Petition of Right, 1628
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- This article is about the constitutional prelude to the English Civil War. For the pre-1947 contractual remedy against the Crown, see: petition of right.
The Petition of Right is a document produced by the English Parliament in the run-up to the English Civil War. It was addressed to Charles I of England in 1628 in an attempt to seek redress on the following points:
- Forced loans
- Arbitrary arrest
- Imprisonment contrary to the Magna Carta
- Arbitrary interference with property rights
- Lack of enforcement of habeas corpus
- Forced billeting of troops
- Imposition of martial law
- Exemption of officials from due process
The petition had the support of Sir Edward Coke; John Pym claimed that the rights herein demanded predated even the Norman conquest and were confirmed by successive kings. The King was under great financial pressure, and agreed in June to look into the "abuses", but maintained his prerogative rights.
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A formal acknowledgment that limited the english monarch's powers to tax people with out the consent of parliament.