Well, here’s a historic anniversary: Magna Carta is 800
years old. To celebrate, Brits have moved all four surviving copies to the
British Library.
Technically, the birthday dates as of 15 June, but the
four documents, from the Library, Salisbury Cathedral and Lincoln Cathedral,
will be on display together for three days. Then—for some unaccountable reason—they’ll
spend a day at the House of Lords. (Perhaps to remind those archaic residues of
hereditary privilege of that notion that no one is above the law, not even
those who claim some sort of divine right to rule.)
(Or possibly because they squawked about not being able
to score tickets to the exhibit at the Library.)
I mean, the principles laid out in that original document
were the first step towards a system of parliamentary democracy. And, even if
it took about 700 years to filter down into something beyond oligarchy and
plutocracy, it was out there in ink and sheepskin to be referred to whenever
someone tried taking the political piss.
While Magna Carta essentially curbed the excesses of King
John, it primarily only expanded the powers of the aristocracy. However, it
formed the basis for our own Constitution and the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights. These are not insignificant things.
So for the next few months, take some time to pour
yourself a nice glass of whatever appeals to you and drink a toast to those
barons who muscled the first inklings of democratic government from a
hereditary king.
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