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1824. Feb<sic>y.</sic> 27 +
Constitutional Code. for Greece
Ch. XXIII Sub Legislatures
§. Observations
Federative system
Match 17 The marginals of this — not the text sent by
Lord Byron's Messenger to Stanhope or Lord Byron.
On Chapter XXIII or XXVI and last of the Constitutional Code
Observations
1
Form of government is here
supposed simple in contradistinction
to federative; to add to a simple
one is to subtract from a
complicated one But as to Greece
a natural and probably
general corruption
For of the Legislature of Greece. The Form of Government — shall it be simple or federative?
As between a sensible and a federative form of government<lb?>the supposition in which the present Code is grounded is that
of a simple one. For the more simple the object the more easy it is to conceive: and to add to a
simple form is more
easy than to subtract
from a complicated one.
At the same time in
the case of a regimented Greece
one altogether natural conception/notion and it is believed a
pretty general one, is
that a federative form
will be the most eligible
and perhaps the only practicable one
A natural and general concept is that a
federative form of government be a
as in the present code will be if not the only practicable
one the one for Greece
In this view I am using my endeavours to procure find and<lb//transmitt for the purpose of transmission a copy of the
Federative Constitution of the Anglo-American United States
For some reason however do not a Among the reasons which applied to the case of American
several precept ones are however those which have no
exact application to the case of Greece.
In America, at the time of the original confederacy
of the original thirteen States also concerned in the revolt
against the Government of the mother country, the habit
of independent Legislation was not only already formed but had been so from
the first plantation of each colony. without a vast surrender
of power to a vast amount — a sacrifice to which the repugnance
to which is deeply planted in every human breast no
simple government — no government other than a federative
one could have been formed.
2
Among the which
applied to the U.S. there
are those which apply not
to Greece: at least with equal force
2. In for want of local knowledge, in any
country so widely distant from, and many of them having been in little communication
with each other, such simple form of government would have been practicable
prompt moreover The whole confederacy being engaged in the
struggle against the every where threatening
if one every separate colony had been in of surrendering
its authority to a central government — no such
central government could have found itself in a situation
to act.
3
1. In U.S. at the
time of the original Confederacy
when 12 out
of the existing 26 joined
in the revolt, the
of legislation had in the
instance of each
established from the first
without great
and
and altogether
sacrifice of
but a <gap/?> had
been formed.
Identifier: | JB/042/838/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 42. |
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1824-02-27 |
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constitutional code |
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constitutional code for greece |
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observations |
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recto |
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jeremy bentham |
j whatman turkey mill 1823 |
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admiral pavel chichagov |
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1823 |
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[[notes_public::"march 17 the marginals of this not the text sent by lord byron's messenger to stanhope or lord byron" [note in bentham's hand]]] |
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