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Press
Information:
Public Information:
Sami Mesarwi (713) 639-4722 or
smesarwi@hmns.org
(713) 639-4629 or
www.hmns.org
Assistant Director of Marketing & PR
Press Site
Melodie Wade (713) 639-4743 or
mwade@hmns.org
Public Relations Consultant
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Original Magna Carta and Only Known Copy
of King’s Writ
United for First Time in
U.S.
Document that helped shape the U.S. Constitution to go on exhibit at HMNS
HOUSTON—An
original edition of the “Magna
Carta,” and the only known example of the King’s Writ, a letter from
King John to the Sheriff of Gloucester dated June 20, 1215 A.D. announcing
the signing of the Magna Carta, will travel to the Houston Museum of Natural
Science from its home in Hereford Cathedral, and can be viewed for a limited
time, Feb. 14 - Aug. 17, 2014.
The
Magna Carta is considered to be Great Britain's
most valuable export to the world and a model upon which the United States
Constitution – among many other important world documents – was based.
The Magna Carta continues to serve as the definitive document modeling basic
civil liberties and is the source of many of
the most fundamental concepts of law, including the very concept of a
written constitution. In more than one hundred decisions, the United States
Supreme Court has traced dependence on the Magna Carta for an understanding
of due process of law, trial by jury of one's
peers, the importance of a speedy and unbiased trial, and protection against
excessive bail or fines or cruel and unusual punishment.
“We are
very honored to be the museum with which Hereford Cathedral has elected to
share this precious document with Houstonians and many others in
Texas and the
U.S.,” said
Joel Bartsch, President of the
Houston Museum of Natural Science.
“To be able to put on display and unite for the first time in the
U.S. a copy of the Magna Carta and
King’s Writ, two documents that helped shape many other landmark documents
including our U.S. Constitution, is a momentous occasion for HMNS.”
The Magna Carta’s history is complex, part of the
evolving relationship between the monarchy and leading nobles of
England during the preceding
century. Following earlier
charters issued by Henry I and Henry II, and decades of increasing conflict
and civil war, the rebel barons of
England, along with the
Archbishop of
Canterbury, Stephen Langton, and a number of
bishops, forced King John to establish peace
through the issuing of a new charter, at Runnymede, near
Windsor, on 15 June 1215.
Both the then Earl of Hereford and Bishop of Hereford were present, and the
Earl was nominated as one of the 25 barons who were to oversee the
keeping of the charter. The charter safeguarded
certain rights, privileges and liberties of the clergy and the
nobles, while also placing some limits on the power of the crown.
Hereford Cathedral’s Magna Carta is the 1217
re-issue. This was made in the
name of King John’s son, Henry III, who was just ten years old, to ensure
that the new boy king’s fragile hold on power retained the support of the
nobles.
Hereford Cathedral is very fortunate in also
possessing the only surviving example of an important writ sent from King
John while still at
Runnymede, instructing the Sheriff of each county to
prepare for the arrival of the legislation we know as Magna Carta.
It is dated 20 June 1215, and was written by a scribe in the camp on
the meadow of
Runnymede, on the banks of the River
Thames. Known unofficially as the
‘King’s Writ,’ this postcard-sized document announced the negotiated peace
to the Sheriff, asked him to swear loyalty to its terms and to look into
corruption and malpractice amongst royal officials in his county in advance
of the arrival of the full charter.
“We are fortunate to be custodians of these
historic documents,” said Canon Chris Pullin, Chancellor of Hereford
Cathedral, who has overall management responsibility for the documents.
“As we approach the 800th anniversary of the sealing of
Magna Carta in 1215, along with the issuing of our King’s Writ, we are
delighted to be able to share these documents with our American friends.”
“On both sides of the
Atlantic we have come to see Magna Carta as
an iconic milestone on the long road of human liberties and justice.
Many world leaders have been inspired by what it stands for, and we
hope that this loan will strengthen the resolve of a new generation to
safeguard the values of justice, peace, and liberty.”
For
tickets, or more information, visit
www.hmns.org or call (713) 639-4629.
The loan of the documents is a
partnership arrangement between the Houston Museum of Natural Science and
the Chapter of Hereford Cathedral and Hereford Cathedral Perpetual Trust.
Magna Carta is
generously underwritten, in part, by Dianne and George Lindahl; Kelly and
Bill Montgomery; Elizabeth and Gary Petersen; HMW
Entertainment; Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co.; Laurie
and Reed Morian; and Matt Assiff and Lisa Young.
.
The
Houston
Museum of Natural Science—one
of the nation’s most heavily attended museums—is a centerpiece of the
Houston Museum District. With four floors of permanent exhibit halls, and
the Wortham Giant Screen Theatre,
Cockrell
Butterfly
Center, Burke Baker
Planetarium and George Observatory and as host to world-class and
ever-changing touring exhibitions, the Museum has something to delight every
age group. With such diverse and extraordinary offerings, a trip to the
Houston Museum of Natural Science, located at
5555 Hermann Park Drive in
the heart of the Museum District, is always an adventure.
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