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Similarities Between Magna Carta And The Us Constitution

692 Words3 Pages

Brody Sheehan
Mr. McCrystal
History Honors
3 February 2023
Magna Carta and US Foundation Documents The Magna Carta, the document from medieval Europe, shaped not only the government of the time, but influenced and affected modern governments along with portraying itself as a symbol of freedom. This influence reached over thousands of years, forming and governing nations, including The United States of America. This document of justice, while undoubtedly influential and important, resembles not only the content, but the creation and life of the American Constitution. The similarity between the Magna Carta and the US Constitution can be seen in their sharing of this description - A revolution over a tyrannical, taxing English ruler resulting …show more content…

Good examples of this are two of the Magna Carta's most emphasized points– a freeman's right to a fair and speedy trial and leveling the king with the higher ranked people of the time. The right to a trial, the Magna Carta’s 29 statement, exists in near replication in the US Constitution's sixth amendment, a testament to the righteous base of this treatise. The main reason for the creation of the Magna Carta, the equalization of the king to the people, influences the most important position in the US government. The US president was created as a servant to the people, suggesting an equal status. Buttressing this suggestion, Article 2 Section 4 of the Constitution states that the president can be removed and penalized for crimes. While both of these examples show the US Constitution appropriating constructive and just laws, they furthermore indicate a classist, racist, and sexist …show more content…

Issued by King Henry III, multiple amendments and revisions were produced as a response to many reasons, such as backlash from the people. The change brought about by the people exhibits a fundamental part in American democracy, the right to protests for change, and the existence of amendments and changes to the Constitution. Further, the manner this protest happened, not always peaceful, shows a bleaker similarity, the reaction instead of preventative change. The changes and manner of change of these two documents solidifies the resemblance of them and their role in the life and growth of

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