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They paid $43 for a replica of the Magna Carta. Turned out, it's an original

They paid $43 for a replica of the Magna Carta. Turned out, it's an original

The Age15-05-2025

Providential or not, the discovery happened largely by chance.
Carpenter was at home in Blackheath, south-east London, ploughing his way through Harvard Law School's digital images as research for a book, when he opened a file named HLS MS 172 – the catalogue name for Harvard Law School Manuscript 172.
'I get down to 172 and it's a single parchment sheet of Magna Carta,' he said. 'And I think, 'Oh my God, this looks to me for all the world – because I read it – like an original'.'
Carpenter emailed Vincent, who was, at the time, at work in a library in Brussels. 'David sent it with a message saying, 'What do you think that is?'' Vincent said. 'I wrote back within seconds, saying, 'You and I both know what that is!''
The two academics were able to confirm the manuscript's authenticity after Harvard Law School photographed it under ultraviolet light and then subjected it to various levels of spectral imaging, a technique that can enhance aspects of historical documents undetectable to the human eye.
Comparing it with six previously known originals from 1300, the professors found that the text matched, as did the dimensions – 489mm x 473mm. The handwriting used in the manuscript, with a large capital 'E' at the start in 'Edwardus' and elongated letters in the first line, also tallied.
'It's the best sort of thing that can happen to a librarian,' said Amanda Watson, assistant dean at Harvard Law School's library. 'This is our daily work to digitalise things, to preserve things, to save things, to open things up for people like David Carpenter.'
Watson said the document itself had sometimes been put on display, but, as part of a large collection, it was not kept out permanently. The library has yet to decide whether it will now be made available to the public, but Watson said she 'can't imagine' that it would be sold.
'In the United States, having things that are 700 years old is special,' added Jonathan Zittrain, professor of international law and chair of the Harvard Law School library.
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'The law of the land'
Magna Carta – 'Great Charter' in Latin – has been used to justify many different causes over the centuries, sometimes on shaky historical ground. But it has evolved into a global symbol of the importance of fundamental freedoms, including habeas corpus. By limiting the power of the monarch, it came to represent the right to protection against arbitrary and unjust rule.
One of its most famous passages states: 'No free man shall be seized or imprisoned, or stripped of his rights or possessions, or outlawed or exiled, or deprived of his standing in any other way, nor will we proceed with force against him, or send others to do so, except by the lawful judgment of his equals or by the law of the land.'
First issued in 1215, it put into writing a set of concessions won by rebellious barons from a recalcitrant King John of England – or Bad King John, as he became known in folklore.
He later revoked the charter, but his son, Henry III, issued amended versions, the last one in 1225, and Henry's son, Edward I, in turn confirmed the 1225 version in 1297 and again in 1300.
The document influenced the US Constitution, and the Bill of Rights includes several provisions that are thought to descend from it.
There are 25 original manuscripts of Magna Carta in all, produced at various times. Including the one at Harvard, only three are outside Britain.
Harvard Law School bought its version from a London legal book dealer, Sweet & Maxwell, which had purchased it in December 1945 from Sotheby's, the auctioneers.
In the 1945 auction catalogue it was listed as a copy and with the wrong date (1327) and was sold for 42 pounds – about a fifth of the average annual income in the United Kingdom at the time – on behalf of Forster Maynard, an air vice-marshal who had served as a fighter pilot in World War I.
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Air Vice-Marshal Maynard inherited it from the family of Thomas and John Clarkson, who were leading campaigners in Britain against the slave trade from the 1780s onward.
Vincent believes the document could be a lost Magna Carta that was once issued to the former parliamentary borough of Appleby-in-Westmorland, in the north of England, and which was last mentioned in print in 1762.
While undoubtedly famous, many Britons seem to have hazy knowledge of the document. Former prime minister David Cameron was famously unable to translate the term Magna Carta when asked by David Letterman on his late-night talk show in 2012.
But few doubt its significance in the evolution of Western notions of rights and freedoms. With some of those now more under threat, Vincent said the discovery at Harvard was timely.
Magna Carta, he said, placed the king under the rule of law. The 'head of state cannot simply go against somebody because he doesn't like them, he has to do it using the law', he said.
The text of the charter is incorporated within 17 state constitutions of the US, he added, 'so there is more of it in American state law than there is in the UK'.
Vincent likened the discovery to happening upon a masterpiece by Johannes Vermeer, the Dutch artist, only 36 of whose paintings are known to have survived. 'He is regarded as the rarest of all the great masters, so there are significantly fewer of these than there are of Vermeers,' Vincent said.
Both he and Carpenter plan to visit Harvard Law School next month to see and touch the document for the first time, a moment that Vincent predicted would be 'emotional.

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They paid $43 for a replica of the Magna Carta. Turned out, it's an original
They paid $43 for a replica of the Magna Carta. Turned out, it's an original

The Age

time15-05-2025

  • The Age

They paid $43 for a replica of the Magna Carta. Turned out, it's an original

Providential or not, the discovery happened largely by chance. Carpenter was at home in Blackheath, south-east London, ploughing his way through Harvard Law School's digital images as research for a book, when he opened a file named HLS MS 172 – the catalogue name for Harvard Law School Manuscript 172. 'I get down to 172 and it's a single parchment sheet of Magna Carta,' he said. 'And I think, 'Oh my God, this looks to me for all the world – because I read it – like an original'.' Carpenter emailed Vincent, who was, at the time, at work in a library in Brussels. 'David sent it with a message saying, 'What do you think that is?'' Vincent said. 'I wrote back within seconds, saying, 'You and I both know what that is!'' The two academics were able to confirm the manuscript's authenticity after Harvard Law School photographed it under ultraviolet light and then subjected it to various levels of spectral imaging, a technique that can enhance aspects of historical documents undetectable to the human eye. Comparing it with six previously known originals from 1300, the professors found that the text matched, as did the dimensions – 489mm x 473mm. The handwriting used in the manuscript, with a large capital 'E' at the start in 'Edwardus' and elongated letters in the first line, also tallied. 'It's the best sort of thing that can happen to a librarian,' said Amanda Watson, assistant dean at Harvard Law School's library. 'This is our daily work to digitalise things, to preserve things, to save things, to open things up for people like David Carpenter.' Watson said the document itself had sometimes been put on display, but, as part of a large collection, it was not kept out permanently. The library has yet to decide whether it will now be made available to the public, but Watson said she 'can't imagine' that it would be sold. 'In the United States, having things that are 700 years old is special,' added Jonathan Zittrain, professor of international law and chair of the Harvard Law School library. Loading 'The law of the land' Magna Carta – 'Great Charter' in Latin – has been used to justify many different causes over the centuries, sometimes on shaky historical ground. But it has evolved into a global symbol of the importance of fundamental freedoms, including habeas corpus. By limiting the power of the monarch, it came to represent the right to protection against arbitrary and unjust rule. One of its most famous passages states: 'No free man shall be seized or imprisoned, or stripped of his rights or possessions, or outlawed or exiled, or deprived of his standing in any other way, nor will we proceed with force against him, or send others to do so, except by the lawful judgment of his equals or by the law of the land.' First issued in 1215, it put into writing a set of concessions won by rebellious barons from a recalcitrant King John of England – or Bad King John, as he became known in folklore. He later revoked the charter, but his son, Henry III, issued amended versions, the last one in 1225, and Henry's son, Edward I, in turn confirmed the 1225 version in 1297 and again in 1300. The document influenced the US Constitution, and the Bill of Rights includes several provisions that are thought to descend from it. There are 25 original manuscripts of Magna Carta in all, produced at various times. Including the one at Harvard, only three are outside Britain. Harvard Law School bought its version from a London legal book dealer, Sweet & Maxwell, which had purchased it in December 1945 from Sotheby's, the auctioneers. In the 1945 auction catalogue it was listed as a copy and with the wrong date (1327) and was sold for 42 pounds – about a fifth of the average annual income in the United Kingdom at the time – on behalf of Forster Maynard, an air vice-marshal who had served as a fighter pilot in World War I. Loading Air Vice-Marshal Maynard inherited it from the family of Thomas and John Clarkson, who were leading campaigners in Britain against the slave trade from the 1780s onward. Vincent believes the document could be a lost Magna Carta that was once issued to the former parliamentary borough of Appleby-in-Westmorland, in the north of England, and which was last mentioned in print in 1762. While undoubtedly famous, many Britons seem to have hazy knowledge of the document. Former prime minister David Cameron was famously unable to translate the term Magna Carta when asked by David Letterman on his late-night talk show in 2012. But few doubt its significance in the evolution of Western notions of rights and freedoms. With some of those now more under threat, Vincent said the discovery at Harvard was timely. Magna Carta, he said, placed the king under the rule of law. The 'head of state cannot simply go against somebody because he doesn't like them, he has to do it using the law', he said. The text of the charter is incorporated within 17 state constitutions of the US, he added, 'so there is more of it in American state law than there is in the UK'. Vincent likened the discovery to happening upon a masterpiece by Johannes Vermeer, the Dutch artist, only 36 of whose paintings are known to have survived. 'He is regarded as the rarest of all the great masters, so there are significantly fewer of these than there are of Vermeers,' Vincent said. Both he and Carpenter plan to visit Harvard Law School next month to see and touch the document for the first time, a moment that Vincent predicted would be 'emotional.

They paid $43 for a replica of the Magna Carta. Turned out, it's an original
They paid $43 for a replica of the Magna Carta. Turned out, it's an original

Sydney Morning Herald

time15-05-2025

  • Sydney Morning Herald

They paid $43 for a replica of the Magna Carta. Turned out, it's an original

Providential or not, the discovery happened largely by chance. Carpenter was at home in Blackheath, south-east London, ploughing his way through Harvard Law School's digital images as research for a book, when he opened a file named HLS MS 172 – the catalogue name for Harvard Law School Manuscript 172. 'I get down to 172 and it's a single parchment sheet of Magna Carta,' he said. 'And I think, 'Oh my God, this looks to me for all the world – because I read it – like an original'.' Carpenter emailed Vincent, who was, at the time, at work in a library in Brussels. 'David sent it with a message saying, 'What do you think that is?'' Vincent said. 'I wrote back within seconds, saying, 'You and I both know what that is!'' The two academics were able to confirm the manuscript's authenticity after Harvard Law School photographed it under ultraviolet light and then subjected it to various levels of spectral imaging, a technique that can enhance aspects of historical documents undetectable to the human eye. Comparing it with six previously known originals from 1300, the professors found that the text matched, as did the dimensions – 489mm x 473mm. The handwriting used in the manuscript, with a large capital 'E' at the start in 'Edwardus' and elongated letters in the first line, also tallied. 'It's the best sort of thing that can happen to a librarian,' said Amanda Watson, assistant dean at Harvard Law School's library. 'This is our daily work to digitalise things, to preserve things, to save things, to open things up for people like David Carpenter.' Watson said the document itself had sometimes been put on display, but, as part of a large collection, it was not kept out permanently. The library has yet to decide whether it will now be made available to the public, but Watson said she 'can't imagine' that it would be sold. 'In the United States, having things that are 700 years old is special,' added Jonathan Zittrain, professor of international law and chair of the Harvard Law School library. Loading 'The law of the land' Magna Carta – 'Great Charter' in Latin – has been used to justify many different causes over the centuries, sometimes on shaky historical ground. But it has evolved into a global symbol of the importance of fundamental freedoms, including habeas corpus. By limiting the power of the monarch, it came to represent the right to protection against arbitrary and unjust rule. One of its most famous passages states: 'No free man shall be seized or imprisoned, or stripped of his rights or possessions, or outlawed or exiled, or deprived of his standing in any other way, nor will we proceed with force against him, or send others to do so, except by the lawful judgment of his equals or by the law of the land.' First issued in 1215, it put into writing a set of concessions won by rebellious barons from a recalcitrant King John of England – or Bad King John, as he became known in folklore. He later revoked the charter, but his son, Henry III, issued amended versions, the last one in 1225, and Henry's son, Edward I, in turn confirmed the 1225 version in 1297 and again in 1300. The document influenced the US Constitution, and the Bill of Rights includes several provisions that are thought to descend from it. There are 25 original manuscripts of Magna Carta in all, produced at various times. Including the one at Harvard, only three are outside Britain. Harvard Law School bought its version from a London legal book dealer, Sweet & Maxwell, which had purchased it in December 1945 from Sotheby's, the auctioneers. In the 1945 auction catalogue it was listed as a copy and with the wrong date (1327) and was sold for 42 pounds – about a fifth of the average annual income in the United Kingdom at the time – on behalf of Forster Maynard, an air vice-marshal who had served as a fighter pilot in World War I. Loading Air Vice-Marshal Maynard inherited it from the family of Thomas and John Clarkson, who were leading campaigners in Britain against the slave trade from the 1780s onward. Vincent believes the document could be a lost Magna Carta that was once issued to the former parliamentary borough of Appleby-in-Westmorland, in the north of England, and which was last mentioned in print in 1762. While undoubtedly famous, many Britons seem to have hazy knowledge of the document. Former prime minister David Cameron was famously unable to translate the term Magna Carta when asked by David Letterman on his late-night talk show in 2012. But few doubt its significance in the evolution of Western notions of rights and freedoms. With some of those now more under threat, Vincent said the discovery at Harvard was timely. Magna Carta, he said, placed the king under the rule of law. The 'head of state cannot simply go against somebody because he doesn't like them, he has to do it using the law', he said. The text of the charter is incorporated within 17 state constitutions of the US, he added, 'so there is more of it in American state law than there is in the UK'. Vincent likened the discovery to happening upon a masterpiece by Johannes Vermeer, the Dutch artist, only 36 of whose paintings are known to have survived. 'He is regarded as the rarest of all the great masters, so there are significantly fewer of these than there are of Vermeers,' Vincent said. Both he and Carpenter plan to visit Harvard Law School next month to see and touch the document for the first time, a moment that Vincent predicted would be 'emotional.

Harvard's Magna Carta 'copy' actually a rare original, experts say
Harvard's Magna Carta 'copy' actually a rare original, experts say

SBS Australia

time15-05-2025

  • SBS Australia

Harvard's Magna Carta 'copy' actually a rare original, experts say

For decades, Harvard University believed it had a cheap copy of the Magna Carta, bought for less than US$30 ($46), but experts say they've proven it's a rare original. According to researchers from King's College London and the University of East Anglia in the United Kingdom, the document — which was bought in 1946 and had been on display at the Harvard Law School library — is one of seven issued in 1300 by King Edward I that still survive. The Magna Carta is held up as a precursor of democracy and the basis of human rights conventions and legal systems around the world. It was created in June 1215, and is still considered to be one of the most important documents in human history, as it established the principle that the king and his government were not above the law. It also serves as one of the foundational documents that helped establish the United States Declaration of Independence, as well as its constitution. In 1300, Edward I issued a final version of the Magna Carta with minor changes, known as the Confirmation of the Charters. It was a reaffirmation of the original Magna Carta signed by King John and the last full issue of the document. David Carpenter, a professor of medieval history at King's College London, who helped uncover the mix-up, described it as "a fantastic discovery". "Harvard's Magna Carta deserves celebration, not as some mere copy, stained and faded, but as an original of one of the most significant documents in world constitutional history, a cornerstone of freedoms past, present, and yet to be won," he said. Carpenter had stumbled across the document online when he noticed key details that led him to believe it could be an original. It was the dimensions of the paper, as well as its distinct handwriting — including its use of elongated letters and a distinct capital 'E' found in the other six previously known originals — that researchers said gave away clues of its authenticity.

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