Ask a decently well-read conservative or classical liberal to put a starting date on modern government (meaning by "modern" something like free and fair, liberal and democratic, decent and respectable) and nine times out of ten he'll tell you 1688.
It was in the summer of that year that the Dutch prince William of Orange invaded England and took the throne from his uncle and father-in-law, King James II. Under William (to the extent that anything can be said to have been "under William"), Parliament claimed a near monopoly on governing authority and adopted the Bill of Rights 1689, establishing the system of effective non-monarchy that perdures in Britain to the present day — and, the revolution's defenders say, laying the groundwork for all limited, democratic governments to follow, including that of the United States.
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