1 / 30

Origins of English Rights

Origins of English Rights. Magna Carta, Petition of Rights, English Bill of Rights. Divine Right of Kings. Divine Right of Kings: This was a belief that a King’s power came directly from God. What are your rights?. Natural Rights.

trey
Download Presentation

Origins of English Rights

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Origins of English Rights

  2. Magna Carta,Petition of Rights, English Bill of Rights

  3. Divine Right of Kings Divine Right of Kings: This was a belief that a King’s power came directly from God.

  4. What are your rights?

  5. Natural Rights • John Locke, a political philosopher believed that everyone was born with natural rights (life, liberty, & property) Life: everyone is entitled to live once they are created. Liberty: everyone is entitled to do anything they want to so long as it doesn't conflict with the first right. Estate: everyone is entitled to own all they create or gain through gift or trade so long as it doesn't conflict with the first two rights.

  6. How are your rights protected?

  7. Thomas Hobbes • Law & Order: Hobbes believed that without some kind of gov’t, chaos would make life "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short".

  8. Magna Carta • Magna Carta is Latin for “Great Charter”. • Originally issued in 1215 AD, it eventually influenced the idea of constitutional law.

  9. Magna Carta • Originally written because of disagreements between Pope Innocent III and King John about the rights of the King. • The most notable right granted to the people by Magna Carta was Habeus Corpus. It is a writ (legal action) which requires a person under arrest to be brought before a judge or into court.

  10. Magna Carta • Out of the 63 clauses in Magna Carta, only 3 are still in use today: 1st, 9th, and 29th. • *The 29th clause is the Habeus Corpus clause.

  11. The Creation of Parliament 1st Parliament formed during the reign of Henry III. Some nobles rebelled by summoning a Parliament without royal authority. Each of the boroughs was represented. By 1295, a model parliament was established. By the reign of Edward III, Parliament was separated into 2 Houses and assumed its modern form.

  12. Petition of Rights • Statement of civil liberties sent by the English Parliament to Charles I. • Initiated by Sir Edward Coke

  13. 4 Principles: • 1) No taxes may be levied without consent of Parliament. • 2) No subject may be imprisoned without cause shown (habeus corpus)

  14. 4 Principles: • 3) No soldiers may be quartered upon the citizenry. • 4) Martial law may not be used in time of peace.

  15. King James Stuart I • King James VI of Scotland • Inherited Queen Elizabeth I throne (1603-1625) • Key questions: how much power should Parliament have? • James Believed in Absolutism • Worst struggles w/ Parliament were over money. They were reluctant to pay for James’s’ expensive court & foreign wars • Offended Puritan members of Parliament • James = Calvinist • only agreed to one Puritan reform: translating the Bible: The King James version

  16. King Charles I (Stuart) • 1625 son of James, came to power • Always needed money • At war with Spain and France • Dissolved Parliament several times when they refused him money • 1628 force to call Parliament • They refused him any money until he signed a document that is known at the Petition of Rights • Agreed to sign the Petition of Rights

  17. Petition Of Rights • No imprisonment w/o due cause • No taxes w/o Parliament’s consent • No housing soldiers in private homes • No martial law in peacetime Charles signed it & then… Ignored it!!!!! (even so… it was important b/c it set forth the idea that the law was HIGHER than the KING

  18. King Charles Stuart I & the English Civil War • Offended Puritans by upholding church ritual & a formal prayer book • 1637- he tried to force the Presbyterian Scots to accept a version of the Anglican prayer book! • Wanted one religion for both Kingdoms • Scots rebelled, threatening to invade England • Called Parliament to ask for money for the rebellion • Parliament now had a chance to oppose him • 1641- Parliament passed laws to limit royal power • 1642- Charles tries to arrest Parliament’s leaders; they escaped • Mob of Londoners Raged outside the Palace after the King! • He escaped & raised an army in the North (loyal to him) • 1642-49 – supporters (loyalists or Cavaliers) & opponents (Roundheads) fought a CIVIL WAR • 1644- Oliver Cromwell came to defend the Puritan opposition

  19. Charles I Tried for Treason & Executed • 1647- the loyalists held the King prisoner on charges of treason • 1649- Charles was tried for treason, found guilty and EXECUTED! • First King ever to be tried, sentenced and killed by the people

  20. Oliver Cromwell & the English Commonwealth

  21. Oliver Cromwell • Puritan Morality imposed! • Sought to reform society • Made laws to promote Puritan morality & abolish “sinful” activities (dancing, theatre, comedy, sports) • Favored religious toleration for all Christians; except Catholics • Became unpopular due to strict religious rules • Son ruled after him, weakly • People began to long for the Monarchy

  22. The Restoration & Charles Stuart II • 1660- Charles II entered London to cheers of support and celebration for the return of the KING • Restored the theater, sporting events, dancing • Parliament passed an important guarantee of freedom, HABEAS CORPUS • 1679- law passed guaranteeing prisoners right to go before a judge & the accuser • Monarch could no longer put people in jail randomly • Died 1685 with no heir

  23. James Stuart II (Charles II brother) • 1685- became King • Offended the English by flaunting his Catholicism • Appointed many Catholics to high office (illegal) • Parliament protested. James dissolved them • 1688- heir born, England became fearful at the prospect of a long line of Catholic Kings

  24. William and Mary • James II older daughter (Protestant) was married to William of Orange (Netherlands). • Parliament invited them to overthrow James • William led his army to London • James fled to France (to save his head) • = a BLOODLESS overthrown of a King • THE GLORIOUS REVOLUTION

  25. The “Conditions” = A Constitutional Monarchy • William & Mary had to agree to rule according to English Law • They had to sign the Bill of Rights • Recognizing Parliament as their Partner in governing. • No suspending of Parliament’s Laws • No taxes w/o a specific grant from Parliament • No interfering w/ freedom of speech in Parliament • No Penalty for a citizen who complains to the King • William & Mary Consented • Constitutional Monarch is Born

  26. English Bill of Rights [1689] • Main provisions: • The King could not suspend the operation of laws. • The King could not interfere with the ordinary course of justice. • No taxes levied or standard army maintained in peacetime without Parliament’s consent. • Freedom of speech in Parliament. • Sessions of Parliament would be held frequently. • Subjects had the right of bail, petition, and freedom from excessive fines and cruel and unusual punishment. • The monarch must be a Protestant. • Freedom from arbitrary arrest. • Censorship of the press was dropped. • Religious toleration.

  27. English Bill of Rights [1689] It settled all of the major issues between King & Parliament. It served as a model for the U. S. Bill of Rights. It also formed a base for the steady expansion of civil liberties in the 18c and early 19c in England.

  28. English Bill of Rights • One of the basic documents of English constitutional law, along with the Magna Carta. • Statement of certain positive rights that its authors considered that citizens and/or residents of a constitutional monarchy should have.

  29. English Bill of Rights • Asserts subjects’ rights to petition the Monarch, and to bear arms for defense. • Says the King cannot do certain things without the consent of the governed.

  30. English Bill of Rights • Predecessor of the: • United States Constitution • United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights • European Convention on Human Rights.

More Related