Um texto preparado para a exposição que ocorreu no começo deste ano na Library of Congress, em Washington:
Magna Carta and Its American Legacy
Before penning the Declaration of Independence--the first of
the American Charters of Freedom--in 1776, the Founding Fathers searched for a
historical precedent for asserting their rightful liberties from King George
III and the English Parliament. They found it in a gathering that took place
561 years earlier on the plains of Runnymede, not far from where Windsor Castle
stands today. There, on June 15, 1215, an assembly of barons confronted a
despotic and cash-strapped King John and demanded that traditional rights be
recognized, written down, confirmed with the royal seal, and sent to each of
the counties to be read to all freemen. The result was Magna Carta--a momentous
achievement for the English barons and, nearly six centuries later, an
inspiration for angry American colonists.
Magna Carta was the result of the Angevin king's disastrous
foreign policy and overzealous financial administration. John had suffered a
staggering blow the previous year, having lost an important battle to King
Philip II at Bouvines and with it all hope of regaining the French lands he had
inherited. When the defeated John returned from the Continent, he attempted to
rebuild his coffers by demanding scutage (a fee paid in lieu of military
service) from the barons who had not joined his war with Philip. The barons in
question, predominantly lords of northern estates, protested, condemning John's
policies and insisting on a reconfirmation of Henry I's Coronation Oath (1100),
which would, in theory, limit the king's ability to obtain funds. (As even
Henry ignored the provisions of this charter, however, a reconfirmation would
not necessarily guarantee fewer taxes.) But John refused to withdraw his
demands, and by spring most baronial families began to take sides. The
rebelling barons soon faltered before John's superior resources, but with the
unexpected capture of London, they earned a substantial bargaining chip. John
agreed to grant a charter.
The document conceded by John and set with his seal in 1215,
however, was not what we know today as Magna Carta but rather a set of baronial
stipulations, now lost, known as the "Articles of the barons." After
John and his barons agreed on the final provisions and additional wording
changes, they issued a formal version on June 19, and it is this document that
came to be known as Magna Carta. Of great significance to future generations
was a minor wording change, the replacement of the term "any baron"
with "any freeman" in stipulating to whom the provisions applied.
Over time, it would help justify the application of the Charter's provisions to
a greater part of the population. While freemen were a minority in 13th-century
England, the term would eventually include all English, just as "We the
People" would come to apply to all Americans in this century.
While Magna Carta would one day become a basic document of the
British Constitution, democracy and universal protection of ancient liberties
were not among the barons' goals. The Charter was a feudal document and meant
to protect the rights and property of the few powerful families that topped the
rigidly structured feudal system. In fact, the majority of the population, the
thousands of unfree laborers, are only mentioned once, in a clause concerning
the use of court-set fines to punish minor offenses. Magna Carta's primary
purpose was restorative: to force King John to recognize the supremacy of
ancient liberties, to limit his ability to raise funds, and to reassert the
principle of "due process." Only a final clause, which created an
enforcement council of tenants-in-chief and clergymen, would have severely
limited the king's power and introduced something new to English law: the
principle of "majority rule." But majority rule was an idea whose
time had not yet come; in September, at John's urging, Pope Innocent II
annulled the "shameful and demeaning agreement, forced upon the king by
violence and fear." The civil war that followed ended only with John's
death in October 1216.
A 1297 version of Magna Carta, presented courtesy of David
M. Rubenstein, is on display in the new David M. Rubenstein Gallery at the
National Archives.
To gain support for the new monarch--John's 9-year-old son, Henry
III--the young king's regents reissued the charter in 1217. Neither this
version nor that issued by Henry when he assumed personal control of the throne
in 1225 were exact duplicates of John's charter; both lacked some provisions,
including that providing for the enforcement council, found in the original.
With the 1225 issuance, however, the evolution of the document ended. While
English monarchs, including Henry, confirmed Magna Carta several times after
this, each subsequent issue followed the form of this "final"
version. With each confirmation, copies of the document were made and sent to
the counties so that everyone would know their rights and obligations. Of these
original issues of Magna Carta, 17 survive: 4 from the reign of John; 8 from
that of Henry III; and 5 from Edward I, including the version now on display at
the National Archives.
Although tradition and interpretation would one day make Magna
Carta a document of great importance to both England and the American colonies,
it originally granted concessions to few but the powerful baronial families. It
did include concessions to the Church, merchants, townsmen, and the lower
aristocracy for their aid in the rebellion, but the majority of the English
population would remain without an active voice in government for another 700
years.
Despite its historical significance, however, Magna Carta may have
remained legally inconsequential had it not been resurrected and reinterpreted
by Sir Edward Coke in the early 17th century. Coke, Attorney General for
Elizabeth, Chief Justice during the reign of James, and a leader in Parliament
in opposition to Charles I, used Magna Carta as a weapon against the oppressive
tactics of the Stuart kings. Coke argued that even kings must comply to common
law. As he proclaimed to Parliament in 1628, "Magna Carta . . . will have
no sovereign."
Lord Coke's view of the law was particularly relevant to the
American experience for it was during this period that the charters for the
colonies were written. Each included the guarantee that those sailing for the
New World and their heirs would have "all the rights and immunities of
free and natural subjects." As our forefathers developed legal codes for
the colonies, many incorporated liberties guaranteed by Magna Carta and the
1689 English Bill of Rights directly into their own statutes. Although few colonists
could afford legal training in England, they remained remarkably familiar with
English common law. During one parliamentary debate in the late 18th century,
Edmund Burke observed, "In no country, perhaps in the world, is law so
general a study." Through Coke, whose four-volume Institutes of the Laws
of England was widely read by American law students, young colonists such as
John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison learned of the spirit of the
charter and the common law--or at least Coke's interpretation of them. Later,
Jefferson would write to Madison of Coke: "a sounder whig never wrote, nor
of profounder learning in the orthodox doctrines of the British constitution,
or in what were called English liberties." It is no wonder then that as the
colonists prepared for war they would look to Coke and Magna Carta for
justification.
By the 1760s the colonists had come to believe that in America
they were creating a place that adopted the best of the English system but
adapted it to new circumstances; a place where a person could rise by merit,
not birth; a place where men could voice their opinions and actively share in
self-government. But these beliefs were soon tested. Following the costly Seven
Years' War, Great Britain was burdened with substantial debts and the
continuing expense of keeping troops on American soil. Parliament thought the
colonies should finance much of their own defense and levied the first direct
tax, the Stamp Act, in 1765. As a result, virtually every document--newspapers,
licenses, insurance policies, legal writs, even playing cards--would have to
carry a stamp showing that required taxes had been paid. The colonists rebelled
against such control over their daily affairs. Their own elected legislative
bodies had not been asked to consent to the Stamp Act. The colonists argued
that without either this local consent or direct representation in Parliament,
the act was "taxation without representation." They also objected to
the law's provision that those who disobeyed could be tried in admiralty courts
without a jury of their peers. Coke's influence on Americans showed clearly
when the Massachusetts Assembly reacted by declaring the Stamp Act
"against the Magna Carta and the natural rights of Englishmen, and
therefore, according to Lord Coke, null and void."
But regardless of whether the charter forbade taxation
without representation or if this was merely implied by the "spirit,"
the colonists used this "misinterpretation" to condemn the Stamp Act.
To defend their objections, they turned to a 1609 or 1610 defense argument used
by Coke: superiority of the common law over acts of Parliament. Coke claimed
"When an act of parliament is against common right or reason, or
repugnant, or impossible to be performed, the common law will control it and
adjudge such an act void. Because the Stamp Act seemed to tread on the concept
of consensual taxation, the colonists believed it, "according to Lord
Coke," invalid.
The colonists were enraged. Benjamin Franklin and others in
England eloquently argued the American case, and Parliament quickly rescinded
the bill. But the damage was done; the political climate was changing. As John
Adams later wrote to Thomas Jefferson, "The Revolution was in the minds of
the people, and this was effected, from 1760 to 1775, in the course of 15 years
before a drop of blood was shed at Lexington."
Relations between Great Britain and the colonies continued to
deteriorate. The more Parliament tried to raise revenue and suppress the
growing unrest, the more the colonists demanded the charter rights they had
brought with them a century and a half earlier. At the height of the Stamp Act
crisis, William Pitt proclaimed in Parliament, "The Americans are the sons
not the bastards of England." Parliament and the Crown, however, appeared
to believe otherwise. But the Americans would have their rights, and they would
fight for them. The seal adopted by Massachusetts on the eve of the Revolution
summed up the mood--a militiaman with sword in one hand and Magna Carta in the
other.
Armed resistance broke out in April 1775. Fifteen months later,
the final break was made with the immortal words of the Declaration of
Independence: "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all Men are
created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable
Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness."
Although the colonies had finally and irrevocably articulated their goal,
Independence did not come swiftly. Not until the surrender of British forces at
Yorktown in 1781 was the military struggle won. The constitutional battle,
however, was just beginning.
In the war's aftermath, many Americans recognized that the rather
loose confederation of states would have to be strengthened if the new nation
were to survive. James Madison expressed these concerns in a call for a
convention at Philadelphia in 1787 to revise the Articles of Confederation:
"The good people of America are to decide the solemn question, whether
they will by wise and magnanimous efforts reap the just fruits of that
Independence which they so gloriously acquired . . . or whether by giving way
to unmanly jealousies and prejudices, or to partial and transitory interests,
they will renounce the auspicious blessings prepared for them by the Revolution."
The representatives of the states listened to Madison and drew heavily from his
ideas. Instead of revising the Articles, they created a new form of government,
embodied in the Constitution of the United States. Authority emanated directly
from the people, not from any governmental body. And the Constitution would be
"the supreme Law of the Land"--just as Magna Carta had been deemed
superior to other statutes.
In 1215, when King John confirmed Magna Carta with his seal, he
was acknowledging the now firmly embedded concept that no man--not even the
king--is above the law. That was a milestone in constitutional thought for the
13th century and for centuries to come. In 1779 John Adams expressed it this
way: "A government of laws, and not of men." Further, the charter
established important individual rights that have a direct legacy in the
American Bill of Rights. And during the United States' history, these rights
have been expanded. The U.S. Constitution is not a static document. Like Magna
Carta, it has been interpreted and reinterpreted throughout the years. This has
allowed the Constitution to become the longest-lasting constitution in the
world and a model for those penned by other nations. Through judicial review
and amendment, it has evolved so that today Americans--regardless of gender,
race, or creed--can enjoy the liberties and protection it guarantees. Just as
Magna Carta stood as a bulwark against tyranny in England, the U.S.
Constitution and Bill of Rights today serve similar roles, protecting the
individual freedoms of all Americans against arbitrary and capricious rule.
Image Top Right:
A 1297 version of Magna Carta, presented courtesy of David
M. Rubenstein, is on display in the West Rotunda Gallery at the National
Archives.
Image Middle Left:
Sir Edward Coke's reinterpretation of Magna Carta provided
an argument for universal liberty in England and gave American colonists a
basis for their condemnation of British colonial policies. (Library of
Congress)
Image Bottom Right:
Members of the British government and church mourn the
demise of the Stamp Act. (Library of Congress)
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