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"The Rights Of Man by Thomas Paine" [NMLH.2003.3.2]



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Catalogue Number
NMLH.2003.3.2

Object Name
book

Title
'Rights Of Man; Being an answer to Mr Burke's attack on the French Revolution. By Thomas Paine, Secretary for Foreign Affairs to Congress in the American War etc., etc. London: J. Watson, 18, Commercial Place, City Road: and all booksellers.'

Place
UK, USA, France

People
Thomas Paine

Events
American War Of Independence, French Revolution

Description
A hardback copy of The Rights of Man by Thomas Paine. The book is open to the title pages, with an engraving of Paine on the left hand page. The right hand page has text: 'Rights Of Man; Being an answer to Mr Burke's attack on the French Revolution. By Thomas Paine, Secretary for Foreign Affairs to Congress in the American War etc., etc. London: J. Watson, 18, Commercial Place, City Road: and all booksellers.'

This is a 1792 copy of The Rights of Man by Thomas Paine, a British political philosopher who lived from 1737-1809. Paine's books included Common Sense, and The Rights of Man, both of which advocated for governmental reform, equality, social welfare funded by taxation, and the abolition of unjust and undemocratic systems of authority, like monarchies and organised religions. Paine's republican beliefs were highly influential on key figures in both the American and French revolutions.

Paine was born in Norfolk, and migrated to the British American Colonies in 1774, where he worked closely with Benjamin Franklin and participated in the American Revolution. The Rights of Man, which defended the actions of French Revolutionaries against the royal family and aristocracy, was viewed as seditious libel by the British government, who feared it would encourage a similar anti-monarchist revolution in the UK. Paine spent the rest of his life in France and the USA. His philosophical work The Age of Reason which criticised religion, and Christianity in particular, led to him being shunned by many former allies, and despite his former popularity, his funeral was only attended by six people. His body then vanished after being unburied by William Cobbett in 1819, who was intending to bring it back to England. Stories abound about what happened to the body, and several people have since claimed to have Tom Paine's bones in their possession.

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