logo
Harvard thought it had cheap copy of the Magna Carta – it turned out to be extremely rare

Harvard thought it had cheap copy of the Magna Carta – it turned out to be extremely rare

Harvard University for decades assumed it had a cheap copy of the Magna Carta in its collection, a stained and faded document it had bought for less than US$30.
But two researchers have concluded it has something much more valuable – a rare version from 1300 issued by England's King Edward I.
The original Magna Carta established in 1215 the principle that the king is subject to law, and it has formed the basis of constitutions globally. There are four copies of the original and, until now, there were believed to be only six copies of the 1300 version.
'My reaction was one of amazement and, in a way, awe that I should have managed to find a previously unknown Magna Carta,' said David Carpenter, a professor of medieval history at King's College London. He was searching the Harvard Law School Library website in December 2023 when he found the digitised document.
'First, I'd found one of the most rare documents and most significant documents in world constitutional history,' Carpenter said. 'But secondly, of course, it was astonishment that Harvard had been sitting on it for all these years without realising what it was.'
Carpenter teamed up with Nicholas Vincent, a professor of medieval history at Britain's University of East Anglia, to confirm the authenticity of Harvard's document.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A furious Moses. A callous tycoon. A battlefield Madonna. Pittsburgh church murals revived
A furious Moses. A callous tycoon. A battlefield Madonna. Pittsburgh church murals revived

South China Morning Post

time2 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

A furious Moses. A callous tycoon. A battlefield Madonna. Pittsburgh church murals revived

When the scaffolding came down inside an unassuming hilltop church, it revealed a raging storm of biblical proportions. A wide-eyed Moses holds the Ten Commandments aloft in righteous fury, ready to shatter the tablets when his followers abandon God for a golden calf. Lightning sizzles and a tornado surges in the background. The late artist Maxo Vanka created the mural in 1941, based on a scene from the Book of Exodus. It is one of 25 that cover the walls and ceilings of St Nicholas Croatian Catholic Church near Pittsburgh, in the US state of Pennsylvania. Vanka, a Croatian-American immigrant like most of the original parishioners, painted the scenes in bursts of creative energy. In marathon sessions, he captured stark social inequities alongside traditional religious themes. Art conservator Jessica Keister works on a mural by Maxo Vanka depicting the hand of God handing a tablet to Moses, inside St Nicholas Croatian Catholic Church in Pittsburgh. Photo: AP St. Nicholas Croatian Catholic Church stands across the Allegheny River from central Pittsburgh. Photo: AP The murals depict scenes with dualities. An angelic justice figure contrasts with a haunting figure of injustice in a World War I gas mask.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store