In the introduction of R.R. Palmer’s The Age of the Democratic Revolution: A Political
History of Europe and America, 1760-1800, he outlines the movements that changed the structures within Western Civilization, which he defines as being the United States, England, France, and several other European countries. Palmer not only fails to examine over half of the nations in the western world that he discusses, but in doing so he also implies that the uprisings in these countries do not fit into his picture of the age of revolutions. Whether this is due to a view of their cultures as less advanced and their people not worthy of discussion or simply due to their lack of prevalence in the academic world in his time, it is important to show that this…