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Our English Heritage

Our English Heritage. Chapter 2 Sec. 1. Section 1 vocabulary. Monarch Magna Carta Legislature Parliament Precedents Common Law Colony Charter. Compact Mayflower Compact. Influences from England’s early government.

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Our English Heritage

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  1. Our English Heritage Chapter 2 Sec. 1

  2. Section 1 vocabulary • Monarch • Magna Carta • Legislature • Parliament • Precedents • Common Law • Colony • Charter • Compact • Mayflower Compact

  3. Influences from England’s early government • When the English arrived in America, they brought with them limited and representative government • England was ruled by a monarch, a king or queen. Nobles held much power • The nobles forced King John to sign the Magna Carta, which means “Great Charter” • This document upheld rights of landowners including equal treatment under the law and a trial by one’s peers. It limited the power of the king or queen

  4. Influences from England’s early government • Nobles and church officials who advised Henry III developed into a legislature, or lawmaking body. This would eventually become known as Parliament • Years later parliament removed James II from the throne, known as the glorious revolution. From then on, no ruler would have more power than the legislature. • Parliament would eventually set up a Bill of Rights. It granted certain rights to all citizens • Rights such as free election, free speech, a fair jury, and no cruel and unusual punishment. • For a long time England had no written laws. Judges made rulings based on precedents, rulings in earlier cases that were similar • The system of law based on precedent and custom is known as common law

  5. Parliament

  6. Bringing the English heritage to America • A colony is group of people in one place who are ruled by a parent country elsewhere • English colonists remained loyal subjects of England for decades. They accepted common law and expected the same rights they enjoyed in England • A charter is a written document granting land and authority to set up colonial governments • The Pilgrims drew up the Mayflower Compact, a written plan that set up a direct democracy in the Plymouth colony • A compact is a legal written contract or agreement

  7. Early colonial governments • English colonies that were set up after Jamestown and Plymouth followed their examples and set up similar compacts • Each colony had a governor and elected legislature, often modeled after Parliament • As time passed colonial governments began to take on more power. The king and parliament were often preoccupied at home. So the colonists got used to making their own decisions

  8. Jamestown

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