New Books in History

Mark Peterson, "The Making and Breaking of the American Constitution: A Thousand-Year History" (Princeton UP, 2026)

May 9, 2026
Mark Peterson, Edmund S. Morgan Professor of History at Yale and scholar of early American history, explains how medieval land systems shaped the U.S. constitutional order. He traces expansion, dispossession of Indigenous peoples, and how industrialization, representation imbalances, and fiscal changes pushed the 1787 framework to breaking point. He urges planned constitutional renovation for modern challenges.
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INSIGHT

Domesday Roots Of American Constitutionalism

  • The book roots American constitutional development in medieval English practices like the Domesday Book's land survey.
  • Peterson argues the Domesday model made constitutions about mobilizing land revenue to support government functions.
INSIGHT

Colonial Land Transformation Blueprint

  • English land‑charter practices were transferred to colonies but collided with Indigenous land systems.
  • Americans reshaped Indian-held territory into surveyed, revenue-producing land modeled on English norms.
INSIGHT

Founding As Process Not Single Event

  • Founding was a process: states revised charters, created the Articles, then retooled into the Philadelphia Constitution.
  • Peterson calls 1787 a realignment to empower national institutions for territorial transformation.
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