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The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms is a bill of rights; separate sentence in the intro as it doesn't quite fall into other classes enumerated there
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:''Alternate use, see [[charter airline]], [[yacht charter]], [[bare-boat charter]] or [[Charter Communications]]''.
:''Alternate use, see [[charter airline]], [[yacht charter]], [[bare-boat charter]] or [[Charter Communications]]''.


A '''charter''' is a document bestowing certain rights on a [[town]], [[city]], [[university]], [[land]] or [[institution]]; sometimes used as a loan of money. The term derives from a root word meaning "[[paper]]".
A '''charter''' is a document bestowing certain rights on a [[town]], [[city]], [[university]], [[land]] or [[institution]]; sometimes used as a loan of money. The [[Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms]] is a [[bill of rights]]. The term derives from a root word meaning "[[paper]]".


==Origin==
==Origin==

Revision as of 04:47, 17 May 2006

Alternate use, see charter airline, yacht charter, bare-boat charter or Charter Communications.

A charter is a document bestowing certain rights on a town, city, university, land or institution; sometimes used as a loan of money. The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms is a bill of rights. The term derives from a root word meaning "paper".

Origin

As John Fiske described in his 1890 treatise on the Origin of Civil Government in the United States:

The word "charter" originally meant simply a paper or written document, and it was often applied to deeds for the transfer of real estate. In contracts of such importance papers or parchment documents were drawn up and carefully preserved as irrefragable evidences of the transaction. And so, in quite significant phrase the towns zealously guarded their charters as the "title-deeds of their liberties."
After a while the word charter was applied in England to a particular document which specified certain important concessions forcibly wrung by the people from a most unwilling sovereign. This document was called Magna Carta, or the "Great Charter," signed at Runnymede, June 15, 1215, by John, king of England.

History

In Anglo-Saxon England charters were used to grant land rights.

Charters were issued in medieval times by Royal decree, perhaps giving a particular town the right to hold a weekly market, or to levy a toll on a road or bridge.

A charter is a legally binding document incorporating an organization or institution and specifying its purpose, remit or bylaws. Organizations such as the Institution of Civil Engineers in the UK is chartered to maintain and advance the science and practice of civil engineering in the UK, and by this charter has the right to regulate the business of civil engineering in the UK; this gives rise to a status of a chartered engineer - one who satisfies the requirements of the charter holding organization.

Charter schools

In education, charter schools are becoming quite common.

Charter colony

A charter colony is a type of colony that was established by a group of settlers that received a charter.

Charter member

The term charter member refers to a person or group who was among those participating in the creation of any chartered organization.

Newsgroup charter

On Usenet, newsgroups in the Big-8 and some other hierarchies must have a newsgroup charter spelling out the purpose of the newsgroup, what constitutes on-topic discussion, and whether or not the newsgroup is moderated.

See also