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Chex
06-13-15, 12:03 PM
Just looking at some opinions.

Blog http://losethename.com/legal-remedy-sovereign-freeman-common-law-no-way/#comments

Under Queen Elizabeth I of England https://registerofbirthsanddeaths.wordpress.com/

shikamaru
06-14-15, 10:10 AM
Tami Pepperman is very close to the material that you've presented.

http://www.chooseyourside.org/

I'm hoping allodial sees this and chimes in.

Chex
06-15-15, 03:31 AM
From Origin of Settlement (Birth) Certificates

Under King Henry VIII of England and his Venetian/Magyar advisers, the first poor laws were promulgated around 1535 coinciding with the first official mandate requiring uniform record keeping by all Church of England parishes of births, deaths and marriages. The poor were considered the responsibility of the “Church” including ensuring they had ample work and did not starve to death as they were considered by default the property of the church.

Today

LONDON – Queen Elizabeth II will return on Monday to the setting where 800 years ago one of her predecessors accepted the Magna Carta, the English document that put limits on the power of the crown for the first time and laid the foundation for modern freedoms.

The Magna Carta, Latin for “Great Charter,” was ratified by King John of England in June 1215 at Runnymede, about 20 miles (about 30 km) west of London after an uprising by his barons. It established certain rights of the English people and placed the monarch under the rule of law.


Not only does it form the bedrock of Britain’s constitutional freedoms, it was the basis for the U.S. Bill of Rights, the U.S. Declaration of Independence and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Three of its 63 clauses remain on Britain’s statute book.

“The relevance of the Magna Carta in the 21st century is that it is the foundation of liberty,” said Robert Worcester, chairman of the Magna Carta 800th Committee.

The queen, who is patron of the Magna Carta Trust, will attend an official ceremony at Runnymede on Monday to commemorate the anniversary. So will other members of the royal family, including her grandson Prince William, who is second in line for the throne.

Source (http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2015/06/14/world/british-royals-set-to-return-to-runnymede-where-the-magna-carta-was-sealed-800-years-ago/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=british-royals-set-to-return-to-runnymede-where-the-magna-carta-was-sealed-800-years-ago#.VX5GN5XbLIU)

shikamaru
06-15-15, 10:05 AM
Thank-you so much for this thread, Chex.

This thread helped me to gain a better understanding of true name versus legal name.

The thing about the Magna Carta is that it was anulled by Pope Innocent III. Future presentments of the Magna Carta were heavily revised. Each presentment having fewer articles than its previous version.

The Charter of the Forest should be mentioned here as well.

Furthermore, the Magna Carta didn't cover those of lesser status. It took an English court case hundreds of years later to extend the liberties of the charter to all English people.