This would be the two documents presented to William and Mary, one each by the English and Scottish Parliaments before they were allowed to take the thrones of those countries. These are called "The Bill of Rights 1689" and "Claim of Right Act 1689" respectively. They limit the power of the Crown vs Parliament in each country and layout several then new political principles, including things like forbidding "cruel and unusual punishments".
Many of the ideas and sometimes whole sentences or paragraphs made it into the US equivalent.
The Virgina Declaration of Rights
The Virgina Declaration of Rights
The Document containing the first 10 Amendments to the Constitution of the United States is the Bill of Rights.
The Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen was written by the National Assembly of France in 1789. It was heavily influenced by the American Declaration of Independence, which served as a model for articulating individual rights and liberties. The American document's emphasis on equality and freedom greatly inspired the French revolutionaries in their quest for democratic ideals.
1689. It served as a model for the US Bill of Rights.
Virginia's Declaration of Rights was the example used to draft the United States first Bill of Rights. George Mason drafted this early Virginia document.
The English Bill of Rights ratified in 1689.
The Virginia Declaration of Rights, written by George Mason in 1776, is the document that states that all Virginians have certain rights including freedom of religion and freedom of speech. It served as a model for the later United States Bill of Rights.
The first state to include a bill of rights in its state constitution was Virginia, adopting it in 1776. The four main components of the Virginia Bill of Rights include the affirmation of natural rights, the principle of popular sovereignty, the separation of powers, and the guarantee of freedom of the press and religion. This document served as a model for later state constitutions and the U.S. Bill of Rights.
As passed, the Virginia Declaration was largely the work of George Mason; the committee and the Convention made some verbal changes and added Sections 10 and 14. This declaration served as a model for bills of rights in several other state constitutions and was a source of the French Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, though its degree of influence upon the latter document is a highly controversial question.
The Virginia Declaration of Rights was a model for the Bill of Rights.
Many political scientists and historians claim that the US Constitution has served as a model for many new governments that were established from the early part of the twentieth century onwards. This does not infer that all new governments are republics like the United States. What has happened is that the rights of citizens guaranteed in the US Constitution, such as freedom of speech, became part of the government structures that were parliamentary in structure, as well as those governments that are republics.