Treason The act created four new kinds of
high treason, in addition to those already existing. The act made it
treason to: or, within the realm or without, compass, imagine, invent, devise or intend: • to deprive the King of his crown, or • to levy war against the King, "within
this realm, or without", or • to "move or stir" any foreigner to invade England or any other country belonging to the King (this latter clause was derived from the
Rump Parliament's
Treasons Act 1649, which had been declared void in 1660). These provisions were expressed only to have effect during the lifetime of the King,
Charles II. However they were temporarily re-enacted, with two modifications, by the
Treason Act 1795 (
36 Geo. 3. c. 7), and then made permanent by the
Treason Act 1817 (
57 Geo. 3. c. 6), both under
George III. In the 1795 version, "the realm" meant
Great Britain (in 1848 the act was extended to cover
Ireland), and levying war against the King was only an offence under the act if done in order to compel the King to change his policies or to "intimidate or overawe" Parliament. (However under the
Treason Act 1351 (
25 Edw. 3 Stat. 5. c. 2), which was not affected, levying war against the King was still treason, without these additional criteria.) The difference between the Treason Act 1351 and the acts of 1661 and 1795 was that while the 1351 act required an actual levying of war, the later acts also made it treason to "compass, imagine, invent, devise, or intend" a levying of war. The
penalty for treason was death. However, the last three treasons on the above list were reduced to
felonies by the
Treason Felony Act 1848 (
11 & 12 Vict. c. 12)), which made the maximum sentence
life imprisonment. The 1848 act is still in force. Imprisoning or otherwise harming the Sovereign continued to be high treason, punishable by death, until the 1795 act was repealed by the
Crime and Disorder Act 1998. Assaulting the Sovereign is still an offence under the
Treason Act 1842, which carries a maximum sentence of seven years. In some
Commonwealth of Nations countries, such as
Canada,
Australia and
New Zealand it is still
treason to imprison or harm the King.
Other offences Besides treason, the 1661 act created other offences designed to protect the national security. These offences required the evidence of two witnesses or a confession, and had to be prosecuted within six months of the offence being committed. The king had to personally authorise a prosecution. Anyone who in speech or writing called the King a
heretic or
papist, or who incited "hatred or dislike of the Person of His Majestie or the established Government" was to be disqualified from holding any public, military or ecclesiastical office (but could keep his
peerage). This measure was expressed only to last during the King's lifetime. A permanent offence (until it was repealed) was committed by any person who claimed (in writing or in speech) that the
Long Parliament had not been
dissolved, or that anyone had a duty to obey an
oath to change the government, or that Parliament could legislate without the
king's assent. == Other provisions ==