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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 author specializing in early American land and institutions, reframes the constitution as a relationship linking land, people, government, and text. He traces roots to Domesday and medieval England. He shows how land rules shaped expansion, Indigenous dispossession, and why a written constitution struggles with modern urban, democratic realities.
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INSIGHT

Constitution As Landed Relationship

  • Mark Peterson reframes constitutions as ongoing relationships between land, people, and written texts rather than static legal texts.
  • He traces this continuity back to medieval England's Domesday Book which linked land surveys to governing capacity and revenue.
INSIGHT

Doomsday Roots Of American Constitutionalism

  • Peterson locates U.S. constitutional origins in English land administration, especially the Domesday Book's mapping of ownership and revenue.
  • Colonial charters transplanted English landholding rules into North America, requiring dispossession of Indigenous land to fit that model.
INSIGHT

Founding As Realignment Not Single Event

  • Founding was a process: states rewrote charters, adopted the Articles, then realigned into the Philadelphia Constitution to handle western lands.
  • 1787 is cast as institutional realignment to empower national land transformation.
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