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The use of this so-called "constitution of Medina" is purely modern and has no historical usage at all. Originally, the document referred to was called a "treaty". It was not even called a charter until the 20th century. It has never been called a "constitution" by any English-speaking historian ever so far as I am aware.
The first "constitution" was the Britannic Constitution created by the Coronation Oath Act in 1689 after the Glorious Revolution. The origin of the term can be found in the first paragraph of the act:
In the wake of this deal between the English parliament and the Dutch stadtholder William, a number of English legal theorists devised a body of supposed law and "rights" which they termed the Britannic Constitution, which was essentially the creation of the idea of a "constitutional monarchy". When the American colonies of Britain revolted they devised their own articles of state which they likewise called a "Constitution" and subsequently also devised a "Bill of Rights" named after those articles which were already established by English parliamentary law and theory.
Since that time, innumerable countries have fashioned "constitutions" in imitation of that of the United States.
To call old bodies of laws like Hammurabi's Code "constitutions" would be anachronistic.
Upvote:1
I believe the Instrument of Government for Commonwealth of Britain, Scotland, and Ireland that established the Protectorate of Oliver Cromwell is the first example of a document that relatively comprehensively sets forth the structure and powers of government for a Nation State. I'm willing to accept San Marino, although it's hard to consider it a nation state. And we should never forget the written Constitution of the Republic of Corsica, which is a clear forerunner to the US Constitution.
Upvote:5
The idea of a written Constitution dates back to Antiquity. Aristotle himself devoted an entire treatise to "The Constitution of Athens" and had also meticulously studied various written Constitutions throughout the Hellenic world, but also included other neighboring cultures, such as Carthage.
The Athenian Constitution's earliest origins may date to Solon-(circa 600 BC/BCE) and Sparta's Constitution dates to Lycurgus-(though I don't have the approximate date).
The Carthaginian Constitution may predate both the Athenian and Spartan Constitutions, though I don't have the exact date.