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Spare copy of Magna Carta found.

Posted: 2015-02-08 07:09am
by Dartzap
Beeb
An early edition of Magna Carta has been found in archives belonging to the Kent town of Sandwich.

The discovery has come months ahead of the 800th anniversary of the sealing of Magna Carta in Runnymede in 1215.

A history expert had asked Kent archivist Dr Mark Bateson to search for another charter from Sandwich.

Dr Bateson found the town's Charter of the Forest in a Victorian scrapbook in Kent County Council archives - with the long-forgotten Magna Carta edition.

The document was ripped with about a third missing but could still be worth up to £10m, according to Professor Nicholas Vincent, a specialist in medieval history from the University of East Anglia.

Its high value comes from the fact that it was found with the Charter of the Forest. The only other such pair in the world is owned by Oriel College, Oxford.

Professor Vincent, who asked Dr Bateson to search for the forest charter in December and went on to authenticate the Sandwich Magna Carta after it was found, said it was "a fantastic discovery".

He said it backed the theory that Magna Carta was issued more widely than previously thought, to at least 50 cathedral towns and ports.

He also said the discovery gave hope that further copies would also turn up.

Twenty-four editions of Magna Carta, which established the principle of the rule of law, are currently known to exist.

The Magna Carta Research Project describes the Sandwich document as a "previously unknown exemplar of the 1300 Magna Carta", over half a metre in length, but missing text and its royal seal.

Experts said the 1300 Magna Carta was issued by Edward I and was apparently the last to be drawn up. They said the discovery of the Sandwich Magna Carta brought to seven the number of surviving originals of 1300.

'Underpinning liberties'
It is understood Sandwich does not plan to sell its copy but does hope to benefit from it as a tourist attraction.

Paul Graeme, mayor of Sandwich Town Council, said owning the forest charter and Magna Carta was "an immense privilege".

He said: "Through the American Declaration of Independence, continuing in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Magna Carta still underpins individual liberties worldwide.

"To own such a document - and the Charter of the Forest - is an honour and a great responsibility."

This week, four 1215 versions were brought together at the Houses of Parliament; two from Salisbury Cathedral and Lincoln Cathedral and two from the British Library.
Bloody typical, eh? You hunt high and low for that 700 year old receipt for a basic rights package, and the bloody thing was down the back of the sofa the whole time!

Re: Spare copy of Magna Carta found.

Posted: 2015-02-08 07:23am
by Gandalf
News like this makes me happy. It's always good to see old documents, be they the Magna Carta or a restaurant menu, found in even halfway decent condition.
An early edition of Magna Carta has been found in archives belonging to the Kent town of Sandwich.

The discovery has come months ahead of the 800th anniversary of the sealing of Magna Carta in Runnymede in 1215.
Well that's a spot of luck! Evidently the trick to finding things in Britain is to be on the cusp of an important anniversary, be it charters of law, or episodes of Doctor Who.

Re: Spare copy of Magna Carta found.

Posted: 2015-02-08 08:20am
by LaCroix
Gandalf wrote:News like this makes me happy. It's always good to see old documents, be they the Magna Carta or a restaurant menu, found in even halfway decent condition.
An early edition of Magna Carta has been found in archives belonging to the Kent town of Sandwich.

The discovery has come months ahead of the 800th anniversary of the sealing of Magna Carta in Runnymede in 1215.
Well that's a spot of luck! Evidently the trick to finding things in Britain is to be on the cusp of an important anniversary, be it charters of law, or episodes of Doctor Who.
I guess anniversaries make curators think "Let's have a look into our archieves, maybe there is something we could use to have a 'special exhibition' to boost visitor numbers."

And out of thousands of collections, sometimes, stuff surfaces. Most museums have 10+ times the stuff they exhibit in storage, and most hasn't been touched in ages.

Re: Spare copy of Magna Carta found.

Posted: 2015-02-08 09:07am
by PainRack
Any details on how they plan to make it a tourist attraction?

Re: Spare copy of Magna Carta found.

Posted: 2015-02-08 12:50pm
by Baffalo
That's like the guys who go hunting through attics and basements after someone dies and decides to pawn off grandma's weird artwork, then kick themselves when they find out it was worth $10 million because it was some artist's early work.

But hey, they found it, it's now going to be preserved. The question is what happened to that third that's missing... probably used by someone to write his grocery list on and it's found with a picture of a loaf of bread on it because the servants are illiterate.

Re: Spare copy of Magna Carta found.

Posted: 2015-02-08 04:57pm
by Bedlam
It must be interesting to see how identical all the copies are, they are of course hand made, have errors crept in?

Re: Spare copy of Magna Carta found.

Posted: 2015-02-24 09:16pm
by Baffalo
Bedlam wrote:It must be interesting to see how identical all the copies are, they are of course hand made, have errors crept in?
Wasn't that what happened with Boudica? For the longest time they called her Bunduca because of a misprint in the 10th century?

I can just see some monk sitting there working by the window, bored out of his mind, and half asleep scribbling the name down wrong. That or drawing penises in the margins to get a laugh.