Treason Act 1495

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The Treason Act 1495,[1] is an Act of the Parliament of England which was passed in the reign of Henry VII of England. The long title of the Act is "An Acte that noe person going wth the Kinge to the Warres shalbe attaynt of treason."[2][3]

Henry had become king after defeating Richard III in the Battle of Bosworth on August 22, 1485. However he backdated the start of his reign to August 21, the day before the battle, enabling him to prosecute anyone who had fought under his rival, and to execute them for treason. This was highly controversial at the time, since it meant that, in a future battle, anyone who fought for the rightful king against a usurper would be at risk of execution if they lost, and this might undermine their courage in battle and their loyalty to their king. Nevertheless, Henry VII had his way at the time as Parliament was then in no position to oppose him.

However ten years later Henry's position on the throne was sufficiently secure that he could afford to grant Parliament what they wanted when in 1495 they passed a bill to prevent the treason laws being abused in this way again. The resulting Act is still in force today and also applies to Scotland.

The Act states that a person serving the king de facto for the time being is not guilty of treason, or of any other offence, if he wages war against the king de jure.

The Act was cited by Sir Harry Vane in his treason trial in 1662 following the Restoration. He was one of those accused of serving with Oliver Cromwell against the king during the English Civil War, and in his defence he relied upon the Act. However the court ruled that the 1495 Act was only intended to protect those who fought for a king, not to protect republican rebels who fought to abolish the monarchy. He was convicted and executed.

[edit] Other countries

In New Zealand, section 64 of the Crimes Act 1961 provides that obedience to the laws of a person with "possession de facto of the sovereign power" is protected from criminal responsibility.[1]

[edit] See also

[edit] References and notes

  1. ^ The Act (technically referred to as 11 Hen. 7, c. 1) has no official short title but could informally be called the Treason Act 1495.
  2. ^ Official text of The Act 11 Hen. 7 (c.1) as amended and in force today within the United Kingdom, from the UK Statute Law Database
  3. ^ Annotated original text, scroll down to (E)