Article 37H9X Freedoms of the forest, ancient and modern | Letters

Freedoms of the forest, ancient and modern | Letters

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Letters
from Environment | The Guardian on (#37H9X)
David Carpenter and Ralph Hanna point out that the 1217 Charter of the Forest wasn't a great emancipation for ordinary people, while Kevin May sings the praises of modern-day Kielder Forest in Northumberland

Felicity Lawrence (For a fairer share of our resources, turn to the 13th century, 8 November) states that the 1217 Charter of the Forest "asserted the rights of ordinary people to access from 'the commons' the means for a livelihood and shelter". It thus "represented an early constitutional victory for ordinary people over a wealthy elite". Alas, this view needs considerable qualification. The key concessions in the charter were granted to "free men", and thus deliberately excluded the unfree, who formed a large proportion of the population. Far from being a victory of the ordinary people over a wealthy elite, the charter was, in some ways, exactly the reverse.
David Carpenter
London

" Yes, the 1217 Charter of the Forest opened forests to use of non-aristocrats. No, this wasn't wildly emancipatory.

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