Crime and Punishment in Anglo-Saxon England
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:24th Sep '20
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The legal texts of pre-Conquest England give an unparalleled insight into Anglo-Saxon England's inhabitants at all levels of society.
The legal texts of pre-Conquest England reveal the capacities and limits of the king's regulatory power, and provide key evidence for the process by which disparate kingdoms merged to become a unified English state. They offer unparalleled insight into Anglo-Saxon England's diverse inhabitants – those who enforced the law and those subject to it.Arguably, more legal texts survive from pre-Conquest England than from any other early medieval European community. The corpus includes roughly seventy royal law-codes, to which can be added well over a thousand charters, writs, and wills, as well as numerous political tracts, formularies, rituals, and homilies derived from legal sources. These texts offer valuable insight into early English concepts of royal authority and political identity. They reveal both the capacities and limits of the king's regulatory power, and in so doing, provide crucial evidence for the process by which disparate kingdoms gradually merged to become a unified English state. More broadly, pre-Norman legal texts shed light on the various ways in which cultural norms were established, enforced, and, in many cases, challenged. And perhaps most importantly, they provide unparalleled insight into the experiences of Anglo-Saxon England's diverse inhabitants, both those who enforced the law and those subject to it.
ISBN: 9781108932035
Dimensions: 230mm x 150mm x 5mm
Weight: 134g
76 pages