The Laws of the Earliest English Kings

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University Press, 1922 - Law - 256 pages
 

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Page 85 - ... 42.7. And a man may fight without incurring a vendetta if he finds another man with his wedded wife, within closed doors or under the same blanket, or with his legitimate daughter or his legitimate sister, or with his mother who was given as a lawful wife to his father.
Page 99 - First concerning our boundaries : up the Thames, and then up the Lea, and along the Lea to its source, then in a straight line to Bedford, then up the Ouse to the Watling Street.
Page 15 - ... much of the spirit of affectionate romance. The men, however, cannot be called mercenary suitors, as they appear to have been the paymasters. These contracts give occasion to the Saxon legislators to express the fact of treating for a marriage by the terms of buying a wife. Hence our oldest law says, if a man buys a maiden, the bargain shall stand if there be no deceit; otherwise, she should be restored to her home, and his money shall be returned to him.
Page vii - I have to thank the Syndics of the University Press for undertaking the publication of the book and the staff for the efficient and obliging way in which the printing and corrections have been carried out. HMC December, 1911. CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE I. THE EARLY NARRATIVE POETRY OF THE TEUTONIC PEOPLES I II.
Page 63 - ... and have given orders for copies to be made of many of those which our predecessors observed and which I myself approved of. But many of those I did not approve of I have annulled, by the advice of my councillors, while [in other cases] I have ordered changes to be introduced.
Page 85 - up the Severn valley and across the Midlands. They repaired the 1 How slowly the law got the strength to replace the blood-feud and to bring the accused into court otherwise than by the force of arms of the aggrieved party, we are reminded by Alfred's laws, eg ' If anyone chances to meet his enemy, not having known him to be at home, and if he will give up his weapons, he shall be detained 30 days and his kinsmen informed. If he will not give up his weapons, then he may be attacked.
Page 8 - Qui inter cetera bona, quae genti suae consulendo conferebat, etiam decreta illi iudiciorum, iuxta exempla Romanorum, cum consilio sapientium constituit; quae conscripta Anglorum sermone hactenus habentur et obseruantur ab ea. In quibus primitus posuit, qualiter id emendare deberet, qui aliquid rerum uel ecclesiae uel episcopi uel reliquorum ordinum furto auferret: uolens scilicet tuitionem eis, quos et quorum doctrinam susceperat, praestare.
Page 135 - Canterbury [there are to be] seven moneyers ; four of the king, two of the bishop, one of the abbot ; in Rochester three, two of the king, one of the bishop ; in London eight ; in Winchester six ; in Lewes two ; in Hastings one ; another at Chichester ; at Southampton two ; at Wareham two ; [at Dorchester one] ;8 at Exeter two ; at Shaftesbury two ; otherwise in the other boroughs one.
Page 73 - ... 18. If anyone lustfully seizes a nun, either by her clothes or by her breast, without her permission, he shall pay as compensation twice the sum we have fixed in the case of a woman belonging to the laity. § 1. If a young woman who is betrothed commits fornication, she shall pay compensation to the amount of 60 shillings to the surety1 [of the marriage], if she is a commoner.
Page 59 - ... ambers of Welsh ale, 30 of clear ale, 2 full-grown cows or 10 wethers, 10 geese, 20 hens, 10 cheeses, an amber full of butter, 5 salmon, 20 pounds of fodder and 100 eels.

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