Today is
Not the Anniversary of the Signing of Magna Carta
Some sources are reporting that today is
the anniversary of the signing, in 1215, of Magna Carta by King John and his
leading nobles, all at Runnymede. From
there the foundation of Magna Carta is dated.
The only problem is that the Magna Carta
of June, 1215 was a dead letter. John
repudiated the charter, and that repudiation was affirmed by Pope Innocent III.
John's after-the-fact rejection of Magna
Carta precipitated the First Barons War, a contest in which a group of
disaffected nobles actually aligned themselves with the King of France. Had
history turned out only slightly differently, the Angevin house of England
could have been replaced by the French royal house, thereby uniting England and
France under a single crown. That, of
course, was the ultimate aim of the English in the Hundred Years War in the
14th and 15th centuries, but that is a different story. King John would die in October, 1216, the
Crown being inherited by his nine year old son Henry III. As part of the effort to bring the First
Barons War to a conclusion, William Marshal, the prototypical knight of the
period and the Regent of Henry III, caused there to be issued a shorter version
of Magna Carta. This effort was not entirely successful, but the shorter
version was ultimately incorporated into the settlement the brought about the
resolution of the First Barons War.
Henry III would again issue Magna Carta
during his reign as a trade-off for new taxes, and his son Edward I would as
well issue Magna Carta in his own name.
Subsequent monarchs would do the same through the 14th century.
That said, none of the issuances of Magna
Carta, irrespective of a specific content, had the same theatrical flair as the
June 15, 1215 signing at Runnymede. For
that reason, it remains the event to which everybody refers.
But it did not bring Magna Carta into
law.
Today is without question the date of
issuance, in 1520, of the bull Exsurge Domine by Pope Leo X. Addressed to formerly obscure theology
professor Martin Luther, it threatened excommunication if Luther did not recant
certain heretical views. He did not do so, and the threatened excommunication
was carried out in January 1520. Whereas
the 1215 Magna Carta never had legal effect, Exsurge Domine did and does.
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