Enlightenment · Europe · Politics

1679

Habeas Corpus Act

May 27, 1679

The English Parliament passed a law forbidding imprisonment without a speedy opportunity to appear before a court. The principle was ancient; the procedure was new and enforceable. Habeas corpus would become the single most famous English legal protection against arbitrary detention and would migrate wherever English common law traveled, from Philadelphia to Calcutta to Sydney, shielding the liberty of millions.