Produced by an anonymous Project Gutenberg volunteer

THE ANGLO-SAXON CENTURY

AND
THE UNIFICATION OF THE ENGLISH-SPEAKING PEOPLES
BY
JOHN R. DOS PASSOS
OF THE NEW YORK BAR

Author of "Stock Brokers and Stock Exchanges," "The Interstate
Commerce Act," "Commercial Trusts," etc.

SECOND EDITION
G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS
NEW YORK AND LONDON

Knickerbocker Press

1903

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COPYRIGHT, 1903
BY
JOHN R. DOS PASSOS

Published, June, 1903

Reprinted, August, 1903

Knickerbocker Press, New York

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ANALYSIS
CHAPTER PAGEIntroduction ……………………………………….viiI. Two events which mark the close of the nineteenth century.1 I. By the Spanish War, the relations of the United States to Europe and the East were suddenly transformed…………..3 II. The effect of the war in Africa upon the relations and power of England…………………………………….5 III. The present diplomatic and political map of the world.8 IV. Russia, China, France—their relations to each other and to the world……………………………………….10 V. The Spanish and Portuguese people………………….31

II. The origin and form of the suggested alliance between
                            England and the United States…48
  I. How the suggestion arose………………………….48
  II. The indefiniteness of the form of the proposed
  Alliance…………………………………………..55
  Definition of co-operation, alliance, union, or compact…61

III. The historical facts traced which have been gradually leading to interfusion between the English-speaking people…………………………………………….69

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  I. The different epochs which led to the development and
    expansion of the English-speaking race………………71
    a. The introduction of Christianity into England……71
    b. The consolidation of the different kingdoms of
      England into one………………………………..74
    c. The influence of the Roman Law upon England's
      Progress……………………………………….77
    d. The Great Charters—the Petition of Right—the
      Habeas Corpus Act, passed under Charles—the Bill of
      Rights in 1688—and the Act of Settlement………….79
    e. The union with Scotland……………………….80
    f. Discovery of America………………………….81
    g. The independence of the colonies……………….83
  II. Résumé of the foregoing………………………….96

IV. The inherent natural reasons or sympathetic causes which sustain a union, and which support the historical growth and tendency to the same end examined…………..99 I. Union natural as to time and people……………..100 II. Of the same national family…………………….101 III. The same language……………………………..108 IV. The same literature……………………………116 V. The same political institutions…………………124 VI. The same laws, legal customs, and general modes of judicial procedure……………………………….133 VII. The same tendency and methods of religious thought and worship……………………………………..137 VIII. Intermarriages……………………………….138

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  IX. Other similarities between the two nations,
    exhibiting the natural featur

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