1. The Bill of Rights, or An Act Declaring the Rights and Liberties of the Subject and Setting the Succession of the Crown, is an important legal document in the British bourgeois revolution, but it is not the Constitution.
2. It has laid the theoretical and legal foundation of the British constitutional monarchy, established the principle that the power of parliament is higher than that of the monarchy, marking the beginning of the establishment of constitutional monarchy in Britain, and together with the Law of Succession to the Throne, marking the end of the British bourgeois revolution, clearing the way for the rapid development of British capitalism.