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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.
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Divine Right of Kings Divine Right of Kings: This was a belief that a King’s power came directly from God.
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.
Thomas Hobbes • Law & Order: Hobbes believed that without some kind of gov’t, chaos would make life "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short".
Magna Carta • Magna Carta is Latin for “Great Charter”. • Originally issued in 1215 AD, it eventually influenced the idea of constitutional law.
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.
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.
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.
Petition of Rights • Statement of civil liberties sent by the English Parliament to Charles I. • Initiated by Sir Edward Coke
4 Principles: • 1) No taxes may be levied without consent of Parliament. • 2) No subject may be imprisoned without cause shown (habeus corpus)
4 Principles: • 3) No soldiers may be quartered upon the citizenry. • 4) Martial law may not be used in time of peace.
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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.
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.
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.
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.
English Bill of Rights • Predecessor of the: • United States Constitution • United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights • European Convention on Human Rights.