Et ad habendum commune consilium regni, de auxilio assidendo aliter quam in tribus casibus predictis, vel de scutagio assidendo, summoneri faciemus archiepiscopos, episcopos, abbates, comites, et majores barones, sigillatim per litteras nostras; et preterea faciemus summoneri in generali, per vicecomites et ballivos nostros, omnes illos qui de nobis tenent in capite; ad certum diem, scilicet ad terminum quadraginta dierum ad minus, et ad certum locum; et in omnibus litteris illius summonicionis causam summonicionis exprimemus; et sic facta summonicione negocium ad diem assignatum procedat secundum consilium illorum qui presentes fuerint, quamvis non omnes summoniti venerint.

And for obtaining the common counsel of the kingdom anent the assessing of an aid (except in the three cases aforesaid) or of a scutage, we will cause to be summoned the archbishops, bishops, abbots, earls, and greater barons, by our letters under seal; and we will moreover cause to be summoned generally, through our sheriffs and bailiffs, all others who hold of us in chief, for a fixed date, namely, after the expiry of at least forty days, and at a fixed place; and in all letters of such summons we will specify the reason of the summons. And when the summons has thus been made, the business shall proceed on the day appointed, according to the counsel of such as are present, although not all who were summoned have come.

This chapter, which has no equivalent among the Articles of the Barons, appears here incidentally: it would never have found a place in Magna Carta but for the need of suitable machinery to give effect to the provision of chapter 12.[[498]]

As the earlier clause is frequently supposed to contain a general doctrine of taxation, so this one is often cited as enunciating a general doctrine of parliamentary representation; while the close connection between the two chapters is taken to indicate an equally close connection between the two conceptions supposed to underlie them, and is urged as evidence that the framers of Magna Carta had grasped the essentially modern principle that taxation and representation go together.[[499]] In this view, the barons at Runnymede deserve credit for anticipating some of the best features of the modern system of parliamentary government. The words of the text, however, will scarcely bear so liberal an interpretation. Vital points of difference between the principles of Magna Carta and the modern doctrine of representation are revealed by a careful analysis.

Under chapter 12 scutages and extraordinary aids could only be levied “with common counsel of our kingdom,” and now chapter 14, by formulating rules for convening the individuals whose consent was thus required, fixes authoritatively the composition of an assembly definitely charged with this specific function. The same Latin words which signify joint “consent” or counsel thus came to signify also a special institution, namely, that “Common Council” afterwards of such vital constitutional importance, continuing under a new name the old curia regis in several of its most important aspects, and passing in turn into the modern Parliament. The duties and constitutional importance of this commune concilium may be considered under six heads.

I. Nature of the Summons. Formal writs had to be issued when the attendance of the members was required. These writs must specify the time, place, and reason of assembling, giving formal notice at least forty days in advance. In these respects the writs issued were all to be the same; but in one vital particular a distinction was recognized. Each of the really powerful men of the realm—archbishops, bishops, abbots, earls, and "other greater barons"—must receive a separate writ, under the royal seal, addressed to him individually and directly, while the “smaller barons” were to be summoned collectively and indirectly through the sheriffs and bailiffs of each district.

II. Composition of the Council. It is clear that the meetings contemplated were purely baronial assemblies since none but Crown tenants were invited to attend; while individual notice under the king’s seal was given only to the more important magnates among them. The Common Council of the Charter was thus an assembly of military Crown tenants, and “the common consent of my kingdom” in John’s mouth was synonymous with “the consent of my barons.”[[500]]

The king’s Council had by this time freed itself from any complicated theories as to its own composition, which may ever have hampered it. It was now extremely homogeneous; a feudal muster of Crown vassals. Some historians, indeed, in their anxiety to find distinguished pedigrees for their democratic ideals, have traced the origins of the leading features of the modern Parliament back to the Anglo-Saxon era; but such attempts are hurtful to the best interests of history, while they do not in the least advance the cause of popular liberties.

It is unnecessary here to examine the various rival theories professing to explain the composition of the Anglo-Saxon Witenagemot, or to discuss the exact connection between that venerable institution and the Curia Regis of the Norman kings. As a matter of fact, the early constitution of the court of the Conqueror or of Rufus seems to have been monarchic rather than aristocratic or democratic; that is to say, it depended to a great extent on the personal will of the king, who might issue or withhold writs of summons very much as he pleased. No evidence exists, of date anterior to the Great Charter, of any magnate thrusting himself unbidden into a royal council or forcing the king to issue a formal invitation. On one occasion, indeed, the action of Henry II. in omitting to issue a writ laid him open to unfavourable criticism. This was in October, 1164, when a special council was summoned to Northampton to pass judgment upon various questions at issue between the king and Thomas à Becket. The primate was ordered to appear for judgment, but the formal writ of summons, which every archbishop, as holder of a barony, was wont to receive as matter of course, was deliberately withheld. Apparently contemporary opinion condemned this omission.[[501]] It is safe to infer, then, that as early as 1164, the method of issuing these writs had become uniform, but this constitutional understanding was not reduced to writing until embodied in Magna Carta. Thus it was in 1215 that the magnates of England formulated for the first time a distinct claim to be present at the king’s councils; and even then the demand only referred to assemblies summoned for one specific purpose. Previously, attendance was reckoned not as a privilege, but merely as an expensive burden, incident, like so many other burdens, to the possession of land.[[502]]

III. Position of the “Minor Barons.” In recognizing a distinction between two classes of Crown tenants, the Great Charter merely gave the weight of its authority to existing usage, as that had taken shape in the reign of Henry II. Crown tenants varied in power and position in proportion to the extent of their lands, from the great earl who owned the larger share of one or more counties, down to the small free-holder with only a few hides, or it might be acres, of land. A rough division was drawn somewhere in the midst; but the exact boundary was necessarily vague, and this vagueness was probably encouraged by the Crown, whose requirements might vary from time to time.[[503]] Those Crown tenants on one side of this fluctuating line were known as barones majores, those on the other as barones minores. The distinction had been recognized as early as the days of Henry II.;[[504]] but Magna Carta helped to stereotype it, and contributed to the growing tendency to confine the word “baron” to the greater men.[[505]] It is unlikely that any “minor baron” who obeyed the general summons would enjoy equal authority with the magnates invited individually by writ; and it is difficult to say even whether he was sure of a welcome, and, if so, in what capacity. Three distinct theories at least have been advanced as to the position occupied by the “minor barons” in the Common Council. (1) The duty of attendance, burdensome to all, was specially burdensome to the poorer Crown tenants. It has accordingly been suggested that the device of inviting them by general summons was intended as an intimation that they need not come. This is the view taken by Prof. Medley.[[506]]