
(c) That Charles's memorable methods of getting money, such as Rummage and Scroungeage, were wrong. (b) Habeas Corpus, which meant that it was wrong if people were put in prison except for some reason, and that people who had been mutilated by the King, such as Prynne, who had often had his ears cut off, should always be allowed to keep their bodies.

This Petition said: (a) That it was wrong for anyone to be put to death more than once for the same offence. The authors maintain that there are only two memorable dates, these being 1066 (the Battle of Hastings and the Norman Invasion) and 55 BC (the first Roman. Another danger is teaching content so that equal weight is given to all content. But so determined were the Roundheads that all this was all wrong that they drew up a Petition called the Petition of Right to show in more detail which things were wrong. (c) Kings were right, and that was right. Sellar 4. (b) Kings were divine, and that was right. An edition of 1066 and All That: A memorable history of England, comprising all the parts you can remember including one hundred and three good things, five bad kings and two genuine dates (1930) 1066 and all that by W. Charles explained that there was a doctrine called the Divine Right of Kings, which said that: (a) He was King, and that was right. For a long time before the Civil War, however, Charles had been quarrelling with the Roundheads about what was right.

With the ascension of Charles I to the throne we come at last to the Central Period of English History (not to be confused with the Middle Ages, of course), consisting in the utterly memorable Struggle between the Cavaliers (Wrong but Wromantic) and the Roundheads (Right and Repulsive).
