There are five extant English law codes from the sixth to the ninth century but, despite Mercia's having been an independent polity in the period, none are Mercian. Three seventh century Kentish royal law codes survive in a single twelfth century manuscript and two West-Saxon law codes survive elsewhere. The early English legal record is, therefore, thin and there are no extant law codes from the major Anglo-Saxon kingdoms of Northumbria, East Anglia, or Mercia. As such, this article discusses possible answers to two questions: what Mercian law was and whether a Mercian law code ever existed.  
Title in English: Development of the English law between the 7th and 10th century on the example of ...
This article investigates two controversies that reveal the deeply intertwined nature of legal strat...
In the wide and growing world of Anglo-Saxon scholarship, wergild has an at once ubiquitous and spec...
The total hidage of land in the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of the Hwicce at its greatest extent appears to ...
This article explores the development of treasure law in England and Scotland, tracing its evolution...
Professor Cooley\u27s contribution to a popular dictionary describes the legal history and law cod...
There are suggestions that King Alfred’s legendary literary renaissance may have been a reaction to ...
The early common law produced a rich literature. This article examines two of the most popular legal...
Manor courts held by landlords for their tenants and other local people existed in their thousands a...
There are suggestions that King Alfred’s legendary literary renaissance may have been a reaction to ...
This article responds to Lord Gill's speech given to the Judicial Institute on 14 July 2016, concern...
This paper will consider the medieval lex mercatoria (Law Merchant) as a set of autonomous commercia...
This thesis examines the production of written law in Anglo-Saxon England by asking some basic quest...
This article offers a systematic analysis of the earliest uses in charters of the Anglo?Saxon vernac...
An article on early English legal history and customary law by Professor Derek Roebuck (Associate Se...
Title in English: Development of the English law between the 7th and 10th century on the example of ...
This article investigates two controversies that reveal the deeply intertwined nature of legal strat...
In the wide and growing world of Anglo-Saxon scholarship, wergild has an at once ubiquitous and spec...
The total hidage of land in the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of the Hwicce at its greatest extent appears to ...
This article explores the development of treasure law in England and Scotland, tracing its evolution...
Professor Cooley\u27s contribution to a popular dictionary describes the legal history and law cod...
There are suggestions that King Alfred’s legendary literary renaissance may have been a reaction to ...
The early common law produced a rich literature. This article examines two of the most popular legal...
Manor courts held by landlords for their tenants and other local people existed in their thousands a...
There are suggestions that King Alfred’s legendary literary renaissance may have been a reaction to ...
This article responds to Lord Gill's speech given to the Judicial Institute on 14 July 2016, concern...
This paper will consider the medieval lex mercatoria (Law Merchant) as a set of autonomous commercia...
This thesis examines the production of written law in Anglo-Saxon England by asking some basic quest...
This article offers a systematic analysis of the earliest uses in charters of the Anglo?Saxon vernac...
An article on early English legal history and customary law by Professor Derek Roebuck (Associate Se...
Title in English: Development of the English law between the 7th and 10th century on the example of ...
This article investigates two controversies that reveal the deeply intertwined nature of legal strat...
In the wide and growing world of Anglo-Saxon scholarship, wergild has an at once ubiquitous and spec...