martedì 27 ottobre 2015

(CLASS 3rd) CLIL LESSON : KING JOHN AND THE MAGNA CHARTA

John became King in 1199 when his brother,King Richard I, died. To many John was cruel, greedy   and ultimately a failure as King.  Infact, John lost the English territory inFrance in 1205; 
he unsuccessfully attemptedto regain France for the rest of his reign. He kept raising taxes to pay for his campaigns,but every time he went to France to fight, he lost.
When he came to the throne, his reign wasfull of trouble. After a quarrel with thechurch King John was excommunicated in1209. John had refused to go along with thePope's choice as Archbishop of Canterbury.
By 1215, the nobility of England had enoughof paying extra taxation. The discontentedbarons rebelled and captured London in May1215. In June, the King met these barons totry and reach a peaceful settlement. The meeting took place at Runnymede on the river  Thames. 
The King agreed to their demands by  signing a document known as the MagnaCharta - Latin 
for 'Great Charter'. Manypeople see the Magna Charta as a vital piece  of English history where the rights of individuals are protected against the power of the King or Queen.
 King John of England signing the Magna Charta
  
IMPORTANT POINTS OF THE MAGNA CHARTA
MEANING
"The Church is free to make its own appointments."
The Church had the final say who was appointed to Church positions of power.
"No more than the normal amounts of money can be collected to run the government, unless the king's feudal tenants give their consent."
The King was not allowed to demand more and more money from his nobility.
"No free man shall be seized or imprisoned, or stripped of his rights or possessions... except by the lawful judgement of his peers."
Everyone has the right to a fair trial.

King John signed the document to keep peace with the rebel barons - to buy time - and did not keep to what he agreed to. Civil war thus broke out in England. The nobility called on the French to invade. John proved himself an able soldier, but died in1216, leaving a divided country - still occupied with French invaders - to his nine year old son, King Henry III .
King John was not a total failure. Recent historians have praised his administrative skills and his success on military campaigns in Scotland, Wales and Ireland. However, his loss of France together with the mess he left England in mean that King John will always be seen as one of the least successful rulers of England.