History Podcast Notes: 1215 and all that: A Bad King and a Good Thing

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Notes from listening to the podcast "1215 and all that: A Bad King and a Good Thing"
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History Podcast: 1215 and all that: a Bad King, and a Good Thing   Taking Liberties with Magna Carta ·         Issued at Runnymede June 1215 ·         Grandfather of all our liberties ·         Totemic qualities it still possesses ·         42 day detention of rule ·         Citizen is guaranteed against the state ·         Public liberties, rights of the citizen   What it says ·         Only historical document in English that everybody has heard of ·         Contains some clauses that even today have general significance and are believed to guarantee the rights of the people ·         39 and 40 clauses are still on the statute book today: no man outlawed, enslaved etc. Lands taken off him except by law of the land, no one will we not sell of refuse right or justice ·         60+ clauses ·         Less relevant causes e.g removal of fish weirs from rivers ·         50-51 removal of Gerald Daffy etc. Some clauses are very personal and less for the good of the kingdom ·         Removal all alien knights etc. Basically anyone not English ·         Opening of the charter begins conventionally enough with name of the king, those who attended the issue at Runnymede beginning with AB of C ·         First clause: we have granted to God – initially granted not to citizens of England but to God king speaking directly to the almighty.   Context ·         Why did he sign Magna Carta? Peace treaty to begin with ·         May 1215 Barons had seized London and held it against the king forcing him into negotiations with his Barons ·         Need for peace treaty? Because John was a slippery character ·         Opinions of John differ little from 13th C similar to Matthew Paris view “hell itself is defiled by the vileness of John” ·         19th C “king John cruel as Nero” “combined in his single person all the vices who ever held the crown” ·         Charged with a whole catalogue crimes ·         Henry II 1189 John had rebelled against his father although he was his favourite ·         1190s Richard crusading etc. John rebelled again ·         1199 Richard died John seized the throne (argued to have belonged to Arthur of Brittany son of Geoffrey) ·         1200 John remarried divorcing Isabel of Gloucester but kept her lands, married southern French heiress Isabella of Angouleme (8-14 years old) ·         Isabella already betrothed to southern French Baron Hugh du Lusignan (withheld consummation because of her age) Hugh rebelled and dragged Arthur of Brittany ·         1202 in a brilliant military manoeuvre he held Arthur captive at Mirebeau ·         Arthur led into captivity and never seen again – John believed to have killed him ·         Phillip declared John’s French lands forfeit and seized John’s possessions in Northern France: Normandy, Maine and Anjou ·         1203 John lost Normandy 1204 retreated to England ·         John back in a realm unaccustomed to having a King ·         Set on reclaiming his lands and raised extraordinary taxation to pay for reclamation of continental lands ·         Came into conflict with Barons and Knights who did not wish to pay those taxes ·         Fell out with the English church and confiscated a large part of their estates taking their revenues for his re-conquest ·         Arose from his refusal to allow Stephen Langton become AB of C, John wanted Bishop of Norwich: John de Gray. Papacy excommunicated them ·         Interdict 1208-124 over England – lack of church services ·         1213 John came to terms with Church allowed Langton back into England placed England under direct papal sovereignty and paid the Pope 100,000 marks a year ·         Placing England under the red hand of Rome ·         1214 John spent collected money on an expedition to France to attack Philip ·         August 1214 at Bouvines John’s northern fork cut off ·         Forced back to England with money and reputation gone ·         Stirrings of Baronial discontent ·         May 1215 seizure of London by Rebel Barons ·         Lustful of Barons wives? Cause of discontent ·         When friends deserted him he punished their families ·         Suspicious man ·         Pipe rolls of government 1210 (middle of John’s reign) (written in medieval latin) tell us about nature of kingship ·         John kept a copy of everything: outgoing and ingoing   00.00minutes – 30.10minutes/68.20            

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