The eight Lord Proprietors of the colony of Carolina promulgate the Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina (ghost written by John Locke), Articles 27, 32, 65, 79, 109 and 116 of which,
- Preserves the Right to Trial by Jury;
- Provide for public balloting in the colonial parliament;
- Prohibits Double Jeopardy;
- Requires freehold ownership of 50 acres property to cast ballots;
- Automatically repeals legislation that is a century old;
- Prohibits religious persecution;
- Enrolls all “inhabitants and freemen … above seventeen years of age, and under sixty” in the Militia.
[added 10/18/2024]
Subsequent Events:
Authority:
Magna Carta, Chapter 13
ccc-2point0.com/magna-carta-excerpts
References:
The Avalon Project : The Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina : March 1, 1669
avalon.law.yale.edu/17th_century/nc05.asp