The US Constitution. The Constitution replaced the Articles of Confederation in the late 18th century.
he wanted to prove it was a law, and it was in the constitution
the king had to obey the law of the land
Article Six in the Constitution describes the federal government's power. It is called the Supremacy Clause because it talks about how federal law is supreme over state.
The law you're referring to is the Land Ordinance of 1785, which established a systematic process for surveying and dividing land in the western territories of the United States. This ordinance introduced a grid system that divided land into townships and sections, a method that is still used in modern land surveying and property descriptions today. The organized approach helped facilitate settlement and development in the west, creating a blueprint for land management that continues to influence land use policies.
2/3 of the states had to approve it before the Constitution became the law of the land. But even then it was only the law of the land for the states that had ratified it..
The Constitution became the law of the land when the required minimum number of states ratified it.
No. The Constitution became the law of the land on March 4, 1789, the date it became operational after being ratified.
The total of nine states had to approve the Constitution to make it "the law of the land."
The United States Constitution was ratified in 1788. This document set forth the law of the land for our new nation.
All of them, eventually. But it was the ninth ratification by New Hampshire that technically brought the Constitution into effect.
It is the supreme law of the land in the U.S.
The United States Constitution is the law of the land, holding supremacy over all other laws. It was ratified on June 21, 1788.
it had to be nine states to approve the constitution before it became a law HI
The US came into existence in 1789, when the Constitution was ratified. This is a point that is anything but minor: the freedoms discussed/implied in the Constitution are not "granted" or "given" by the Constitution or by the government whose establishment it describes. The People who ratified the Constitution as the law of the land are the ones who established the Constitution as law, and therefore it is The People who proclaim the freedoms enjoyed under the Constitution's provisions. This may seem unusual to people from cultures/nations that are many hundreds or thousands of years old. But just a few years before the Constitution, the colonists fought a war to free themselves from the authority of the British monarchy.
The Constitution is the supreme law of the land in America.
The US came into existence in 1789, when the Constitution was ratified. This is a point that is anything but minor: the freedoms discussed/implied in the Constitution are not "granted" or "given" by the Constitution or by the government whose establishment it describes. The People who ratified the Constitution as the law of the land are the ones who established the Constitution as law, and therefore it is The People who proclaim the freedoms enjoyed under the Constitution's provisions. This may seem unusual to people from cultures/nations that are many hundreds or thousands of years old. But just a few years before the Constitution, the colonists fought a war to free themselves from the authority of the British monarchy.