

As Winston Churchill wrote in his History of the English-Speaking Peoples (1956):
The underlying idea of the sovereignty of the law, long existent in feudal custom, was raised by it into a doctrine for the national state. And when in subsequent ages the State, swollen with its own authority, has attempted to ride roughshod over the rights and liberties of the subject, it is to this doctrine (Magna Carta) that appeal has again and again been made, and never as yet, without success.

be able to wander around the building where the principles of liberty were hammered out made me feel privileged to have lived for much of my life in a country that has so vigorously championed the concept of personal freedom within the law. It also made me sad to reflect that Parliament has done so much in recent years to curtail that freedom - by kow-towing to a bunch of socialistic foreigners who wouldn’t recognise true liberty if it punched them in the nose; by passing Hate Crime legislation which places outrageous restrictions on what we’re allowed to say and think, and which places certain victim groups on a privileged pedestal; and, of course, the freedom of the press is now up for grabs, essentially because a few entertainers and politicians don’t want us to know what grubby things they get up to in private.

The Temple Church, which was first consecrated in 1185 by Heraclius, the Patriarch of Jersualem, was built by the Knights Templar as their London HQ. It has a striking circular nave – the Round Church -
built to a design based on the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. Like most buildings of its age in London, it’s been knocked about a bit over the years. Despite escaping the Great Fire of London, Wren classicised it, only for the Victorians to re-Gothicise it in 1841.

There's a decent video about the church here.
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