Transcript for:
Legacy and Influence of Magna Carta

This is the story of an 800 year old  medieval document known as Magna Carta,   or the ‘Great Charter’. It’s one of the most  famous documents in the world. But how did   this old piece of parchment become such a  powerful symbol of our rights and freedoms?  Magna Carta was granted in 1215 and established  for the first time that everyone, even the king,   had to obey the law. When Magna Carta was  printed for the first time, it became the   first law that all English lawyers studied. But  many people didn’t realise its significance.   Shakespeare wrote a play about King John  in which he failed to mention Magna Carta.  In the 1600s, English lawyers used Magna Carta  to challenge King Charles I. At this time,   the king could ignore parliament and imprison  anyone who opposed him. Inspired by Magna Carta,   Sir Edward Coke wrote the Petition of Right,  which set out to limit the king’s powers.  Around the same time, Magna Carta was taken  overseas to America by the first British   settlers. Many American colonies based their  own laws on Magna Carta. Then, in the 1770s the   Americans fought for independence from Britain.  Magna Carta became a symbol of American liberty,   and its principles were echoed in the Declaration  of Independence and the Bill of Rights.  In 18th century Britain, Magna Carta was  used to protest against the censorship   of the press. At this time, people could be  imprisoned without trial for criticising the   king. When newspaper publisher John Wilkes  was arrested for insulting King George III,   he used Magna Carta to fight for his freedom.  He claimed that ancient English liberties were   under threat. Wilkes’s campaign showed Magna  Carta on everything from posters to teapots.   You could say that Magna Carta went viral! In the 1800s, very few people had the right to   vote in Britain. A nationwide movement of working  people known as the Chartists, inspired by Magna   Carta, created a ‘People’s Charta’ to fight for  all men to have the vote. Then, in the early   1900s the Suffragettes used Magna Carta to argue  that all women should have the right to vote too.  Increasingly, people across the empire argued  for rights equal to those of British citizens.   Gandhi fought successfully for greater freedom  for the Indian settlers in South Africa. He   described the resulting document as ‘the Magna  Carta of our liberty in this land.’ In his   famous speech from the dock, Nelson Mandela  declared his admiration for Magna Carta and   for Western democracy, which he contrasted  with the oppressive South African regime.  Perhaps the most significant influence  of Magna Carta today is the Universal   Declaration of Human Rights. Written  after the atrocities of World War II,   the declaration states that people around the  world are protected by fundamental human rights,   regardless of their citizenship, race, gender  or beliefs. Eleanor Roosevelt famously said   that the Declaration may well become ‘the  international Magna Carta of all men everywhere’.  Although very few of Magna Carta’s original  clauses remain valid in English law,   it continues to inspire people worldwide. Not  a bad legacy for an 800 year old document!