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Cheap $27 ‘copy’ of historic Magna Carta is revealed to be an ORIGINAL worth 78,000x more

Published on May 15, 2025 at 12:52 PM

A CHEAP copy of the monumental Magna Carta bought by Harvard University for $27 is actually an original worth a whopping $21million (£16million).

The jaw-dropping revelation came after two researchers analysed the “print”;; – but realised it was in fact a rare version of the document issued by Edward I.

1300 Magna Carta displayed in a frame.
The 1300 copy of Magna Carta owned by Harvard Law School has been revealed to be an original worth millions
Researchers using imaging technology on a Magna Carta copy.
Researchers analysed the print which originally cost $27
Page of an auction catalogue listing medieval manuscripts and a Magna Carta.
A Sotheby’s auction catalogue listing that wrongly categorises the original issue 1300 Magna Carta as a copy, pictured

The original Magna Carta established in 1215 famously stated that the is subject to law.

The , intended to make peace between King John and rebel barons in the 13th century, has formed the basis of constitutions globally.

Until now, it was believed that there were only four copies of the 1215 original and just six copies of the 1300 version.

But the groundbreaking discovery has now changed that fact – bringing the total amount of 1300 copies to seven.

Professor of medieval history at King’s College London David Carpenter said his reaction was one of “amazement, and in a way, awe”;;.

He had been searching the Harvard Law School Library website in December 2023 when he found the digitised .

The researcher said: “First, I’d found one of the most rare documents and most significant documents in world constitutional .

“But secondly, of course, it was astonishment that Harvard had been sitting on it for all these years without realizing what it was.”;;

Carpenter then teamed up with Nicholas Vincent, a professor of medieval history at the University of East Anglia to analyse and confirm the document’s origin.

Comparing it wit six other authentic copies from 1300, they made the shocking discovery that the dimensions matched up.

The pair then turned to images Harvard librarians created using ultraviolet light and spectral imaging.

This technology helps to highlight details on faded documents which are not perceivable to the naked eye.

With these images, they compared the text word-for-word and handwriting which included a large capital “E”;; at the start of “Edwardus”;;.

Although the first version 1250 was annulled, the charter was reissued in 1300 by Edward I.

It promised protection of church rights, limits on taxes and access to impartial justice.

Four of its clauses, including the guarantee of fair legal process, have survived and are still enshrined in law to this day.

Researchers using imaging technology on a copy of the Magna Carta.
Researchers analysed fine details that cannot be seen by the human eye
They compared text word-for-word and handwriting which included a large capital ‘E’ at the start of ‘Edwardus’
Librarian using imaging technology to analyze a faded Magna Carta.
Technology was used to help its librarians see details the rare, faded copy

Carpenter said the 1300 edition of Magna Carta was “different from the previous versions in a whole series of small ways and the changes are found in every single one”;;.

Harvard needed a copy that could prove authenticity, and Carpenter said they passed this test “with flying colours”;;.

The tattered and faded copy is now worth millions of dollars – a 1297 version of the Magna Carta sold at auction for $21.3million in 2007.

But Harvard have no plans to sell it now.

The mysterious journey it took to end up in the hands of the university was uncovered mainly by Vincent, who traced it back to the former parliamentary borough of Appleby in Westmorland, England.

The Harvard Law School library purchased the “copy”;; in 1946 from a London-based book dealer for a mere $27.50.

It was wrongly dated as a 1327 version when it was bought.

The researcher then determined the document was sent to an auction house in 1945 via a World War pilot.

War hero Forester Maynard inherited the archives from Thomas and John Clarkson – leading campaigners against the slave trade.

Thomas Clarkson had become friends with William Lowther, hereditary lord of the manor of Appleby.

Vincent speculates the lord gave the document to Clarkson.

The researcher said there was “a chain of connection there, as it were, a smoking gun”;; but there lacked clear proof that it was the Appleby Magna Carta.

“But it seems to me very likely that it is,”;; he said.

Vincent still wants to find a letter or other documentation confirming the Magna Carta was given to Thomas Clarkson.

The two researchers will visit Harvard in June to see its Magna Carta firsthand.

Portrait of David Carpenter, professor of medieval history at King's College London.
David Carpenter, a professor of medieval history at King’s College London
Professor Nicholas Vincent sitting at his desk.
Nicholas Vincent, a professor of medieval history at the University of East Anglia

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