The recognition that man as such, irrespective of persons, without distinction as to race, sex, language or religion, has the right to live in circumstances in which his humanity can develop, has a long history.
In our civilization the rights of man have been wrested from authority in the national sphere by a gradual process. Magna Charta formulated as universal human rights certain rights to freedom, but at that time the liber homo, who was supposed to have a claim to these rights, was only the human being who belonged to a small group of “lords temporal and spiritual”. In the Déclaration des droits de l'homme et du citoyen, it was rather the rights of the “citoyen” than of man as such that were formulated: it was mainly a matter here of the rights to freedom of the bourgeois citizen. There was a gradual development in the law systems of the West European countries of the universal rights of man, as they were expressed, both in our country and elsewhere, in universal suffrage. In Russia the recognition of the human rights was achieved by revolution with the Declaration of the toiling and exploited masses, in which the human position of the dispossessed was strikinglyformulated. Thus it was by different ways that not merely the nobleman and the bourgeois, but every one came be regarded as a full human being.