The Day of The Magna Carta
JdArden
あらすじ
A king's seal, a riverside meadow and a sheet of parchment-what looked like baronial bargaining at Runnymede became something more dangerous: a claim that power must answer to rules. The Day of the Magna Carta follows that combustible scrap from negotiation and clause-by-clause trade-offs to a global emblem used by lawyers, rebels and statesmen. It tells the story as theater and as law, without hagiography or legalese. JD Arden pairs scene-rich reconstructions-the frozen throne, the march to the meadow, the shiver of sealing-with short, pointed readings of clauses and later reinventions. Clear-eyed and often witty, this book shows why a fragile medieval compromise survived, how it was repurposed, and what it really means for debates about authority today. Read it to see how limits on power are made, lost and remade-and why the work of keeping them is never finished.