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The achievement of the Magna Charta is found not only in the original meaning understood by Englanders of the thirteenth century, but also in the subsequent application of the document’s principles. The Magna Charta began as a peace treaty between the baronial class and the king, but later symbolized a written contract between the governed and the government, a contract that included the right of rebellion when the government grew despotic or ruled without popular consent.
The Magna Charta also came to represent the notion of government bound by the law, sometimes referred to as the rule of law. The distinction between government according to law and government according to the will of the sovereign has been drawn by legal and political philosophers for thousands of years. This distinction was also made during the reign of King John. For example, Peter Fitz Herbert, an important landowner, complained that his father had been “disseised” of land “by the will of the king” despite evidence that the land belonged to his family as a matter of “right.”
In another case, jurors returned a verdict against the Crown because the king had acted “by his will and without judgment” (Holt 1965, 91). For subsequent generations, in both England and the United States, the Magna Charta signified the contrast between tyrannical government unfettered by anything but the personal whims of its political leadership, and representative government limited by the letter and spirit of the law. The Magna Charta implied that no government official, not even an autocratic monarch asserting absolute power, is above the law.
Finally, the Magna Charta has come to symbolize equality under the law. Although the baronial leadership of 1215 represented a privileged class of male landowners, many provisions of the Magna Charta safeguarded the interests of women as well. For example, the Magna Charta granted women the right to refuse marriage and the option to remarry. It also protected a widow’sinterest in one-third of her husband’s property.
Some provisions of the Magna Charta applied more broadly to all “free” individuals (ch. 39), whereas other provisions seemingly applied to every person in the realm, free or not.
Chapter 16, for example, stated that “no one” shall be compelled to perform service for a knight’s fee, and chapter 42 guaranteed a safe return to “anyone” who left the realm.
The most telling provision in this regard was chapter 40, which provided that “justice” will be sold to “no one.” This provision embodies more than the idea that justice is cheapened when bought and sold. It also underscores the principle that all persons, rich and poor, must be treated the same under the law. An extension of this principle was captured by the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which, as interpreted by the Supreme Court, invalidates laws that discriminate on the basis of, among other things, race, gender, national origin, and illegitimacy.
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LANGUAGE PRACTICE AND COMPREHENSION CHECK | | | That the king can do no wrong, is a necessary and fundamental principle of the English constitution. |