The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although you did not include the options for this question, we can answer the following.
During the rule of King Edward I, the document that provided parliament with the final say on levying taxes was the Confirmation of Charters.
This was an important document in the times of King Edward I of England. The Confirmation of Charters was issued in 1297 and was added to Magna Carta. It was a document that the King wanted to create with comments that could not be added to the original Magna Carta. King Edward considered that a new document was needed to negotiate some issues with the English noble barons.
He did not approve of slavery, he just didn't know how to end it
Samuel Johnson: Lexicographer
Adam Smith: Philosopher
Samuel Pepys: Diarist
Oliver Cromwell: Political leader
Details:
Samuel Johnson (1709-1784) published <em>A Dictionary of the English Language </em>in 1755, after many years of work on the project. It was the most commonly used English dictionary until the <em>Oxford English Dictionary </em>was first published in 1928.
Adam Smith (1723-1790) is best known for his economic theories, published in <em>An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations </em>(1776). However, he also is well respected in the philosophical field of ethics, with his notable work in that area being <em>The Theory of Moral Sentiments </em>(1759).
Samuel Pepys (1633-1703) was an administrator for the English navy and a member of Parliament. He is most famous, though, for a lengthy diary he kept for ten years of his life which provided thought and comments on events occurring at his time in history.
Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658) was the leader of Parliament's movement against King Charles I, and the military leader against the king's forces in the English Civil War. He went on to run the Commonwealth of England after the king was deposed and executed. He later took up the title of Lord Protector of England.