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Today, its impact is felt by perhaps a third of the world’s people
The Magna Carta NEW YORK: Back in the year 1215 A.D., a group of English barons handed King John a document written on parchment. Put your royal seal on this, they said. John did, and the idea of liberty was born. The document was the Magna Carta, a declaration of human rights that would become a guiding principle for democracy as it is known today. While that original edict was initially ignored and John died the next year, its key ideas were included in other variations over the next few decades. More than 800 years later, about 17 copies survive, and one of those, signed by King Edward I in 1297, will go up for sale on December 18 at Sotheby’s. The document, which Sotheby’s vice-chairman David Redden calls “the most important document in the world,” is expected to fetch a record $20-30 million. While earlier versions of the royal edict were written and then ignored, Mr. Redden said, “The 1297 Magna Carta became the operative version, the one that was entered into English common law and became the law of the land,” ultimately influencing democracies around the world. Today, its impact is felt by perhaps a third of the world’s people, he said. This includes all of North America, India, Pakistan, much of Africa, Australia and other areas that make up the British Commonwealth. “When it’s something as enormously important as this, you try to get a handle on it,” he said. “It is absolutely correct to say the Magna Carta is the birth certificate of freedom. It states the bedrock principle that no person is above the law — that is the essence of it.” Only two copies of the Magna Carta exist outside Britain, one in Australia and the Sotheby’s copy here. An earlier Magna Carta version was loaned by Britain to the United States for its bicentennial celebration in 1976, but suggestions that it be made a permanent gift were rejected — not only at home but at the Library of Congress, whose archivists warned that opting to donate rather than loan such an item would set “an unfortunate precedent for public institutions everywhere.” The 1279 Magna Carta was forced on Edward I by barons unhappy over taxes imposed to pay for his military campaigns in France, Wales and against Scottish rebel William Wallace. Written in medieval Latin on sheepskin that after 710 years remains intact and legible, the 1297 Magna Carta was owned for five centuries by a British family that put it up for sale in the early 1980s. To the consternation of some in Britain, the document was then bought for $1.5 million by the Perot Foundation, created by Texas billionaire H. Ross Perot. From 1988 until a few months ago, it was exhibited in a custom-designed, gold-plated container at the National Archives in Washington, a few meters from its direct descendants, the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution. — AP Corrections and clarifications
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