Magna Carta, also called
Magna Carta
Libertatum (the
Great Charter of
Freedoms), is an
English
legal
charter, originally issued in the year
1215. It was written in
Latin and is known by its Latin name. The usual
English translation of
Magna Carta is
Great Charter.
Magna Carta required King
John of
England to proclaim certain rights (pertaining to
freemen), respect certain
legal procedures, and accept that his
will could be
bound by the law. It explicitly protected
certain rights of the King's subjects, whether free or fettered —
and implicitly supported what became the
writ
of
habeas corpus, allowing
appeal against unlawful imprisonment.
Magna Carta was arguably the most significant early influence on
the extensive historical process that led to the rule of
constitutional law today in the
English speaking world. Magna Carta
influenced the development of the
common
law and many constitutional documents, including the
United States Constitution. Many
clauses were renewed throughout the
Middle
Ages, and continued to be renewed as late as the 18th century.
By the second half of the 19th century, however, most clauses in
their original form had been
repealed from
English law.
Magna Carta was the first document forced onto an
English King by a group of his subjects (the
barons) in an attempt to limit his powers by law and protect their
privileges. It was preceded by the 1100
Charter of Liberties in which King
Henry I voluntarily stated that
his own powers were under the law.
In practice, Magna Carta in the medieval period mostly did not
limit the power of Kings; but by the time of the
English Civil War it had become an
important symbol for those who wished to show that the King was
bound by the law.
Magna Carta is normally understood to refer to a single document,
that of 1215. Various amended versions of Magna Carta appeared in
subsequent years however, and it is the 1297 version which remains
on the statute books of
England and
Wales.
Background

One of the certified copies of Magna
Carta made in 1215.
After the
Norman conquest of
England in 1066 and advances in the 12th century, the English
King had by 1199 become a powerful and influential
monarch in Europe. Factors contributing to this
include the sophisticated centralised government created by the
procedures of the new
Norman systems of
governance and extensive
Anglo-Norman
land holdings within
Normandy.
But after King
John of England was
crowned in the early 13th century, a series of failures at home and
abroad, combined with perceived abuses of the king's power, led the
English
barons to revolt and attempt to
restrain what the king could legally do.
France
King John's actions in France were a major cause of discontent in
the realm. At the time of his accession to the throne after
Richard's death, there were no
set rules to define the line of succession. King John, as Richard's
younger brother, was crowned over Richard's nephew,
Arthur of Brittany.
Since Arthur still had
a claim over the Anjou
empire,
however, John needed the approval of the French king, Philip Augustus. To get it, John gave
to Philip large tracts of the French-speaking Anjou
territories.
When John later married
Isabella of Angoulême, her
previous fiancé (
Hugh IX of
Lusignan, one of John's
vassals) appealed
to Philip, who then declared
forfeit all of John's French lands,
including the rich Normandy. Philip declared Arthur as the true
ruler of the Anjou throne and invaded John's French holdings in
mid-1202 to give it to him. John had to act to save face, but his
eventual actions did not achieve this—Arthur disappeared in
suspicious circumstances, and John was widely believed to have
murdered him, thus losing the little support he had from his French
barons.
After the
defeat of John's allies at the Battle of Bouvines
, Philip retained all of John's northern French
territories, including Normandy (although Aquitaine
remained in English hands for a time). These
serious military defeats, which lost to the English a major source
of income, made John unpopular at home. Worse, to recoup his
expenses, he had to further tax the already unhappy barons.
The Church
At the time of John's reign there was still a great deal of
controversy as to how the
Archbishop of Canterbury was to be
elected, although it had become traditional that the monarch would
appoint a candidate with the approval of the monks of
Canterbury.
But in the early 13th century, the
bishops
began to want a say. To retain control, the monks elected one of
their numbers to the role.
But John, incensed at his lack of involvement
in the proceedings, sent John de Gray,
the Bishop of Norwich, to Rome
as his
choice. Pope Innocent III
declared both choices invalid and persuaded the monks to elect
Stephen Langton. Nevertheless, John
refused to accept this choice and exiled the monks from the realm.
Infuriated, Innocent ordered an
interdict (prevention of
public worship — mass, marriages, the ringing of church bells,
etc.) in England in 1208,
excommunicated John in 1209, and encouraged
Philip to invade England in 1212.
John finally relented, and agreed to endorse Langton and allow the
exiles to return.
To placate the pope, he gave England and
Ireland
as papal territories and rented them back as a
fiefdom for 1,000 marks per annum.
This surrender of
autonomy to a foreign
power further enraged the barons.
Taxes
King John I needed money for armies, but the loss of the French
territories, especially Normandy, greatly reduced the state income,
and a huge tax would need to be raised to reclaim these
territories. Yet, it was difficult to raise taxes because of the
tradition of keeping them unchanged.
John relied on clever manipulation of pre-existing rights,
including those of
forest law, which
regulated the king's hunting preserves, which were easily violated
and severely punished. John also increased the pre-existing
scutage (feudal payment to an overlord
replacing direct military service) eleven times in his seventeen
years as king, as compared to eleven times during the reign of the
preceding three monarchs. The last two of these increases were
double the increase of their predecessors. He also imposed the
first income tax, raising the (then) extortionate sum of
£70,000.
Rebellion and signing of the document
By 1215,
some of the most important barons in England had had enough, and
with the support of Prince Louis
the French Dauphin and King Alexander II of the Scots, they
entered London
in force on
10 June 1215, with the city showing its sympathy with their cause
by opening its gates to them. They, and many of the
moderates not in overt rebellion, forced King John to agree to the
"Articles of the Barons", to which his Great Seal was attached in the
meadow at Runnymede
on 15 June 1215. In return, the barons
renewed their oaths of
fealty to King John on
19 June 1215. The contemporary
chronicler,
Roger of Wendover, recorded the events in
his
Flores Historiarum.
A formal document to record the agreement was created by the royal
chancery on 15 July: this was the
original Magna Carta. An unknown number of copies of it were sent
out to officials, such as royal
sheriffs and
bishops.
The most significant clause for King John at the time was clause
61, known as the "security clause", the longest portion of the
document. This established a committee of 25 barons who could at
any time meet and overrule the will of the King, through force by
seizing his castles and possessions if needed. This was based on a
medieval legal practice known as
distraint, but it was the first time it had
been applied to a monarch. In addition, the King was to take an
oath of loyalty to the committee.
Clause 61 essentially neutered John's power as a monarch, making
him King in name only. He renounced it as soon as the barons left
London, plunging England into a
civil war,
called the
First Barons' War. Pope
Innocent III also annulled the "shameful and demeaning agreement,
forced upon the King by violence and fear." He rejected any call
for restraints on the King, saying it impaired John's dignity. He
saw it as an affront to the Church's authority over the King and
the 'papal territories' of England and Ireland, and he released
John from his oath to obey it.
Magna Carta re-issued
Prince Louis invaded England in 1216, and was proclaimed king in
London in May of that year with the support of the barons. However,
John died from
dysentery on 18 October
1216, and this quickly changed the nature of the war. His
nine-year-old son
Henry was
next in line for the throne. The royalists believed the rebel
barons would find the idea of loyalty to the child Henry more
palatable, so the boy was swiftly crowned Henry III in late October
1216, Louis's support for the English throne collapsed (he would go
on to reign in France as Louis VIII), and the war ended.
Henry's
regent reissued Magna Carta in his
name on 12 November 1216, omitting some clauses, such as clause 61,
and again in 1217. When he turned 18 in 1225, Henry III reissued
Magna Carta, this time in a shorter version with only 37
articles.
Henry III ruled for 56 years (the longest reign of an
English Monarch in the Medieval period) so
that by the time of his death in 1272, Magna Carta had become a
settled part of English legal precedent.
The
Parliament of Henry III's
son and heir,
Edward I, reissued
Magna Carta for the final time on 12 October 1297, as part of a
statute called
Confirmatio cartarum,
reconfirming Henry III's shorter version of Magna Carta from
1225.
Content
Magna Carta was originally written in Latin. A large part of Magna
Carta was copied, nearly word for word, from the
Charter of Liberties of
Henry I, issued when Henry I ascended to
the throne in 1100, which bound the king to certain laws regarding
the treatment of church officials and nobles, effectively granting
certain civil liberties to the church and the English
nobility.
Magna carta cum statutis angliae, (Great Charter with English
Statutes) page 1 of manuscript, fourteenth century.
The document commonly known as Magna Carta today is not the 1215
charter but a later charter of 1225, and is usually shown in the
form of The Charter of 1297 when it was confirmed by Edward I. At
the time of the 1215 charter, many of the provisions were not meant
to make long term changes but simply to right the immediate wrongs,
and therefore The Charter was reissued three times in the reign of
Henry III (1216, 1217 and 1225) in order to provide for an updated
version. After this, each individual king for the next two hundred
years (until
Henry V in 1416)
personally confirmed the 1225 charter in his own charter.
Rights still in force today
For modern times, the most enduring legacy of Magna Carta is
considered the right of
habeas
corpus. This right arises from what are now known as
clauses 36, 38, 39, and 40 of the 1215 Magna Carta.
As the most recent version, it is the 1297 Charter which remains in
legal force in
England and Wales.
Using the clauses in the 1297 charter (the content and numbering
are somewhat different from the 1215 Charter): Clause 1 guarantees
the freedom of the English Church. Although this originally meant
freedom from the King, later in history it was used for different
purposes (see below). Clause 9 guarantees the "ancient liberties"
of the City of London. Clause 29 guarantees a right to
due process.
The repeal of clause 26 in 1829 was the first time a clause of
Magna Carta was repealed. With the document's perceived protected
status broken, in 150 years nearly the whole charter was repealed,
leaving just Clauses 1, 9, and 29 still in force after 1969.
Most of it
was repealed in England and Wales by the Statute Law Revision Act 1863,
and in Ireland
by the
Statute Law
Revision Act 1872.
| Clause |
Repealing Act |
| II |
Statute Law Revision Act 1863 and Statute Law (Ireland)
Revision Act 1872 |
| III |
Statute Law Revision Act 1863 and Statute Law (Ireland)
Revision Act 1872 |
| IV |
Statute Law Revision Act 1863 and Statute Law (Ireland)
Revision Act 1872 |
| V |
Statute Law Revision Act 1863 and Statute Law (Ireland)
Revision Act 1872 |
| VI |
Statute Law Revision Act 1863 and Statute Law (Ireland)
Revision Act 1872 |
| VII |
Administration of
Estates Act 1925, Administration of Estates Act (Northern
Ireland) 1955 and Statute Law (Repeals) Act 1969 |
| VIII |
Statute Law (Repeals) Act 1969 |
| X |
Statute Law Revision Act 1948 |
| XI |
Civil Procedure Acts Repeal Act 1879 |
| XII |
Civil Procedure Acts Repeal Act 1879 |
| XIII |
Statute Law Revision Act 1863 and Statute Law (Ireland)
Revision Act 1872 |
| XIV |
Criminal Law Act 1967 and
Criminal Law Act (Northern Ireland) 1967 |
| XV |
Statute Law (Repeals) Act 1969 |
| XVI |
Statute Law (Repeals) Act 1969 |
| XVII |
Statute Law Revision Act 1892 |
| XVIII |
Crown Proceedings Act
1947 |
| XIX |
Statute Law Revision Act 1863 and Statute Law (Ireland)
Revision Act 1872 |
| XX |
Statute Law Revision Act 1863 and Statute Law (Ireland)
Revision Act 1872 |
| XXI |
Statute Law Revision Act 1863 and Statute Law (Ireland)
Revision Act 1872 |
| XXII |
Statute Law Revision Act 1948 |
| XXIII |
Statute Law (Repeals) Act 1969 |
| XXIV |
Statute Law Revision Act 1863 and Statute Law (Ireland)
Revision Act 1872 |
| XXV |
Statute Law Revision Act 1948 |
| XXVI |
Offences
against the Person Act 1828 and Offences Against the Person
(Ireland) Act 1829 |
| XXVII |
Statute Law Revision Act 1863 and Statute Law (Ireland)
Revision Act 1872 |
| XXVIII |
Statute Law Revision Act 1863 and Statute Law (Ireland)
Revision Act 1872 |
| XXX |
Statute Law (Repeals) Act 1969 |
| XXXI |
Statute Law Revision Act 1863 and Statute Law (Ireland)
Revision Act 1872 |
| XXXII |
Statute Law Revision Act 1887 |
| XXXIII |
Statute Law Revision Act 1863 and Statute Law (Ireland)
Revision Act 1872 |
| XXXIV |
Statute Law Revision Act 1863 and Statute Law (Ireland)
Revision Act 1872 |
| XXXV |
Sheriffs Act 1887 |
| XXXVI |
Statute Law Revision Act 1863 and Statute Law (Ireland)
Revision Act 1872 |
| XXXVII |
Statute Law Revision Act 1863 and Statute Law (Ireland)
Revision Act 1872 |
Feudal rights still in place in 1225
Several clauses were present in the 1225 charter but are no longer
in force and would have no real place in the post-feudal world.
Clauses 2 to 7 refer to the feudal death duties, defining the
amounts and what to do if an heir to a fiefdom is underage or is a
widow. Clause 23 provides no town or person should be forced to
build a bridge across a river. Clause 33 demands the removal of all
fish weirs. Clause 43 gives special
provision for tax on reverted estates and Clause 44 states that
forest law should only apply to those in the king's forest.
Feudal rights not in the 1225 charter
Some provisions have no bearing in the world today, since they are
feudal rights and were not even included in the 1225 charter.
Clauses 9 to 12, 14 to 16, and 25 to 26 deal with debt and taxes
and Clause 27 with
intestacy.
The other clauses state that no one may seize land in debt except
as a last resort; that underage heirs and widows should not pay
interest on inherited loans; that county rents will stay at their
ancient amounts; and that the crown may only seize the value owed
in payment of a debt, that aid (taxes for warfare or other
emergency) must be reasonable, and that scutage (literally
"shield[-payment]", payment in lieu of actual military service used
to finance warfare) may only be sought with the consent of the
kingdom.
Clause 14 states that the common consent of the kingdom was to be
sought from a council of the archbishops, bishops, earls and
greater Barons. This later became the great council, which led to
the first parliament.
Judicial rights
Clauses 17 to 22 allowed for a fixed law court, which became the
chancellery, and defines the scope and frequency of county assizes.
They also state that fines should be proportionate to the offence,
that they should not be influenced by ecclesiastical property in
clergy trials, and that their peers should try people. Many think
that this gave rise to jury and magistrate trial, but its only
manifestation in the modern world was the right of a lord to a
criminal trial in the House of Lords at first instance (abolished
in 1948).
Clause 24 states that crown officials (such as sheriffs) may not
try a crime in place of a judge. Clause 34 forbids repossession
without a
writ precipe. Clauses 36 to 38 state
that writs for loss of life or limb are to be free, that someone
may use reasonable force to secure their own land, and that no one
can be tried on their own testimony alone.
Clauses 36, 38, 39 and 40 collectively define the right of
Habeas Corpus. Clause 36 requires courts to
make inquiries as to the whereabouts of a prisoner, and to do so
without charging any fee.Clause 38 requires more than the mere word
of an official, before any person could be put on trial. Clause 39
gives the courts exclusive rights to punish anyone. Clause 40
disallows the selling or the delay of justice. Clauses 36 and 38
were removed from the 1225 version, but were reinstated in later
versions. The right of Habeas Corpus as such was first invoked in
court in the year 1305.
Clause 54 says that no man may be imprisoned on the testimony of a
woman except on the death of her husband.
Anti-corruption and fair trade
Clauses 28 to 32 state that no royal officer may take any commodity
such as grain, wood or transport without payment or consent or
force a knight to pay for something the knight could do himself,
and that the king must return any lands confiscated from a felon
within a year and a day.
Clause 35 sets out a list of standard measures, and Clauses 41 and
42 guarantee the safety and right of entry and exit of foreign
merchants.
Clause 45 says that the King should only appoint royal officers
where they are suitable for the post.
In the United States
, the Supreme Court of California
interpreted clause 45 in 1974 as establishing a
requirement at common law that a defendant faced with the potential
of incarceration is entitled to a trial overseen by a law-trained
judge.
Clause 46 provides for the guardianship of monasteries.
Temporary provisions
Some provisions were for immediate effect and were not in any later
charter. Clauses 47 and 48 abolish most of
Forest Law (these were later taken out of Magna
Carta and formed into a separate charter, the Charter of the
Forests). Clauses 49, 52 to 53 and 55 to 59 provide for the return
of hostages, land and fines taken in John's reign.
Article 50 states that no member of the
d'Athée family may be a royal
officer. Article 51 calls for all foreign knights and mercenaries
to leave the realm.
Articles 60, 62 and 63 provide for the application and observation
of the Charter and say that the Charter is binding on the King and
his heirs forever, but this was soon deemed dependent on each
succeeding king reaffirming the Charter under his own seal.
Great Council
The first long-term constitutional effect arose from Clauses 14 and
61, which permitted a council composed of the most powerful men in
the country to exist for the benefit of the state rather than in
allegiance to the monarch. Members of the council were also allowed
to renounce their oath of allegiance to the King in pressing
circumstances and to pledge allegiance to the council and not to
the King in certain instances. The common council was responsible
for taxation, and although it was not representative, its members
were bound by decisions made in their absence. The common council,
later called the Great Council, was England's proto-
parliament.
The Great Council only existed to give input on the opinion of the
kingdom as a whole, and it only had power to control scutage until
1258 when Henry III got into debt fighting in
Sicily for the pope. The barons agreed to a tax in
exchange for reform, leading to the
Provisions of Oxford. But Henry got a
papal bull allowing him to set aside the
provisions and in 1262 told royal officers to ignore the provisions
and only to obey Magna Carta.
The barons revolted and seized the Tower of
London
, the Cinque ports and
Gloucester
. Initially the King surrendered, but when
Louis IX of France arbitrated in
favour of Henry, Henry crushed the rebellion. Later he ceded
somewhat, passing the
Statute of
Marlborough in 1267, which allowed writs for breaches of Magna
Carta to be free of charge, enabling anyone to have standing to
apply the Charter.
This secured the position of the Great Council forever, but its
powers were still very limited. The council originally only met
three times per year and so was subservient to the King's council,
Curiae Regis, who, unlike the Great
Council, followed the king wherever he went.
Still, in some senses the council was an early form of parliament.
It had the power to meet outside the authority of the King and was
not appointed by him. While executive government descends from the
Curiae Regis, parliament descends from the Great Council, which was
later called
the parliamentum. However, the Great Council
was very different from modern parliament. There were no knights,
let alone commons, and it was composed of the most powerful men,
rather than elected citizens.
Magna Carta had little effect on subsequent development of
parliament until the Tudor period. Knights and county
representatives attended the Great Council (
Simon de Montfort's
Parliament), and the council became far more representative under
the model parliament of
Edward I
which included two knights from each county, two burgesses from
each borough and two citizens from each city. The Commons separated
from the Lords in 1341. The right of the Commons to exclusively
sanction taxes (based on a withdrawn provision of Magna Carta) was
re-asserted in 1407, although it was not in force in this period.
The power
vested in the Great Council by, albeit withdrawn, Clause 14 of
Magna Carta became vested in the House of
Commons
but Magna Carta was all but forgotten for about a
century, until the Tudors.
Tudor dynasty (1485 - 1603)
Magna Carta was the first entry on the statute books, but after
1472, it was not mentioned for a period of nearly 100 years. There
was much ignorance about the document. The few who did know about
the document spoke of a good king being forced by an unstable pope
and rebellious barons "to attaine the shadow of seeming liberties"
and that it was a product of a wrongful rebellion against the one
true authority, the king. The original Magna Carta was seen as an
ancient document with shadowy origins and as having no bearing on
the Tudor world.
Shakespeare's
King John makes no mention of the Charter at all but
focuses on the murder of Arthur. The Charter in the statute books
was correctly thought to have arisen from the reign of Henry
III.
First uses of the charter as a bill of rights
This statute was used widely in the reign of
Henry VIII (1509 - 1547) but was seen
as no more special than any other statute and could be amended and
removed. But later in the reign, the
Lord Treasurer stated in the
Star Chamber that many had lost their lives in
the Baronial wars fighting for the liberties which were guaranteed
by the Charter, and therefore it should not so easily be overlooked
as a simple and regular statute.
The church often attempted to invoke the first clause of the
Charter to protect itself from the attacks by Henry, but this claim
was given no credence.
Francis Bacon
was the first to try to use Clause 39 to guarantee due process in a
trial.
Although there was a re-awakening of the use of Magna Carta in
common law, it was not seen (as it was later) as an entrenched set
of liberties guaranteed for the people against the Crown and
Government. Rather, it was a normal statute, which gave a certain
level of liberties, most of which could not be relied on, least of
all against the king. Therefore, the Charter had little effect on
the governance of the early Tudor period. Although lay parliament
evolved from the Charter, by this stage the powers of parliament
had managed to exceed those humble beginnings. The Charter had no
real effect until the
Elizabethan
age. (1558 - 1603)
Reinterpretation of the charter
In the Elizabethan age, England was becoming a powerful force in
Europe.
In academia, earnest but futile attempts
were made to prove that Parliament had Roman
origins. The events at Runnymede in 1215 were
"re-discovered", allowing a possibility to show the antiquity of
Parliament, and Magna Carta became synonymous with the idea of an
ancient house with origins in Roman government.
The Charter was interpreted as an attempt to return to a pre-Norman
state of things. The Tudors saw the Charter as proof that their
state of governance had existed since time immemorial and the
Normans had been a brief break from this liberty and democracy.
This claim is disputed in certain circles but explains how Magna
Carta came to be regarded as such an important document.
Magna Carta again occupied legal minds, and it again began to shape
how that government was run. Soon the Charter was seen as an
immutable entity. In the trial of
Arthur Hall for questioning the
antiquity of the House, one of his alleged crimes was an attack on
Magna Carta.
Edward Coke's opinions
One of the first respected jurists to write seriously about the
great charter was
Edward Coke, who had a
great deal to say on the subject and was influential in the way
Magna Carta was perceived throughout the Tudor and
Stuart periods, although his opinions changed
across time and his writing in the Stuart period was more
influential. In the Elizabethan period, Coke wrote of Parliament
evolving alongside the monarchy and not existing by any allowance
on the part of the monarch. However he was still fiercely loyal to
Elizabeth, and the monarchy still judged the Charter in the same
light it always had: an evil document forced out of their
forefathers by brute force. He therefore prevented a re-affirmation
of the charter from passing the House, and although he spoke highly
of the charter, he did not speak out against imprisonments without
due process. This came back to haunt him later when he moved for a
reaffirmation of the charter.
Role in the lead-up to the Civil War
By the time of the Stuarts (1603), Magna Carta had attained an
almost mythical status for its admirers and was seen as
representing a 'golden age' of English liberties extant prior to
the Norman invasion. Whether or not this 'golden age' ever truly
existed is open to debate; regardless, proponents of its
application to English law saw themselves as leading England back
to a pre-Norman state of affairs. What is true, however is that
this age existed in the hearts and minds of people of the time.
Magna Carta was not important because of the liberties it bestowed,
but simply as 'proof' of what had come before; many great minds
influentially exalted the Charter; by the seventeenth century, Coke
was talking of the Charter as an indispensable method of limiting
the powers of the Crown, a popular principle in the Stuart period
where the kings were proclaiming their
divine right and were looking, in the
minds of some of their subjects, towards becoming absolute
monarchs.
It was not the content of the Charter which has made it so
important in the history of England, but more how it has been
perceived in the popular mind. This is something that certainly
started in the Stuart period, as the Charter represented many
things, which are not to be found in the Charter itself. Firstly it
was used to claim liberties against the Government in general
rather than just the Crown and the officers of the crown, secondly
that it represented that the laws and liberties of England,
specifically Parliament, dated back to a time immemorial and
thirdly, that it was not only just but right to usurp a king who
disobeyed the law.
For the last of these reasons Magna Carta began to represent a
danger to the monarchy;
Elizabeth ordered that
John Coke stop a bill from going through
Parliament which would have reaffirmed the validity of the Charter,
and
Charles I ordered the
suppression of a book which Coke intended to write on Magna Carta.
The powers of Parliament were growing, and on Coke's death,
parliament ordered his house to be searched; the manuscripts were
recovered, and the book was published in 1642 (at the end of
Charles I's
Personal Rule). Parliament
began to see Magna Carta as its best way of claiming supremacy over
the crown and began to state that they were the sworn defenders of
the liberties — fundamental and immemorial — which were to be found
in the Charter.
In the four centuries since the Charter had originally catered for
their creation, Parliament's power had increased greatly from their
original level where they existed only for the purpose that the
king had to seek their permission in order to raise scutage. They
had become the only body allowed to raise tax, a right which
although descended from the 1215 Great Charter was not guaranteed
by it, since it was removed from the 1225 edition. Parliament had
become so powerful that the Charter was being used both by those
wishing to limit Parliament's power (as a new organ of the Crown),
and by those who wished Parliament to rival the king's power (as a
set of principles Parliament was sworn to defend against the king).
When it became obvious that some people wished to limit the power
of Parliament by claiming it to be tantamount to the crown,
Parliament claimed they had the sole right of interpretation of the
Charter.
This was an important step; for the first time Parliament was
claiming itself a body as above the law; whereas one of the
fundamental principles in English law was that the law, Parliament,
the monarch, and the church held all, albeit to different extents.
Parliament was claiming exactly what Magna Carta wanted to prevent
the king from claiming, a claim of not being subject to any higher
form of power. This was not claimed until ten years after the death
of Lord Coke, but he would not have agreed with this, because he
claimed in the
English
Constitution the law was supreme and all bodies of government
were subservient to the supreme law, which is to say the common
law, as embodied in the Great Charter. These early discussions of
Parliament sovereignty seemed to only involve the Charter as the
entrenched law, and the discussions were simply about whether
Parliament had enough power to repeal the document.
Although it was important for Parliament to be able to claim
themselves more powerful than the King in the forthcoming struggle,
the Charter provided for this very provision. Clause 61 of the
Charter enables people to swear allegiance to what became the Great
Council and later Parliament and therefore to renounce allegiance
to the king. Moreover, Clause 61 allowed for the seizing of the
kingdom by the body which later became Parliament if Magna Carta
was not respected by the king or Lord Chief Justice. So there was
no need to show any novel level of power in order to overthrow the
king; it had already been set out in Magna Carta nearly half a
millennium before. Parliament was not ready to repeal the Charter
yet however, and in fact, it was cited as the reason why
ship money was illegal (the first time Parliament
overruled the king).
Trial of Archbishop Laud
Further proof of the significance of Magna Carta is shown in the
trial of Archbishop Laud in 1645. Laud was tried with attempting to
subvert the laws of England including writing a condemnation of
Magna Carta claiming that as the Charter came about due to
rebellion it was not valid (a widely held opinion less than a
century before, when the 'true' Magna Carta was thought to be the
1225 edition, with the 1215 edition being considered less valid for
this very reason). However, Laud was not trying to say that Magna
Carta was evil, and he actually used the document in his defence.
He claimed his trial was against the right of the freedom of the
church (as the Bishops were voted out of Parliament in order to
allow for parliamentary condemnation of him) and, that he was not
given the benefit of due process contrary to Clauses 1 and 39 of
the Charter. By this stage, Magna Carta had passed a great distance
beyond the original intentions for the document, and the Great
Council had evolved beyond a body merely ensuring the application
of the Charter. It had gotten to the stage where the Great Council
or Parliament was inseparable from the ideas of the Crown as
described in the Charter and therefore it was potentially not just
the King that was bound by the Charter, but Parliament also.
Civil War and interregnum
After the seven years of the civil war (1642 - 1649), after the
king had surrendered and had been executed, it seemed Magna Carta
no longer applied, as there was no King.
Oliver Cromwell was accused of destroying
Magna Carta, and many thought he should be crowned just so that it
would apply. Cromwell had much disdain for Magna Carta, at one
point describing it as "Magna Farta" to a defendant who sought to
rely on it.
In this time of foment, there were many revolutionary theorists,
and many based their theories at least initially on Magna Carta, in
the misguided belief that Magna Carta guaranteed liberty and
equality for all.
Levellers
The
Levellers believed that all should be
equal and free without distinction of class or status. They
believed that Magna Carta was the 'political bible', which should
be prized above any other law and that it could not be repealed.
They prized it so highly that they believed all (such as Archbishop
Laud) who "trod Magna Carta…under their feet" deserved to be
attacked at all levels. The original idea was to achieve this
through Parliament but there was little support, because at the
time the Parliament was seeking to impose itself as above Magna
Carta. The Levellers claimed Magna Carta was above any branch of
government, and this led to the upper echelons of the Leveller
movement denouncing Parliament. They claimed that Parliament's
primary purpose was not to rule the people directly but to protect
the people from the extremes of the King; they claimed that Magna
Carta adequately did this and therefore Parliament should be
subservient to it.
After the Civil War, Cromwell refused to support the Levellers and
was denounced as a traitor to Magna Carta. The importance of Magna
Carta was greatly magnified in the eyes of the Levellers.
John Lilburne, one of the leaders of the
movement, was known for his great advocacy of the Charter and was
often known to explain its purpose to lay people and to expose the
misspeaking against it in the popular press of the time. He was
quoted as saying
the ground and foundation of my freedome I
build upon the grand charter of England. However, as it became
apparent that Magna Carta did not grant the level of liberty
demanded by the Levellers, the movement reduced its advocacy of it.
William Walwyn, another leader of the
movement, advocated natural law and other doctrines as the primary
principles of the movement. This was mainly because the obvious
intention of Magna Carta was to grant rights only to the barons and
the episcopacy, and not the general and egalitarian rights the
Levellers were claiming. Also influential, however, was Spelman's
rediscovery of the existence of the feudal system at the time of
Magna Carta, which seemed to have less and less effect on the world
of the time. The only right, which the Levellers could trace back
to 1215, possibly prized over all others, was the right to due
process granted by Clause 39. One thing the Levellers did agree on
with the popular beliefs of the time was that Magna Carta was an
attempt to return to the fabled pre-Norman 'golden age'.
Diggers
However, not all such groups advocated Magna Carta. The
Diggers were a very early socialistic group who
called for all land to be available to all for farming and the
like.
Gerrard Winstanley, a
leader of the group, despised Magna Carta as a show of the
hypocrisy of the post-Norman law, since Parliament and the courts
advocated Magna Carta and yet did not even follow it themselves.
The Diggers did, however, believe in the
pre-Norman golden age and wished to return to
it, and they called for the abolition of all Norman and post-Norman
law.
Charles II
The Commonwealth was relatively short lived however, and when
Charles II took the throne in 1660, he vowed to respect both the
common law and the Charter. Parliament was established as the
everyday government of Britain, independent of the King but not
more powerful. However, the struggles based on the Charter were far
from over and took on the form of the struggle for supremacy
between the two Houses of Parliament.
Within Parliament
In 1664,
the British navy seized Dutch lands in both Africa and America leading to
full-scale war with the Netherlands
in 1665. The
Lord
Chancellor Edward
Lord Clarendon, resisted an alliance with the Spanish and
Swedes in favour of maintaining a relationship with the French, who
were the allies of the Dutch. This lack of a coherent policy led to
the
Second Anglo-Dutch War
(1665-67), with the Dutch burning ships in the docks at Chatham,
and the blame was placed on Clarendon. The Commons demanded that
Clarendon be indicted before the Lords, but the Lords refused,
citing the due process requirements of the Charter, giving
Clarendon the time to escape to Europe.
A very similar set of events followed in 1678 when the Commons
asked the Lords to indict
Thomas Lord Danby on a
charge of fraternising with the French. As with Clarendon the Lords
refused, again citing Magna Carta and their own supremacy as the
upper house. Before the quarrel could be resolved, Charles
dissolved the Parliament. When Parliament was re-seated in 1681,
again the Commons attempted to force an indictment in the Lords.
This time
Edward Fitzharris who
was accused of writing libellously that the King was involved in a
papist plot with the French (including
the overthrowing of Magna Carta). However, the Lords doubted the
veracity of the claim and refused to try Fitzharris saying Magna
Carta stated that everyone must be subject to due process and
therefore he must be tried in a lower court first. This time the
Commons retorted that it was the Lords who were denying justice
under Clause 39 and that the Commons were right to cite the Charter
as their precedent. Again, before any true conclusions could be
drawn Charles dissolved the Parliament, although more to serve his
own ends and to rid himself of a predominantly
Whig Parliament, and Fitzharris was tried
in a regular court (the King's Bench) and executed for treason.
Here the Charter, once again, was used far beyond the content of
its provisions, and simply being used as a representation of
justice. Each house was claiming the Charter under Clause 39
supported its supremacy, but the power of the King was still too
great for either house to come out fully as the more
powerful.
Outside Parliament
The squabble also continued outside the Palace of Westminster.
In 1667
the Lord Chief Justice and
important member of the House of Lords, Lord Keeling, forced a grand jury of Somersetshire
to return a verdict of murder when they wanted to
return one of manslaughter. However, his biggest crime in
the eyes of the Commons was that, when the jury objected on the
grounds of Magna Carta, he scoffed and exclaimed "Magna what ado
with this have we?" The Commons were incensed at this abuse of the
Charter and accused him of endangering the liberties of the people.
However, the Lords claimed he was just referring to the
inappropriateness of the Charter in this context, but Keeling
apologised anyway. In 1681 the next Lord Chief Justice,
Lord Scroggs, was condemned by the Commons
first for being too severe in the so-called 'papist plot trials'
and second for dismissing another Middlesex grand jury in order to
secure against the indictment of the Duke of York, the Catholic
younger brother of the King later to become
James II. Charles again dissolved
Parliament before the Commons could impeach Scroggs, and removed
him from office on a good pension. Just as it seemed that the
Commons might be able to impose their supremacy over the Lords, the
King intervened and proved he was still the most powerful force in
the government. However, it was certainly beginning to become
established that the Commons were the primary branch of Government,
and they used the Charter as much as they could in order to achieve
this end.
Supremacy of the Commons
This was not the end of the struggle however, and in 1679 the
Commons passed the
Habeas Corpus
Act of 1679, which greatly reduced the powers of the Crown. The
act passed through the Lords by a small majority, arguably
establishing the Commons as the more powerful House. This was the
first time since the importance of the Charter had been so
magnified that the Government had admitted that the liberties
granted by the Charter were inadequate. However, this did not
completely oust the position of the Charter as a symbol of the law
of the 'golden age' and the basis of common law.
It did not take long before the questioning of the Charter really
took off and
Sir Matthew Hale soon
afterwards introduced a new doctrine of common law based on the
principle that the Crown (including the government cabinet in that
definition) made all law and could only be bound by the law of God,
and showed that the 1215 charter was effectively overruled by the
1225 charter, further undermining the idea that the charter was
unassailable, adding credence to the idea that the Commons were a
supreme branch of Government. Some completely denied the relevance
of the 1215 Charter as it was forced upon the King by rebellion
(although the fact that the 1225 charter was forced on a boy by his
guardians was overlooked). It was similarly argued against the
Charter that it was nothing more than a relaxation of the rigid
feudal laws and therefore had no meaning outside of that
application.
Glorious Revolution
The danger posed by the fact that
Charles II had no legitimate child was
becoming more and more real, as this meant that the heir apparent
was the Duke of York, a Catholic and firm believer in the divine
right of kings, threatening the establishment of the Commons as the
most powerful arm of government. Parliament did all it could to
prevent James's succession but was prevented when Charles dissolved
the Parliament.
In February 1685, Charles died of a stroke
and James II assumed the thrones of England, Ireland and Scotland
. Almost straight away James attempted to
impose Catholicism as the religion of the country and to regain the
royal prerogative now vested in the Parliament. Parliament was
slightly placated when James's four-year-old son died in 1677 and
it seemed his Protestant daughter Mary would take his throne.
However when James' second wife,
Mary of
Modena, gave birth to a male heir in 1688 Parliament could not
take the risk that another Catholic monarch would assume the throne
and take away their power.
Forces of the
Dutch Republic
commanded by
Stadtholder William III of Orange invaded the
country in November 1688 to pre-empt the threat of an Anglo-French
Catholic alliance. A special
Convention
Parliament was called and declared that James had broken the
contract of Magna Carta by fleeing the capital and throwing the
Great Seal of the Realm in
the
River Thames, thereby nullifying
his claim to the throne.
This proved that Parliament had become the major power in the
British Government.
William III
of Orange and
Mary, James
II's eldest daughter were made joint sovereigns in February 1689.
The Declaration of Rights, 23 Heads of Grievances formulated by a
special commission, was read aloud before William and Mary accepted
the throne. They were crowned on April 11, swearing an oath to
uphold the laws made by Parliament.
The
Bill of Rights was passed by
Parliament in December 1689 and was a re-statement in statutory
form of the Declaration of Rights. It went far beyond what Magna
Carta had ever set out to achieve. It stated that the Crown could
not make law without Parliament. Although the raising of taxes was
specifically mentioned, it did not limit itself to such, as Magna
Carta did. However, one important thing to note is that the writers
of the Bill did not seem to think that the Bill included any new
provisions of law; all the powers it 'removes' from the crown it
refers to as 'pretended' powers, insinuating that the rights of
Parliament listed in the Bill already existed under a different
authority, presumably Magna Carta. So the importance of Magna Carta
was not completely extinguished at this point, although it was
somewhat diminished.
Eighteenth century
The power of the Magna Carta myth still existed in the 18th
century; in 1700
Samuel Johnson
talked of Magna Carta being "born with a grey beard" referring to
the belief that the liberties set out in the Charter harked back to
the Golden Age and time immemorial. However, ideas about the nature
of law in general were beginning to change. In 1716 the
Septennial Act was passed, which had a number
of consequences. Firstly, it showed that Parliament no longer
considered its previous statutes unassailable, as this act provided
that the parliamentary term was to be seven years, whereas fewer
than twenty-five years had passed since the
Triennial Act (1694), which provided that a
parliamentary term was to be three years. It also greatly extended
the powers of Parliament. Previously, all legislation that passed
in a parliamentary session had to be listed in the election
manifesto, so in effect the electorate was consulted on all issues
that were to be brought before Parliament. However, with a
seven-year term, it was unlikely, if not impossible, that all the
legislation passed would be discussed at the election. This gave
Parliament the freedom to legislate as it liked during its term.
This was not
Parliamentary
sovereignty as understood today however, as although Parliament
could overrule its own statutes, it was still considered itself
bound by the higher law, such as Magna Carta. Arguments for
Parliamentary sovereignty were not new; however, even its
proponents would not have expected Parliament to be as powerful as
it is today. For example, in the previous century, Coke had
discussed how Parliament might well have the power to repeal the
common law and Magna Carta, but they were, in practice, prohibited
from doing so, as the common law and Magna Carta were so important
in the constitution that it would be dangerous to the continuing
existence of the constitution to ever repeal them.
Extent of the Commons' powers
In 1722 the
Bishop of Rochester
(
Francis Atterbury (a Stuart
Jacobite)), a member of the House of
Lords, was accused of treason. The Commons locked him in the Tower
of London, and introduced a bill intending to remove him from his
post and send him into exile. This, once again, brought up the
subject of which was the more powerful house, and exactly how far
that power went. Atterbury claimed, and many agreed, that the
Commons had no dominion over the Lords. Other influential people
disagreed however; for example, the
Bishop of Salisbury (also a Lord) was of
the strong opinion that the powers of Parliament, mainly vested in
the Commons, were sovereign and unlimited and therefore there could
be no limit on those powers at all, implying the dominion of the
lower house over the upper house. Many intellectuals agreed;
Jonathan Swift went so far as to say
that Parliament's powers extended to altering or repealing Magna
Carta. This claim was still controversial, and the argument
incensed the Tories. Bolingbroke spoke of the day when "liberty is
restored and the radiant volume of Magna Carta is returned to its
former position of Glory". This belief was anchored in the
relatively new theory that when
William the Conqueror invaded England
he only conquered the throne, not the land, and he therefore
assumed the same position in law as the Saxon rulers before him.
The Charter was therefore a recapitulation or codification of these
laws rather than (as previously believed) an attempt to reinstate
these laws after the tyrannical Norman Kings. This implied that
these rights had existed constantly from the '
golden age immemorial' and could never be
removed by any government. The Whigs on the other hand claimed that
the Charter only benefited the nobility and the church and granted
nowhere near the liberty they had come to expect. However although
the Whigs attacked the content of the Charter, they did not
actually attack the myth of the 'golden age' or attempt to say that
the Charter could be repealed, and the myth remained as immutable
as ever.
America
The 1765
Stamp Act extended the
stamp duty, which had been in force on home
territory since 1694 to cover the
American colonies as well. However,
colonists of the
Thirteen Colonies
despised this since they were not represented in Parliament and
refused to accept that an external body, which did not represent
them, could tax them in what they saw was a denial of their
rights as Englishmen. The cry
"
no taxation without
representation" rang throughout the colonies.
The influence of Magna Carta can be clearly seen in the
United States Bill of Rights,
which enumerates various rights of the people and restrictions on
government power, such as:
No person shall be ... deprived of life,
liberty, or property, without due
process of law.
Article 21 from the Declaration of Rights in the
Maryland Constitution of 1776
reads:
That no freeman ought to be taken, or imprisoned,
or disseized of his freehold, liberties, or privileges, or
outlawed, or exiled, or in any manner destroyed, or deprived of his
life, liberty, or property, but by the judgment of his peers, or by
the law of the land.
The
Ninth
Amendment to the United States Constitution states that, "The
enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be
construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people." The
framers of the
United States
Constitution wished to ensure that rights they already held,
such as those provided by the Magna Carta, were not lost unless
explicitly curtailed in the new
United States Constitution.
Parliamentary Sovereignty
The doctrine of parliamentary supremacy if not parliamentary
sovereignty had all but emerged by the regency;
William Blackstone argued strongly for
sovereignty in his Commentaries on the English Law in 1765. He
essentially argued that absolute supremacy must exist in one of the
arms of Government and he certainly thought it resided in
Parliament as Parliament could legislate on anything and
potentially could even legislate the impossible as valid law if not
practical policy. The debate over whether of not Parliament could
limit or overrule the supposed rights granted by Magna Carta was to
prove to be the basis for the discussion over parliamentary
sovereignty; however Blackstone preached that Parliament should
respect Magna Carta as a show of law from time immemorial, and the
other great legal mind of the time,
Jeremy Bentham used The Charter to attack the
legal abuses of his time.
In 1763 an MP,
John Wilkes was arrested
for writing an inflammatory pamphlet, No. 45, 23rd of April 1763:
however he cited Magna Carta incessantly, and the weight that Magna
Carta held at the time meant Parliament was reluctant to continue
the charge, and he was released and awarded damages for the
wrongful seizing of his papers as the general warrant under which
he was arrested was deemed illegal. However, he was still expelled
from Parliament after spending a week in the Tower of London. He
was abroad for a number of years until 1768 when he returned and
failed to be elected as the MP for London; unperturbed, however, he
stood again for Middlesex but he was expelled again, on the basis
of the earlier offence, the following year. He stood again,
however, and was elected yet again, but the Commons ruled that he
was ineligible to sit. At the next three re-elections Wilkes again
was the champion, but the house did not relent and his opponent,
Lutteral, was declared the winner. The treatment of Wilkes caused a
furore in Parliament, with Lord Camden denouncing the action as a
contravention of Magna Carta. Wilkes made the issue a national one
and the issue was taken up by the populace, and there were very
popular prints of him being arrested while teaching his son about
Magna Carta all over the country. He had the support of the
Corporation of London, long seeking to establish its supremacy over
Parliament based on The Charter itself. The fight for the charter
was misplaced and it was merely the idea of the liberties which
were supposedly enshrined in The Charter that people were fighting
for. It is no coincidence that those who supported Wilkes would
have little or no knowledge of the actual content of The Charter,
or, if they did, were looking to protect their own position based
on The Charter. Wilkes re-entered the house in 1774. He had talked
of Magna Carta as he knew it would capture public support to
achieve his aims, but he had started the ball rolling for a reform
movement to 'restore the constitution' through a more
representative, less powerful, and shorter-termed Parliament.
One of the principal reformists was a man called
Granville Sharp who was a philanthropist who
had on his list of causes the Society for the Abolition of Slavery
and The Society for the Conversion of the Jews. Sharp called for
the reformation of Parliament based on Magna Carta, and devised a
doctrine to back this up, the doctrine of accumulative authority.
This theory stated that almost innumerable parliaments had approved
of Magna Carta, and therefore it would take the same amount of
Parliaments to repeal The Charter. As with many, he accepted the
supremacy of Parliament as an institution, but he did not believe
that this power was without restraint, namely that they could not
repeal Magna Carta. Many reformists agreed that The Charter was a
statement of the liberties of the mythical and immemorial golden
age, but there was a popular movement to have a holiday to
commemorate the signing of The Charter in a similar way to the
American 4th of July holiday; however, very few went as far as
Sharp.
Although there was a popular movement to resist the sovereignty of
Parliament based on The Charter, there were still a great number of
people who thought that The Charter was over-rated.
John Cartwright pointed
out in 1774 that Magna Carta could not possibly have existed unless
there was a firm constitution beforehand to facilitate its use. He
went even further, later, and claimed that The Charter was not even
part of the constitution but merely a codification of what the
constitution was at the time. Cartwright suggested that there
should be a new Magna Carta based on equality and rights for all,
not just for landed persons.
The work of people like Cartwright was fast showing that the rights
granted by The Charter were out of pace with the developments which
followed in the next six centuries. However there were certain
provisions, such as Clauses 23 and 39, which were not only still
valid then but which still form the basis of important rights in
the present English law. Undeniably, though, Magna Carta was
diminishing in importance, and the arguments for having a fully
sovereign Parliament were becoming more and more accepted. Many in
the house still supported The Charter, however, such as Sir Francis
Burdett who called for a return to the constitution of Magna Carta
in 1809 and denounced the house for taking proceedings against the
radical John Gale Jones, for denouncing the house as acting in
contravention of Magna Carta. Burdett was largely ignored, as by
this stage Magna Carta had largely lost its appeal, but he
continued, claiming that the
Long
Parliament had usurped all the power then enjoyed by the
Parliament of the time; he stated that Parliament was constantly
acting against Magna Carta (although he was referring to their
judicial rather than their legislative practice) which they did not
have the right to do; he achieved popular support and there were
riots across London when he was arrested for these claims, and
again a popular print circulated of him being arrested whilst
teaching his son about Magna Carta
With the popular movements being in favour of the liberties of The
Charter, and Parliament trying to establish their own sovereignty
there needed to be some sort of action in order to swing the
balance in favour of one or the other. However, all that occurred
was the Reform Act 1832 which was such a compromise that it ended
up pleasing no one. Due to their disappointment in the Reform Act a
group was founded calling itself the Chartists; they called for a
return to the constitution of Magna Carta and eventually culminated
in a codification of what they saw as the existing rights of the
People; the People's Charter. At a rally for the Chartists in 1838
the Reverend Raynor demanded a return to the constitution of The
Charter; freedom of speech, of worship, and of congress. This is a
perfect example of how the idea of The Charter went so far beyond
the actual content of The Charter: it depicted for many people the
idea of total liberty whereas the actual liberties granted by The
Charter were very limited and by no means intended to be applied to
all. It was this over-exaggeration of The Charter that eventually
led to its downfall. The more people expected to get from The
Charter, the less Parliament was willing to attempt to cater to
this expectation, and eventually writers such as
Tom Paine rebutted the claims of those such as the
Chartists. This meant that the educated were no longer supporting
any of these claims, and therefore the Myth gradually faded into
obscurity, and the final claim against sovereignty of Parliament
was erased, and the road was open to the establishment of this
doctrine.
Chartists
The major breakthrough occurred in 1828 with the passing of the
Offences against
the Person Act 1828, which for the first time repealed a clause
of Magna Carta, namely Clause 36. With the myth broken, in one
hundred and fifty years nearly the whole charter was
repealed.
The
Reform Act 1832 fixed some of
the most glaring problems in the political system, but did not go
nearly far enough for a group that called itself the
Chartists, who called for a return to the
constitution of Magna Carta , and eventually created a codification
of what they saw as the existing rights of the People, the
People's Charter. At a rally for the
Chartists in 1838 the Reverend Raynor demanded a return to the
constitution of the Charter; freedom of speech, worship and
congress. This is a perfect example of how the idea of the Charter
went so far beyond its actual content: it depicted for many people
the idea of total liberty. It was this exaggeration of the Charter
that eventually led to its downfall. The more people expected to
get from the Charter, the less Parliament was willing to attempt to
cater to this expectation, and eventually writers such as
Tom Paine refuted the claims about the Charter
made by those such as the Chartists. This meant that the educated
no longer supported these claims, and the power of Magna Carta as a
symbol of freedom gradually faded into obscurity.
Influences on later constitutions
Many later attempts to draft constitutional forms of government,
including the
United States
Constitution, trace their lineage back to this source document.
The
United
States Supreme Court
has explicitly referenced Lord Coke's analysis of Magna Carta as an
antecedent of the Sixth
Amendment's right to a speedy trial.
Magna Carta has influenced
international law as well:
Eleanor Roosevelt referred to the
Universal Declaration of
Human Rights as "a Magna Carta for all mankind". Magna Carta is
thought to be the crucial turning point in the struggle to
establish freedom and a key element in the transformation of
constitutional thinking throughout the world. When Englishmen left
their homeland to establish colonies in the new world, they brought
with them charters that guaranteed they and their heirs would "have
and enjoy all liberties and immunities of free and natural
subjects." (qtd. from wall of
National
Archives). In 1606, Sir Edward Coke, who drafted the
Virginia Charter, had highly praised Magna
Carta, which reflected many of its values and themes into the
Virginia Charter (Howard 28). Colonists were also aware of their
rights that came from Magna Carta. When American colonists raised
arms against England, they were fighting not so much for new
freedom, but to preserve liberties, many of which dated back to the
13th century Magna Carta. In 1787 when the representatives of
America gathered to draft a constitution, they built upon the legal
system they knew and admired:
English
common law that had evolved from Magna Carta (National
Archives).
The ideas addressed in the great charter that are found today are
particularly obvious. The American Constitution is the "
supreme law of the land," recalling
the manner in which Magna Carta had come to be regarded as
fundamental law. This heritage is quite apparent. In comparing
Magna Carta with the Bill of Rights: the
Fifth
Amendment guarantees: "No person shall be deprived of life,
liberty or property without due process of law." In addition, the
United States Constitution included a similar writ in the
Suspension Clause, article 1, section 9:
"The privilege of the writ
habeas
corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in cases of
rebellion or invasion, the public safety may require it." Written
575 years earlier, Magna Carta states, "No free man shall be taken,
imprisoned, disseised, outlawed, banished, or in any way destroyed,
not will we proceed against or prosecute him, except by the lawful
judgment of his peers and by the law of the land." (qtd. in Howard
pg VI: Foreword). Each of these proclaim no man may be imprisoned
or detained without proof that they did wrong.
Jews in England
Magna Carta contained two articles related to money lending and
Jews in England. Jewish involvement
with money lending caused Christian resentment, because the Church
forbade
usury; it was seen as
vice and was punishable by
excommunication, although Jews, as
non-Christians, could not be excommunicated and were thus in a
legal grey area. Secular leaders, unlike the Church, tolerated the
practice of Jewish usury because it gave the leaders opportunity
for personal enrichment. This resulted in a complicated legal
situation: debtors were frequently trying to bring their Jewish
creditors before Church courts, where debts would be absolved as
illegal, while the Jews were trying to get their debtors tried in
secular courts, where they would be able to collect plus interest.
The relations between the debtors and creditors would often become
very nasty. There were many attempts over centuries to resolve this
problem, and Magna Carta contains one example of the legal code of
the time on this issue:
- If one who has borrowed from the Jews any sum, great or
small, die before that loan be repaid, the debt shall not bear
interest while the heir is under age, of whomsoever he may hold;
and if the debt fall into our hands, we will not take anything
except the principal sum contained in the bond. And if
anyone die indebted to the Jews, his wife shall have her dower and
pay nothing of that debt; and if any children of the deceased are
left under age, necessaries shall be provided for them in keeping
with the holding of the deceased; and out of the residue the debt
shall be paid, reserving, however, service due to feudal lords; in
like manner let it be done touching debts due to others than
Jews.
After the Pope annulled Magna Carta, future versions contained no
mention of Jews. The Church saw Jews as a threat to their
authority, and the welfare of Christians, because of their special
relationship to Kings as moneylenders. "Jews are the sponges of
kings," wrote the
theologian William de
Montibus, "they are
bloodsucker of Christian
purses, by whose robbery kings dispoil and deprive poor men of
their goods." Thus the specific singling out of Jewish moneylenders
seen in Magna Carta originated in part because of Christian nobles
who permitted the otherwise illegal activity of usury, a symptom of
the larger ongoing
power struggle between
Church and State during the Middle Ages.
Popular perceptions
Symbol and practice
Magna
Carta is often a symbol for the first time the citizens of England
were granted rights against an absolute
king. However, in practice the Commons could not enforce
Magna Carta in the few situations where it applied to them, so its
reach was limited. Also, a large part of Magna Carta was copied,
nearly word for word, from the Charter of Liberties of
Henry I, issued when Henry I rose to the
throne in 1100, which bound the king to laws which effectively
granted certain civil liberties to the church and the English
nobility.
Many documents form Magna Carta
The document commonly known as Magna Carta today is not the 1215
charter, but a later charter of 1225, and is usually shown in the
form of the Charter of 1297 when it was confirmed by Edward I. At
the time of the 1215 charter, many of the provisions were not meant
to make long-term changes but simply to right some immediate
wrongs; therefore, the Charter was reissued three times in the
reign of Henry III (1216, 1217 and 1225). After this, each king for
the next two hundred years (until
Henry V in 1416) personally confirmed the
1225 charter in his own charter. It is not be thought of as one
document but rather a variety of documents coming together to form
one Magna Carta.
The document was unsigned
Popular perception is that King John and the barons signed Magna
Carta. There were no signatures on the original document, however,
only a single seal placed by the king. The words of the
charter--
Data per manum nostram--signify that the document
was personally given by the king's hand. By placing his seal on the
document, the King and the barons followed common law that a seal
was sufficient to authenticate a deed, though it had to be done in
front of witnesses. John's seal was the only one, and he did not
sign it. The barons neither signed nor attached their seals to
it.
America
The document is also honoured in America, where it is an antecedent
of the
United States
Constitution and Bill of Rights. In 1957, the
American Bar Association erected
the Runnymede Memorial. In 1976, the UK lent an original 1215 Magna
Carta to the U.S. for its bicentennial celebrations, and also
donated an ornate case to display it, which included a gold replica
of Magna Carta. The case and gold replica are still on display in
the U.S. Capitol Rotunda in Washington, D.C.
21st Century Britain
In 2006,
BBC History
held a poll to recommend a date for a proposed "Britain Day". 15
June, as the date of the signing of the original 1215 Magna Carta,
received most votes, above other suggestions such as
D-Day,
VE Day, and
Remembrance Day. The outcome was not
binding, although the then
Chancellor Gordon Brown had previously given his support
to the idea of a new national day to celebrate
British identity. It was used as the name for an
anti-surveillance movement in the 2008 BBC series
The Last Enemy. According to
a poll carried out by
YouGov in 2008, 45% of
the British public do not know what Magna Carta is. However, its
perceived guarantee of trial by jury and other civil liberties led
to
Tony Benn to refer to the debate over
whether to increase the maximum time terrorist suspects could be
held without
charge from 28 to 42 days as "the day Magna Carta was
repealed".
Usage of the definite article, spelling "Magna Charta"
Since there is no direct, consistent correlate of the
English definite article in Latin, the usual
academic convention is to refer to the document in English without
the article as "Magna Carta" rather than "
the
Magna Carta". According to the
Oxford English Dictionary, the
first written appearance of the term was in 1218:
"Concesserimus libertates quasdam scriptas in 'magna carta
nostra de libertatibus" (Latin: "We concede the certain
liberties here written in our great charter'
of liberties"). However, "
the Magna Carta" is
frequently used in both academic and non-academic speech.
Especially in the past, the document has also been referred to as
"Magna Charta", but the pronunciation was the same. "Magna Charta"
is still an acceptable variant spelling recorded in many
dictionaries due to continued use in some reputable sources. From
the 13th to the 17th centuries, only the spelling "Magna Carta" was
used. The spelling "Magna Charta" began to be used in the 18th
century but never became more common despite also being used by
some reputable writers.
Copies
Numerous copies were made each time it was issued, so all of the
participants would each have one — in the case of the 1215 copy,
one for the royal archives, one for the
Cinque Ports, and one for each of the 40
counties of the time. Several of those copies still exist and some
are on permanent display. If there ever was one single '
master copy' of Magna Carta sealed by King John
in 1215, it has not survived. Four contemporaneous copies (known as
"exemplifications") remain, all of which are located in England:
- The
'burnt copy', which was found in the records of Dover Castle
in the 17th century and so is assumed to be the
copy that was sent to the Cinque
Ports. It was subsequently involved at a house fire at
its owner's property, making it all but illegible. It is the only
one of the four to have its seal surviving, although this too was
melted out of shape in the fire. It is currently held by the British
Library
.
- Another supposedly original, but possibly
amended version of Magna Carta is on show just outside of the
chamber of the House of
Lords
situated in Westminster Palace.
- One
owned by Lincoln
Cathedral
, normally on display at Lincoln Castle
. It has an unbroken attested history at
Lincoln since 1216. We hear of it in 1800 when the Chapter Clerk of
the Cathedral reported that he held it in the Common Chamber, and
then nothing until 1846 when the Chapter Clerk of that time moved
it from within the Cathedral to a property just outside. In 1848,
Magna Carta was shown to a visiting group who reported it as
"hanging on the wall in an oak frame in beautiful preservation". It
went to the New York World
Fair in 1939. In 1941, after war broke out with Japan,
Magna Carta was sent to Fort
Knox
, along with the U.S. Declaration of
Independence and Constitution, until 1944, when it was deemed safe
to return them. Having returned to Lincoln, it has been back to
America on various occasions since then. It was taken out of
display for a time to undergo conservation in preparation for its
visit to America, where it was exhibited at the Contemporary
Art Center of Virginia from 30 March to 18 June 2007 in
recognition of the Jamestown
quadricentennial. From 4 July to 25 July, the document was
displayed at the National Constitution Center
in Philadelphia, returning to Lincoln Castle
afterwards.
- One
owned by and displayed at Salisbury Cathedral
. It is the best preserved of the four.
Other early versions of Magna Carta survive.
Durham
Cathedral
possesses 1216, 1217, and 1225 copies.
A near
perfect 1217 copy is held by Hereford Cathedral
and is occasionally displayed alongside the
Mappa Mundi in the cathedral's
chained library. Remarkably,
the Hereford Magna Carta is the only one known to survive along
with an early version of a Magna Carta 'users manual', a small
document that was sent along with Magna Carta telling the Sheriff
of the county to observe the conditions outlined in the
document.
Four
copies are held by the Bodleian Library
in Oxford
.
Three of these are 1217 issues and one a 1225 issue. On 10 December
2007, these were put on public display for the first time.

Magna Carta Place, Canberra,
Australia
In 1952
the Australian Government purchased a 1297 copy of Magna Carta for
£12,500 from King's School, Bruton
, England. This copy is now on display in the
Members' Hall of Parliament House
, Canberra. In January 2006, it was announced
by the Department of Parliamentary Services that the document had
been revalued down from A$40m to A$15m.
Only one copy (a 1297 copy with the royal seal of
Edward I) is in private hands; it was
held by the Brudenell family, earls of
Cardigan, who had owned it for five centuries,
before being sold to the
Perot Foundation
in 1984.
This copy, having been on long-term loan to
the US National
Archives
, was auctioned at Sotheby's New York on 18 December 2007; The Perot
Foundation sold it in order to "have funds available for medical
research, for improving public education and for assisting wounded
soldiers and their families." It fetched US$21.3 million, It
was bought by
David Rubenstein of
The Carlyle Group, who after the
auction said, "I thought it was very important that the Magna Carta
stay in the United States and I was concerned that the only copy in
the United States might escape as a result of this auction."
Rubenstein's copy is on permanent loan to
the National Archives
in Washington, DC
.
Participant list
Barons, Bishops and Abbots who were party to Magna Carta.
Barons
Surety
Barons for the enforcement of Magna
Carta:
- William
d'Aubigny, Lord of Belvoir Castle
.
- Roger Bigod,
Earl of Norfolk and Suffolk.
- Hugh Bigod, Heir
to the Earldoms of Norfolk and
Suffolk.
- Henry de
Bohun, Earl of Hereford.
- Richard de
Clare, Earl of Hertford.
- Gilbert de
Clare, heir to the earldom of Hertford.
- John
FitzRobert, Lord of Warkworth Castle
.
- Robert Fitzwalter, Lord of
Dunmow Castle.
- William de
Fortibus, Earl of
Albemarle.
- William
Hardel, **Mayor of
the City of
London
.
- William de Huntingfield,
Sheriff of Norfolk and
Suffolk.
- John de Lacy, Lord of
Pontefract
Castle
.
- William de Lanvallei, Lord
of Standway Castle.
- William Malet, Sheriff of
Somerset
and Dorset
.
- Geoffrey
de Mandeville, Earl of Essex and
Gloucester.
- William
Marshall Jr, heir to the earldom of Pembroke.
- Roger de
Montbegon, Lord of Hornby Castle, Lancashire
.
- Richard de Montfichet,
Baron.
- William de Mowbray, Lord of Axholme Castle.
- Richard de Percy, Baron.
- Saire/Saher
de Quincy, Earl of
Winchester.
- Robert de Roos, Lord of Hamlake Castle.
- Geoffrey de Saye, Baron.
- Robert de
Vere, heir to the earldom of
Oxford.
- Eustace de
Vesci, Lord of Alnwick
Castle
.
Bishops
These bishops being witnesses (mentioned by the King as his
advisers in the decision to sign the Charter):
- Stephen Langton, Archbishop of Canterbury, Cardinal of the Holy Roman
Church,
- Henry, Archbishop of Dublin,
Henry de Loundres,
- E. Bishop of London
- J. Bishop of Bath,
Jocelin of Wells,
- P. Bishop of Winchester,
Peter des Roches,
- H. Bishop of Lincoln, Hugh de Wells,
- R. Bishop of Salisbury,
Herbert Poore aka "Robert",
- W. Bishop of Rochester,
- W. Bishop of Worcester,
Walter de Gray,
- J. Bishop of Ely, Geoffrey de Burgo,
- H. Bishop of Hereford,
Hugh de Mapenor,
- R. Bishop of Chichester,
Richard Poore (brother of
Herbert/Robert above),
- W. Bishop of Exeter.
Abbots
These
abbots being witnesses:
Others
See also
Notes
- Josephus Nelson Larned and Donald Eugene Smith. The new
Larned History for ready reference, reading and research,
1923. pg 1103.
- Within this article dates before 14 September 1752 are in the
Julian calendar, later dates are in the Gregorian calendar.
- Signing of Magna Carta, Runneymede, 1215
- by 9 Geo. 4 c. 31 s. 1
- Gordon v. Justice Court, 12
Cal. 3d 323 (1974).
- Department for Constitutional Affairs - Speeches -
Speech by The Lord Chief Justice - Magna Carta: a Precedent For
Recent Constitutional Change
- Frederic Jesup Stimson, The Law of the Federal and State
Constitutions of the United States; Book One, Origin and Growth of
the American Constitutions, 2004, Introductory, Lawbook
Exchange Ltd, ISBN 1-58477-369-3
- Charles Lund Black, A New Birth of Freedom, 1999, p.
10, Yale University Press, ISBN 0-300-07734-3
- KLOPFER v. NORTH CAROLINA, 386 U.S. 213
(1967)
- Introduction to contemporary civilization in the West.
Columbia University, 1960. pg 419.
- "National Archives Featured Documents: Magna
Carta"
- Sarasin, Ronald A. "Remarks on the Magna Carta", United States Capitol
Historical Society, 12 September 2003.
- Dictionary of Modern Legal Usage, Bryan A.
Garner
- Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of English
Usage
- "Fort Knox Bullion Depository"
GlobalSecurity.org
- Harry Evans, Bad King John and the Australian Constitution
- Magna Charta translation, Magna Charta
Surety Baron Listing, Magna Charta Period Feudal Estates
References
External links