Publius, short for Publius Valerius Publicola (Latin: Friend of the People), a Roman consul who helped overthrow the monarchy and establish the Roman Republic c. 500 BCE.
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The Federalist Papers were signed as "PUBLIUS", translated from Latin as "public". The intent in the signature is clear - the authors wanted to imply public interest in the debate; further, that the ideals in their works were not owned by an individual but by the public generally.
Most commonly it was Publius
Publius
Cincinnatus
No. It was "Cincinnatus "
The Federalist Papers were all signed with the pen name "Publius," but were written anonymously by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison and John Jay.
No. The authors of the Federalist Papers, Alexander Hamilton, James Madison and John Jay, all signed their essays with the pen name "Publius."
The Federalist Papers were a series of 85 anonymous articles (under the pen name Publius), written by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay. The entire set is available online at federali.st [http://federali.st/]
The Federalist Papers. The famous work that these men wrote was called the federalist papers. These papers were created in order to gain support for the proposed constitution. The Federalist Papers consisted of a series of articles written under the pen name of Publius which was actually Hamilton, Madison, and Jay. Some would call it the most significant public-relations campaign in history.
The Federalist Papers were actually all written by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay. They all wrote under the same pen name of Publius Alexander Hamilton, who masterminded the Papers, wrote the most, about 50 or 51 (some are still disputed). James Madison wrote 29 or 30, and John Jay, who became sick, only wrote five.
The Federalist Papers written by Madison, Hamilton and some other guy who i cant remember cause he wonly wrote lke 2 of them they publish them under a pen name
No one wrote the Federalist Papers under the name "Caesar." All three authors, Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay, wrote under the pen name "Publius." One of the authors of essays that were later assembled into a collection called the Anti-Federalist Papers signed his work "Brutus," the name of the man who killed Julius Caesar. Other Anti-Federalist writers used names like "Cato," "Federal Farmer," and "Centinel," among others.
The author's name is Amanda Quick, a pen name for Jayne Ann Krentz. She writes historical romance novels under the pseudonym Amanda Quick.
The address of the Sheaffer Pen Museum Inc is: 627 Avenue G, Fort Madison, IA 52627