Stamps mark 800th anniversary of Magna Carta

Blackleaf

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Monday, you can hardly have failed to notice, marks the 800th anniversary of Magna Carta, the document famously issued by King John at Runnymede on June 15, 1215. Most people are understandably a little hazy about the charter’s contents (it runs to 63 clauses and over 4,000 words). But they are aware that it was a “good thing” – a significant step in the direction of the liberties we enjoy today.

At the same time, most people think of John himself as a "bad king", not least because he crops up as the villain in the tales of Robin Hood. One academic recently described him on Radio 4 as “an absolute rotter”; another, less constrained, has summed him up as “a s---”.


How was it, then, that the bad king left us something so remarkably good in Magna Carta? Is it the case, some historians have asked, that we have King John all wrong? That he was actually not as bad as legend makes out?

The answer to this is an emphatic “No!” John was one of the worst kings – arguably the worst king – ever to sit on England’s throne.

King John: the most evil monarch in Britain's history


A lecherous traitor, a depraved tyrant and a hopeless leader in war – it’s no wonder his subjects rose up and forced Magna Carta on him


Duplicitous?: a 14th-century depiction of King John hunting. He reigned from 6 April 1199 to 19 October 1216 Photo: Bridgeman Images - Bridgeman Images - art images & historical footage for licensing


By Marc Morris
13 Jun 2015
The Telegraph
2 Comments

Monday, you can hardly have failed to notice, marks the 800th anniversary of Magna Carta, the document famously issued by King John at Runnymede on June 15, 1215. Most people are understandably a little hazy about the charter’s contents (it runs to 63 clauses and over 4,000 words). But they are aware that it was a “good thing” – a significant step in the direction of the liberties we enjoy today.

At the same time, most people think of John himself as a “bad king”, not least because he crops up as the villain in the tales of Robin Hood. One academic recently described him on Radio 4 as “an absolute rotter”; another, less constrained, has summed him up as “a s---”.


John sealing the Magna Carta by Frank Wood, 1925 Photo: Bridgeman Images - Bridgeman Images - art images & historical footage for licensing

How was it, then, that the bad king left us something so remarkably good in Magna Carta? Is it the case, some historians have asked, that we have King John all wrong? That he was actually not as bad as legend makes out?

The answer to this is an emphatic “No!” John was one of the worst kings – arguably the worst king – ever to sit on England’s throne. “A very bad man,” in the words of one contemporary chronicler, “brim-full of evil qualities.” Despite occasional attempts to rehabilitate him, his reputation among academics remains extremely poor.

John’s offences are almost too numerous to list. In the first place, he was treacherous: when his older brother, Richard the Lionheart, was away on crusade, John attempted to seize the throne by plotting with the king of France, Philip Augustus, prompting contemporaries to damn him as “a mad-headed youth” and “nature’s enemy”. He was also lecherous: several nobles are reported to have taken up arms against him because he had forced himself on their wives and daughters.

Most of all, John was shockingly cruel. In a chivalrous age, when aristocrats spared their enemies, capturing them rather than killing them, John preferred to do away with people by grisly means. On one occasion, for example, he ordered 22 captive knights to be taken to Corfe Castle in Dorset and starved to death. Another time he starved to death the wife and son of his former friend, William de Briouze. In 1203 he arranged the murder of his own nephew and rival for power, Arthur of Brittany.


Alex Kavangh, the British Library's exhibition officer, polishes a painting of a fearful King John. Photo: Clare Kendall



On one occasion, King John ordered 22 captive knights to be taken to Corfe Castle (above) in Dorset and starved to death


John might have got away with such nefarious acts had he not also been politically incompetent. At the start of his reign in 1199, he inherited the greatest dominion in Europe — not just England and large parts of Wales and Ireland, but also the whole western half of France: Normandy, Brittany, Anjou and Aquitaine. Yet within five years, he had lost almost all these continental territories to Philip Augustus. Contemporaries put this down to a lack of boldness on John’s part, calling him “Soft-sword”, and he did indeed lack the necessary martial skill that his brother Richard had possessed in spades. “No man may trust him,” sang the troubadour poet Bertran de Born, “for his heart is soft and cowardly.”

King John’s loss of his continental inheritance was deeply shameful, and he was determined to win it back. To raise the massive armies and fleets this enterprise would require, he wrung unprecedented sums of money from England. Taxes were suddenly demanded on an almost annual basis. Nobles were charged gargantuan sums to inherit their lands. Royal justices imposed exorbitant fines for trifling offences. The lands of the Church were seized, and the Jews were imprisoned and tortured until they agreed to pay up. John’s reign saw the greatest financial exploitation of England since the Norman Conquest.

But it was all for nothing. When the king finally launched his long-planned continental campaign in 1214, it was a disaster. John, true to form, shied away from battle when challenged by French forces, and his allies in the north were defeated in a decisive clash with Philip Augustus. He returned to England that autumn with his treasury empty and his dreams of re-conquest in tatters.


Polishing a replica of King John's tomb. Photo: Clare Kendall


With their tyrannical ruler over a barrel, his subjects demanded reform. John dodged their demands for six months, until in May 1215 they came out in open rebellion and seized London. With his capital held against him, the king was forced to negotiate, and obliged to make concessions when he met his critics the following month at Runnymede.

Such is the general background that led to Magna Carta, a charge-sheet aimed squarely at King John and his many acts of misgovernment. The king did not issue it willingly, but under pressure from his opponents and in the hope of buying time. As soon as the meeting at Runnymede had broken up, John wrote to the pope complaining that the charter had been exacted under duress, and the pope obligingly declared it invalid. Within a few weeks both sides were again at war.

King John did not survive for much longer. Worn out by the exhaustion of fighting a losing war, he contracted dysentery in October 1216 and died a few days later at Newark Castle. Magna Carta, however, was unexpectedly resurrected, reissued by John’s supporters in the name of his nine-year-old son, the newly crowned Henry III. Its most contentious clauses, that allowed the barons to make war on the king should he transgress, were removed, but the bulk of the detail remained.

Today the detail is no longer relevant. What we now celebrate is the famous sentiment in the middle of the charter, which declares that a free man shall not be imprisoned, exiled, deprived of his property or otherwise destroyed simply because it is the king’s will. King John had indulged in precisely that sort of unjust behaviour, and his subjects had called him to account for it. This is how the “bad king” ended up leaving us something so good.



Marc Morris is the author of King John: Treachery, Tyranny and the Road to Magna Carta

King John: the most evil monarch in Britain's history - Telegraph

 
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Curious Cdn

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Canada Post should issue a commemorative Magna Carta stamp showing a Toronto cop carding a black guy. "800 years of fuzzy interpretation"
 

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Magna Carta scribes identified ahead of 800th anniversary

BBC News
14 June 2015



Scientists have identified the scribes who wrote two of the four original 1215 copies of the Magna Carta.

They found the copies held in Lincoln and Salisbury were written by scribes based at those cathedrals, rather than by someone working for King John.

The discovery was made ahead of the 800th anniversary of the historic charter on Monday.

Lead investigator Professor Nicholas Vincent said to identify the authors was a "significant achievement".

He said after 800 years it was "certainly equivalent to finding needles in a very large haystack".

The new discovery sheds further light on the Church's role in the creation and distribution of Magna Carta - which sought to restrain the powers of the king.


Scientists say Salisbury's copy was "probably" made by someone working for the cathedral's dean and chapter


Professor Vincent said: "It has become apparent, not least as a result of work undertaken for the Magna Carta Project, that the bishops of England were crucial to both the publication and the preservation of Magna Carta.

"King John had no real intention that the charter be either publicised or enforced. It was the bishops instead who insisted that it be distributed to the country at large and thereafter who preserved it in their cathedral archives."

The project, involving academics from the University of East Anglia and King's College London, found the Lincoln Magna Carta was written by a scribe who produced several other documents for the Bishop of Lincoln and Salisbury's was "probably" made by someone working for the cathedral's dean and chapter.


Charter bearers are carrying a replica of the document down the River Thames as part of the 800th anniversary celebrations


Project team member David Carpenter, a professor of medieval history at King's College, said: "We now know that three of the four surviving originals of the charter went to cathedrals: Lincoln, Salisbury and Canterbury. Probably cathedrals were the destination for the great majority of the other original charters issued in 1215.

"This overturns the old view that the charters were sent to the sheriffs in charge of the counties. That would have been fatal since the sheriffs were the very people under attack in the charter.

"They would have quickly consigned Magna Carta to their castle furnaces."

A replica of the Great Charter began its journey down the Thames on Saturday as part of events to mark its 800th anniversary.

The Royal Barge Gloriana is leading 200 boats from Hurley in Berkshire to Runnymede in Surrey, where the document was signed, over two days.


Magna Carta scribes identified ahead of 800th anniversary - BBC News

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Magna Carta celebrations begin on River Thames


BBC News
13 June 2015


A replica of Magna Carta is being transported down the river

A replica of Magna Carta is being carried down the Thames as part of events to mark its 800th anniversary.

The Royal Barge Gloriana is leading 200 boats from Hurley in Berkshire to Runnymede in Surrey over two days.

Magna Carta was granted by King John on 15 June 1215, establishing that the king was subject to the law rather than being above it.

Twenty-three local people have been chosen as "charter bearers" to relay the document.


Twenty-three local people have been chosen as "charter bearers" to relay the document



Magna Carta was first agreed by King John on 15 June 1215



Charter bearers are carrying the document on board the Royal Shallop Jubilant during the event


The pageant, which started at 09:00 BST, has been organised by Thames Alive, with support from Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead, Runnymede borough and Spelthorne borough councils.

As the copy of Magna Carta is transported downstream, actors will recount its story.

Charter bearers, who live, work or study in one of the three boroughs, will carry the document on board the Royal Shallop Jubilant.


The Queen's Diamond Jubilee barge, Gloriana, is the flagship of the pageant



Magna Carta was sealed at Runnymede but the exact spot is not known


The Queen's Diamond Jubilee barge, Gloriana, is the flagship of the flotilla.

Five-time Olympic gold medallist rower Sir Steve Redgrave, from Marlow, Buckinghamshire, watched as it passed through his home town.

"It's the first row barge that has been built for 300 years so it's pretty spectacular," he said.


Crowds gathered at Clivedon to greet the Gloriana


The event will culminate with the unveiling of a 13ft bronze statue of the Queen at Runnymede Pleasure Grounds on Sunday.

Road closures will be in place during the celebrations in Berkshire and Surrey.

The flotilla is due to arrive at Oakley Court Hotel, Windsor, at 20:00. The replica Magna Carta's journey will pause overnight before commencing at 09:00 on Sunday.


The flotilla passed through Boulter's Lock near Maidenhead


Principles set out in Magna Carta charted the right to a fair trial and limits on taxation without representation.

It also inspired a number of other documents, including the US Constitution and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.


About 200 boats are being paddled or rowed along the river as part of the celebrations



The Queen's barge was blessed during the pageant at Cookham


Magna Carta celebrations begin on River Thames - BBC News
 
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Spokesperson for King John Plantagenet says:

"No good can ever come from this Libtard Socialism. The next thing you know, the Serfs will be choosing the king instead of God doing it and they'll withdraw all of our troops from the Levant and the kingdom will collapse for sure and we will all go straight to hell, with haste.
 
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Blackleaf

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Happy 800th birthday, Magna Carta!











Magna Carta 'changed the world', David Cameron tells anniversary event

BBC News
15 June 2015



Magna Carta went on to "change the world", Prime Minister David Cameron has said at an event marking the 800th anniversary of the document that heralded modern democracy.

He was speaking at a ceremony at Runnymede in Surrey, close to the River Thames, where King John of England sealed the original document in 1215.

The charter first protected the rights and freedoms of society and established the king was subject to the law.

The Queen also attended the ceremony.

Follow live coverage of the event here


The Queen unveiled a plaque marking Monday's events



David Cameron said the document had inspired people across the world


Mr Cameron told the audience Magna Carta would "alter forever the balance of power between the governed and the government".

And he said the document had inspired different generations and countries across the world.

He said: "Why do people set such store by Magna Carta?

"Because they look to history. They see how the great charter shaped the world, for the best part of a millennium, helping to promote arguments for justice and for freedom."

Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby said the document "set the bar high for all of us today".

Earlier, the Duke of Cambridge was shown a new art installation commissioned for the anniversary.

The work, called The Jurors, is inspired by the 39th clause of Magna Carta, which gives the right to a jury trial.

Artist Hew Locke said it was a "great honour" to be chosen to produce the piece.

There will also be a rededication of the American Bar Association's Magna Carta Memorial.

A replica of the Great Charter began its journey down the Thames on Saturday as part of the commemorations.

The Royal Barge Gloriana has led 200 boats from Hurley in Berkshire and is due to arrive at Runnymede on Monday.


The Royal Barge Gloriana has been leading a flotilla along the River Thames to mark the anniversary


Prince William was shown an art installation of bronze chairs by Hew Locke, commissioned to mark the anniversary



Events are also being held in other parts of the country including Salisbury Cathedral, where one of the original copies of Magna Carta is held

There are just four known copies of the original Magna Carta in existence today, from an estimated 13 that were made.

Two are held by the British Library, with Salisbury Cathedral and Lincoln Cathedral holding the others.

What was Magna Carta?




Magna Carta originated in 1215 as a peace treaty between King John and a group of rebellious barons

The original document was written in Latin on parchment made from animal skin

The name didn't emerge until the document's reissue in 1217. It became known as The Great Charter to differentiate it from the smaller Charter of the Forest issued at the same time

Why is Magna Carta so important?



Magna Carta was first agreed by King John on 15 June 1215

By Clive Coleman, BBC legal correspondent

"Does Magna Carta mean nothing to you? Did she die in vain?" asked an exasperated Tony Hancock playing the jury foreman in an episode of his famous Half Hour.

Clearly not. Far from dying, Magna Carta has had a life longer, fuller and more influential than the most optimistic medieval baron could have imagined.

But why is a charter from 1215 which was declared null and void by the Pope within weeks of being written, which doesn't mention "trial by jury" or "habeas corpus" (the right not to be held indefinitely without trial) and which forbids any woman from accusing a man of murder or manslaughter, seen as the foundation of our liberties and our law?

At its heart is the idea that the law is not simply the whim of the king, or the government. It is the great egalitarian legacy of Magna Carta, that all are equal under the law, and all can be held to account.

It is that idea that gave birth to so many of our rights and freedoms, to parliamentary democracy, fair trial, and a series of controls on the abuse of arbitrary power.


BBC iWonder - How did a peace treaty from 1215 forge the freedoms of 2015?

Magna Carta 'changed the world', David Cameron tells anniversary event - BBC News
 
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Blackleaf

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Magna Carta trail: Patrols to protect barons statutes

20 June 2015
BBC News


The 25 barons, including this Expansive Place Baron, are located around the City of Lincoln


Organisers of a Magna Carta barons trail in Lincoln say patrols are being set up to ensure the statues are not damaged.

A helmet on one of the statues, which was knocked off, has been repaired.

The figures, designed by Lincolnshire artists, will eventually be auctioned with the profits going to charity.

Donations made during tours of the Baron Trail will be given to the city's first responders service.

The colourful statutes are displayed in prominent locations in the city.

'Helmet in hand'

Spokesman for the Lincoln Business Improvement Group (BIG) Matt Corrigan said a team of volunteers would ensure the statutes were not damaged.

"We will need to look after them and our wardens team will do that along with other volunteers who will be going out and checking on the barons and making sure they are all in good condition," he said.

"The damage was probably caused when someone tried to climb up it and the helmet came off in their hand. It has all been sorted out now."


The Wings of an Angel Baron represents Geoffrey de Mandeville and its design by Louise Jardin was inspired by the windows of Lincoln Cathedral



The Baron Mayor of Lincoln statue represents William de Hardell and was designed by artist Leah Goldberg



For hundreds of years, Lincoln Cathedral held one of the four remaining original copies of Magna Carta, which is now securely held in Lincoln Castle instead. Between 1311 (when it took the record from Old St Paul's Cathedral) and 1549, when its 525ft central spire collaped, Lincoln Cathedral was the world's tallest building


The trail is part of the 800th anniversary celebrations of the sealing of the Magna Carta.

The city holds one of four remaining original copies of the charter, which was sealed by King John at Runnymede in 1215.

The barons have all been sponsored by businesses or organisations and given their own identity, including the Truck Driver Baron, the Graduate Baron and the Beekeeper Baron.



Magna Carta trail: Patrols to protect barons statutes - BBC News
 
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