The Bill of Rights was important cuz The Bill of Rights limited government's role and gave the individual certain rights that neither the government nor majority could infringe on.
Declaration of Independence Bill of Rights not the Declaration of Independence.
yes and no the bill of rights was based off of the declaration of independence
No, the Bill of Rights is not in the Declaration of independence. It is a series of amendments to the US Constitution.
No, the Deceleration of Independence and the Bill of Rights are not the same thing because a while after Jefferson wrote the Deceleration of Independence he wrote the Bill of rights!!! :D
The Bill of Rights, the Declaration of Independence, and the Constitution are all stored in Independence Hall. (in Washington D.C.)
US Constitution, Declaration of Independence, Bill of Rights, legal documents.
The Declaration of Independence, the US Constitution, and the amendments to it that became the Bill of Rights were all written in Pennsylvania
The Bill of Rights and the Declaration of Independence are two separate and distinct documents. The Declaration of Independence explains why it had become necessary for the United States of America to declare its independence from England. The Bill of Rights listed a number of things that congress can not do. There is a connection. After the first four long sentences, The Declaration of Independence contains a bill of particulars. Some of the issues in the bill of particulars are in the bill of rights. You can download the entire Declaration and the entire Constitution and compare the bill of particulars with the Constitution.
The Declaration of Independence was written before the Constitution and the Bill of Rights was written after the Constitution, so when it comes to the influence on the writing of the Constitution, the Bill of Rights cannot be the correct answer. Therefore, the correct answer is the Declaration of Independence.
the Bill of Rights is the first ten amendments
no. he was declaring the bill of rights and the rights of independence.
No,It's in the BILL OF RIGHTS