by Dan Frampton
King John signs the great charter: June 15, 1215 |
Magna Carta is a remarkably
unremarkable document. A single sheet of parchment, granted by King John in a
field, and repealed ten weeks later, has nevertheless gone down in history as the
beginning of our modern democracy- the first step along the way to limiting the
arbitrary power of our rulers.
Or so the story goes. The
‘Great Charter’ was sealed (not signed, as is often believed) by King John when
faced with the rebellion of his barons. John’s rule had been spectacularly
unsuccessful, at least in the eyes of his most prominent subjects. He had
murdered his nephew, Prince Arthur, dared to collect taxes, tried to marry a
woman who had already been betrothed, been excommunicated by the Pope, and,
most spectacularly, had lost most of his land in France. Faced with armed
revolt, King John had little choice but to give his assent to a series of
restrictions on his power. Magna Carta was never intended to be permanent.
John, hoping that he had placated the nobility, then declared the Pope his
feudal overlord and refused to obey his barons, whom Pope Innocent soon
excommunicated. Prince Louis of France pledged his support for the nobility and
the country was plunged into civil war. War was soon over, Magna Carta repealed
and John dead from dysentery.
Magna Carta: "a remarkably unremarkable document" |
Why then, did the Great Charter
endure? It was just one of thousands of similar charters granted across the
medieval Europe and not copied into the King’s own collection of statutes until
1297. A final and definitive issue of Magna Carta was not sent out to the
counties until 1300 and it was subsequently ignored by later monarchs.
Shakespeare failed to mention it in his play about the era, King John, and
Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell referred to it as ‘Magna Farta’. Furthermore,
most of the original sixty or so clauses, many of which sought to rectify
specific grievances against John, now seem of completely out of date. Few, for
instance, would raise an eyebrow if the Charter’s prohibition on the fishing of
weirs on the River Thames was again enforced.
It is, perhaps, just two
clauses, 39 and 40, that have cemented Magna Carta’s place in our national
story: “No free man shall be seized or imprisoned or stripped of his rights or
possessions or outlawed or exiled or deprived of his standing in any other way,
nor will we proceed with force against him, or send others to do so, except by
the lawful judgement of his equals or by the law of the land. To no one will we
see, to no one shall we deny or delay right or justice.” This is not, it should
be clear, liberty as we understand it today. The concept of democracy would
have been anathema to most in the 13th century and Magna Carta applied only to
the ‘free men’ of England- 10% of medieval society. Yet the meaning is clear to
see. No man, not even the King, was to be above the law.
It is an idea that has echoed
down the ages. It is in the Petition of Right, the English Bill of Rights, the
American Declaration of Independence, the Constitution of the United States,
the United Nations Charter. It is been appealed to by everyone from the
oppressed subjects of the British Raj, to Fascist Sir Oswald Mosley when
protesting against his detention. It is there in outrage against the suspension
of habeas corpus (which was erroneously believed to have originated in Magna
Carta) during the economic crisis that followed the Napoleonic Wars. It is
there in the radical defence of Queen Caroline against the tyrannical George
IV. It is there in the mass petitions of the Chartists. ‘I am prepared to die,’
spoke Nelson Mandela, in fighting to bring the rights he believed enshrined in
Magna Carta to Apartheid South Africa.
Magna Carta has therefore, been
revered not so much for what King John originally granted, but for what it has
subsequently come to symbolise. And surely in world where protestors are shot
dead by military snipers, where corrupt governments remain untouched, where
minorities are persecuted, where war is still a daily occurrence, where women
are second class citizens, and where wealth is concentrated in the hands of a
few, the embryonic freedoms written in Magna Carta remain more important than
ever.
The fight against oppression in
all its forms continues, thanks not least to King John and his Great Charter of
1215.
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