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The DC Traveler

Losing the Magna Carta

by Jon on October 8th, 2007

Magna Carta at the National Archives In some sad news from a couple weeks ago, the 13th-century copy of the Magna Carta, which has been on display at the National Archives for over 20 years was quickly removed from public display just three days after its owner, the Perot Foundation, announced that it would sell the rare document at a Sotheby’s auction in New York.

On loan to the Archives since 1984, this copy is from the year 1297, a time when King Edward I was on the British throne.

After receiving the document on loan, the Archives sent it on a 3-year national tour, before becoming a 20-year fixture. It was displayed in the same hall as the Declaration of Independence, The Constitution and The Bill of Rights.

Copies of charter are considered to be the most famous documents in the world, and the essential document of English law that provided rights and personal freedoms.  It inspired the Founding Fathers, providing that citizens could not be imprisoned or deprived of property without due process, as well as granting the right to a speedy trial before a jury.  

National Archives

There are less than 20 copies of the document and only two outside of Great Britain, the other residing in Australia.

The estimate proceeds from the document’s auction in December are in the $20-$30 million range.

With luck, the new buyer will return the document back to the Archives after it is sold.

Images - Magna Carta - Flickr, Archives - personal collection 

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POSTED IN: Announcement, City History & Information, Museums

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