Leges Henrici Primi
12th-century Latin legal treatise / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Leges Henrici Primi or Laws of Henry I is a legal treatise, written in about 1115, that records the legal customs of medieval England in the reign of King Henry I of England. Although it is not an official document, it was written by someone apparently associated with the royal administration. It lists and explains the laws, and includes explanations of how to conduct legal proceedings. Although its title implies that these laws were issued by King Henry, it lists laws issued by earlier monarchs that were still in force in Henry's reign; the only law of Henry that is included is the coronation charter he issued at the start of his reign. It covers a diverse range of subjects, including ecclesiastical cases, treason, murder, theft, feuds, assessment of danegeld, and the amounts of judicial fines.
Leges Henrici Primi | |
---|---|
Laws of Henry I Leges Henrici | |
Author(s) | unknown |
Dedicated to | King Henry I of England |
Language | medieval Latin |
Date | c.ā1115 |
Manuscript(s) | 6 extant manuscripts plus 3 known lost manuscripts |
Rylands lat.155 c. 1201 (Rs) | |
Red Book of the Exchequer c. 1225 (Sc) | |
Hargrave MS 313 c. 1255 (Hg) | |
Cotton MS Claudius D.II c. 1310 (K) | |
Corpus Christi College 70 c. 1320 (Co) | |
Oriel College 46 c. 1330 (Or) | |
Principal manuscript(s) | K, Rs |
First printed edition | 1644 |
Genre | Legal text |
Subject | English laws and legal procedures |
The work survives in six manuscripts that range in date from about 1200 to around 1330, belonging to two different manuscript traditions. Besides the six surviving manuscripts, three others were known to scholars in the 17th and 18th centuries, but have not survived to the present day. Two other separate copies may also have existed. The complete work itself was first printed in 1644, but an earlier partial edition appeared in 1628. The Leges is the first legal treatise in English history, and has been credited with having greater effect on the views of English law before the reign of King Henry II than any other work of its kind.