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        | Magna Carta is an English charter,  originally issued in the year 1215 and reissued later in the 13th  century in modified versions, which included the most direct challenges  to the monarch's authority to date. The charter first passed into law in  1225. The 1297 version, with the long title (originally in Latin) The Great Charter of the Liberties of England, and of the Liberties of the Forest, still remains on the statute books of England and Wales. |  | 
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        | The Mayflower Compact was the first governing document of Plymouth Colony. It was written by the colonists, later together known to history as the Pilgrims, who crossed the Atlantic aboard the Mayflower.  Almost half of the colonists were part of a separatist group seeking  the freedom to practice Christianity according to their own  determination and not the will of the English Church.[citation needed] It was signed on November 11, 1620 (OS)[1] by 41 of the ship's one hundred and two passengers,[2] in what is now Provincetown Harbor near Cape Cod. |  | 
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        | were a series of laws that restricted the use of foreign shipping for trade between England (after 1707 Great Britain)  and its colonies, a process which had started in 1651. Their goal was  to force colonial development into lines favorable to England, and stop  direct colonial trade with the Netherlands, France and other European  countries. The original ordinance of 1651 was renewed at the Restoration by Acts of 1660 and 1663, and subsequently subject to minor amendment.  These Acts also formed the basis for British overseas trade for nearly  200 years. |  | 
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        | was the first assembly of elected representatives of English colonists in North America. The House was established by the Virginia Company,  who created the body as part of an effort to encourage English  craftsmen to settle in North America. Its first meeting was held in Jamestown, Virginia, on July 30, 1619.[1] |  | 
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        | was an undocumented, though long-standing, British policy of avoiding strict enforcement of parliamentary laws,meant to keep the American colonies obedient to Great Britain. |  | 
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