Manuscript book of statutes containing Magna Carta and 20 other statutes in Latin or French, c. 1330
Bound
vellum volume with 199 leaves
SAFE/ RICHARDSON / 14
Richardson
Collection
June 2015 marks
the 800th anniversary of the signing of the Magna Carta by
King John at
Runnymede on the banks of the Thames.
This copy of
the 1297 statute was bound in a unique volume with 20 other statutes in about
1330. Approximately 10 cm long, it remains in the original bindings with scraps
of skin attached to the rough wooden boards. The text is handwritten on vellum
in a mixture of Latin and French, with a few decorated initials.
LAW of the Land
By Maggie Patton
The Magna
Carta, regarded by many as the foundation of legal practice in England, has
been a major influence on the development of democracy in countries around the
world. In 1225 King Henry III reissued a much-revised version, and it was not
until 1297 that the charter was enrolled on the statute books by King Edward I.
Edward’s 1297
statute is the version of the Magna Carta recognised by English law today. It
includes the famous clause 39: 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 judgement of his equals or by the law
of the land.
The Library has
a copy of the 1297 statute, which was bound in a unique volume with 20 other
statutes in about 1330. Approximately 10 cm long, it remains in the original
bindings with scraps of skin attached to the rough wooden boards. The text is
handwritten on vellum in a mixture of Latin and French, with a few decorated
initials. The volume also includes the Charter of the Forest, a companion
document to the Magna Carta, which provided a right of common access to royal
lands. Clause 10 of the Charter of the Forest repealed the death penalty for
capturing venison.
The size and
contents of this volume suggest it belonged to a practising lawyer, who would
have carried it as he travelled around the courts of England and
Wales. The pages have been well thumbed and there is evidence of water damage. English
landowner Nelson Moore Richardson bequeathed the volume to the Library in 1926
along with a collection of bibles and early manuscripts. Richardson presented
the collection in honour of Australian troops who supported Britain in the
First World War. ‘We have liked them and the Australians so much,’ he wrote,
‘that it occurred to us that it would show in a small way our appreciation of
the Australians and the noble way in which they have come forward to help us in
this war, and all the sacrifices they have made, if we were to arrange that
these bibles should eventually find a home in Australia.’
At the
anniversary of the signing of the Magna Carta, the Library’s 1297 copy of the
statute has been digitised and is available on our website. The volume will be
on display in the Amaze Gallery and a number of public programs will recognise
the Magna Carta as among the most influential documents in legal history.