Articles of Confederation were replaced by the US Constitution, creating "a more perfect union." (Even though the prior union was not perfect and technically there is no such thing as "more perfect.") Mainly, the Constitution provides the framework for our republican form of government. It confers specific authority to each of the branches of government and to the several states. And it provides for certain protections of civil rights that no majority can abridge or abrogate. It was also a response to Shays' Rebellion. Daniel Shays led a rebellion burning down court houses throughout the colonies in 1786. The farmers were in a desperate situation and figured if there were no courthouses, the judges couldn't rule to have their farms taken away. It began in Massachusetts and spread to other states. The states did not have the manpower to back down the militia rebellion, but under the Articles of the Confederation the federal government did not have the authority to step in. Many of the men involved in writing the Constitution were actually nervous of giving the federal government more power so soon after they had fought the Revolutionary War. Even George Washington was quoted as saying "I almost despair of seeing a favorable issue to the proceedings of the convention, and do therefore repent having any agency in the business."
A confederacy is an alliance of independent states with a weak central or national government. In this system, supreme authority is granted to individual states, and the central government mainly acts as a coordinating body for common issues. Examples include the Confederate States of America during the American Civil War and the Swiss Confederation.
There really were no successes of the Articles of Confederation. The only thing I can think of would be our ideas that transferred over to the Declaration. Mainly, the articles were a huge flop in our history. Sorry I couldn't give you what you wanted.
Mainly because it officially combined the former colonies into a single nation - the United States of America.
There really were no successes of the Articles of Confederation. The only thing I can think of would be our ideas that transferred over to the Declaration. Mainly, the articles were a huge flop in our history. Sorry I couldn't give you what you wanted.
The Articles of Confederation were important because they were the first attempt at a body of laws created to govern the new United States. Ultimately, though, they did not last and were replaced by the US Constitution, which has endured since the 1780s.
Mainly their deeds, they formed an armed force, came up with the declaration of independence, and articles of confederation
Shays Rebellion was an armed rebellion that occurred in Massachusetts starting in 1786, motivated partially by post-war financial difficulties and comprised mainly of Revolutionary War veterans. This rebellion showed that the government as created by the Articles of Confederation was too weak and ineffective to deal with the difficulties that the rebellion was motivated by--as well as the rebellion itself.
Shays Rebellion was an armed rebellion that occurred in Massachusetts starting in 1786, motivated partially by post-war financial difficulties and comprised mainly of Revolutionary War veterans. This rebellion showed that the government as created by the Articles of Confederation was too weak and ineffective to deal with the difficulties that the rebellion was motivated by--as well as the rebellion itself.
Enlightenment.
There really were no successes of the Articles of Confederation. The only thing I can think of would be our ideas that transferred over to the Declaration. Mainly, the articles were a huge flop in our history. Sorry I couldn't give you what you wanted.
In U.S. history, there are two Articles of Confederation. The first was formed after the American colonists declared their independence from Britain and created their own government; the second when the southern states seceded from the North. In the second Articles, there was no event that proved they weren't working. They ceased to exist when the South lost the Civil War. The first failed mainly because there wasn't written into it a system of taxation that was equitable for the country to maintain a government, a military, and a presence on the world stage. After the War of Independence, the founders of the country decided that rather than revise the Articles of Confederation, they would rewrite a new Constitution, taking into account what they had learned after many years of war and independent governance.
The framers of the Articles decentralized power in order to prevent the abuses of power that had existed under British rule. They reasoned that, with the bulk of the power given to individual states, no one person could rise to rule over the entire country and start to rule tyrannically.
its mainly the Constitution broken up into sections