An Introduction to Early
English Law
Bill Griffiths
Much of Anglo-Saxon life followed a traditional pattern, of custom,
and of dependence on kin-groups for land, support and security. The
Viking incursions of the ninth century and the re-conquest of the north
that followed both disturbed this pattern and led to a new emphasis
on centralised power and law, with royal and ecclesiastical officials
prominent as arbitrators and settlers of disputes.
The diversity and development of early English law is sampled here by
selecting several law-codes to be read in translation - that of Ethelbert
of Kent, being the first to be issued in England, Alfred the Great's,
the most clearly thought-out of all, and short codes from the reigns
of Edmund and Ethelred the Unready.
5 96 pages
