Are we celebrating the wrong Magna Carta?

Are we celebrating the wrong Magna Carta?

The history books tell us that Magna Carta was sealed on 15 June 1215. But, according to Professor David Carpenter, that's not actually the date we should commemorate. He explains to David Musgrove why we ought to remember a different issue of the charter – 800 years ago on 11 February 1225. It was in 1225 that John's son Henry III willingly agreed to a reissue of the charter and, argues David, this was the one with the lasting legacy. The HistoryExtra podcast is produced by the team behind BBC History Magazine. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Episoder(2612)

An A-Z history of the English alphabet

An A-Z history of the English alphabet

Which letter of the English alphabet did Benjamin Franklin think we'd be better off without? Why must the letter U (almost) always follow the letter Q? And what is the point of silent letters? From th...

30 Jun 47min

Abigail Adams: life of the week

Abigail Adams: life of the week

As the wife of a founding figure in early American history, Abigail Adams was able to push beyond the restrictions of many of her sex in the 18th century, influencing policy and advocating for those i...

29 Jun 39min

The astonishing laws of medieval Wales

The astonishing laws of medieval Wales

From divorce settlements and cattle disputes to surprisingly modern ideas about gender and compensation, the laws of Hywel Dda shed unique light on how society functioned, in a turbulent age of rival ...

28 Jun 45min

Inside the Declaration of Independence

Inside the Declaration of Independence

It’s 250 years since the Declaration of Independence brought a new nation into formal existence. But what did it actually say – and who did it leave out? In the second episode of HistoryExtra’s series...

27 Jun 32min

Cannibalism, heartbreak and Madame Guillotine: George Forster's extraordinary life

Cannibalism, heartbreak and Madame Guillotine: George Forster's extraordinary life

He sailed to Antarctica with Captain Cook, rubbed shoulders with Benjamin Franklin and helped found a revolutionary republic. It’s little wonder, then, that Andrea Wulf describes George Forster – the ...

25 Jun 43min

Charlotte Brontë's life through clothes

Charlotte Brontë's life through clothes

We might picture Charlotte Brontë's life as an isolated one, separated from much of the world and its fashions as she whiled away the hours in her father's Haworth parsonage. But the truth, as Eleanor...

23 Jun 36min

Emma Goldman: life of the week

Emma Goldman: life of the week

Anarchist, feminist, revolutionary: 19th-century activist and writer Emma Goldman emigrated from the Russian empire to the United States as a teenager, and spent decades challenging power and conventi...

22 Jun 40min

Stealing the V2 rocket: Britain’s secret WW2 intelligence coup

Stealing the V2 rocket: Britain’s secret WW2 intelligence coup

In 1944, as Allied troops pushed across Europe after D-Day, the Allies faced a terrifying new threat: Hitler’s V2 weapons, striking without warning at supersonic speed. In this episode, Emily Briffett...

21 Jun 31min

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