Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of plates
- Preface
- Preface to second edition
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- 1 The Charter and its history
- 2 Government and society in the twelfth Century
- 3 Privilege and liberties
- 4 Custom and law
- 5 Justice and jurisdiction
- 6 Crisis and civil war
- 7 Quasi Pax
- 8 The quality of the Great Charter
- 9 The achievement of 1215
- 10 From distraint to war
- 11 The re-issues and the beginning of the myth
- Appendices
- 1 The meeting at Bury St Edmunds, 1214
- 2 Notification of Thomas count of Perche, February 1215
- 3 Triplex forma pacis
- 4 The ‘unknown’ charter
- 5 The Articles of the Barons
- 6 Magna Carta, 1215
- 7 Translations of the Charters
- 8 The Twenty-Five barons of Magna Carta, 1215
- 9 The date of the London treaty
- 10 The Oxford Council, 16-23 July 1215
- 11 Select documents illustrative of the history of Magna Carta, 1215
- 12 Magna Carta, 1225
- 13 Charter of the Forest, 1225
- 14 Liberties and perpetuity
- References
- Index
10 - The Oxford Council, 16-23 July 1215
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2014
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of plates
- Preface
- Preface to second edition
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- 1 The Charter and its history
- 2 Government and society in the twelfth Century
- 3 Privilege and liberties
- 4 Custom and law
- 5 Justice and jurisdiction
- 6 Crisis and civil war
- 7 Quasi Pax
- 8 The quality of the Great Charter
- 9 The achievement of 1215
- 10 From distraint to war
- 11 The re-issues and the beginning of the myth
- Appendices
- 1 The meeting at Bury St Edmunds, 1214
- 2 Notification of Thomas count of Perche, February 1215
- 3 Triplex forma pacis
- 4 The ‘unknown’ charter
- 5 The Articles of the Barons
- 6 Magna Carta, 1215
- 7 Translations of the Charters
- 8 The Twenty-Five barons of Magna Carta, 1215
- 9 The date of the London treaty
- 10 The Oxford Council, 16-23 July 1215
- 11 Select documents illustrative of the history of Magna Carta, 1215
- 12 Magna Carta, 1225
- 13 Charter of the Forest, 1225
- 14 Liberties and perpetuity
- References
- Index
Summary
One of the most important features of Mr Richardson's original paper on ‘The Morrow of the Great Charter’ was the emphasis he gave to the assembly held at Oxford in the third week of July. ‘This July meeting,’ he wrote, ‘for which the evidence is exceptionally abundant, has been ignored or implicitly denied by historians. But it is vitally important if the sequence of events is to be understood. The broad result of the meeting was to carry a stage further the concordia of Runnymede.’
This view differs radically from the one advanced above. The main points of difference are as follows.
(1) Richardson equated the triplex forma pacis with Magna Carta and not, as has been argued above, with the papal forma of March. This meant that he could interpret the approval which the papal commissioners expressed for the forma in September as approval of Magna Carta, and this in turn supported his hypothesis that the agreement was still being amplified in July. On the correct dating of the triplex forma pacis see appendix 3, above, pp. 413-17.
(2) He made the avowed presumption that the administrative changes and other measures taken at or about this time were taken by conciliar decision.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Magna Carta , pp. 484 - 489Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1992