The entire text elaborates on how to limit royal power, ensuring the private rights and property rights of other groups.
Even treason theoretically requires a trial before it can be convicted, although the actual operation is another matter, every single clause is undoubtedly a shackle bound upon the King.
No wonder it's ridiculed by many nations as the weakest "Iron Rule" on the Old Continent.
If it were an ordinary person, they would certainly hope for more limitations on royal power, but now the one being limited is himself.
Even if he successfully crowns, widely reclaiming royal power, the existence of the [Royal Iron Rule - Great Charter] itself dooms him to be a limited monarch, until history transitions to "Monarch Parliament" and "Constitutional Monarchy."
Byron raised an eyebrow:
"Times have changed. No one can limit me, not even the Magna Carta.
Having a claim and merely having a claim are two different concepts.
