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Legal
Culture in the Early Medieval West
Patrick Wormald
The history of early medieval law is not
and cannot be the same as the history of legislation. Law-codes and edicts
in the post-Roman West were indeed statements of law. But they were a better
reflection of what kings and churchmen wished society to be than of what
society experienced. Up to a point, this is true of any legal system. But
the situation of the post-Roman West was unparalleled, in that a 'barbarian'
ruling-class, whose law had hitherto been unwritten, had taken over the
immortal legal heritage of the Roman Empire. Thus, the leges issued
by the Franks and Anglo-Saxons tended to be fosslised memorials of the
time when they were written, or else idealised versions of a social order
that was actually upheld at local level by traditional means.
Patrick Wormald's collected essays argue that
the values of sub-Roman society were at odds with the images cultivated
by the texts. At the same time, there is a risk that scepticism about the
relevance of the texts will encourage the view that early medieval law
never broke out of the constraints imposed by immemorial tradition and
elite consensus. Wormald's case is that, on the contrary, the same stimuli
as encouraged the writing down of law could also foster an aggressively
interventionist approach to social behaviour. Its effect was that at least
some western authorities had a much stronger sense of crime and punishment
by the twelfth century than they had had in the sixth. Among the realities
obscured by legal texts is the extent of legal change.
Based on a knowledge of early medieval legislation
built up over more than quarter of a century and now unequalled in the
English-speaking world, Wormald's essays seek to establish that legal history
is not just the history of law, nor even that of society, but also that
of elite and popular culture in complex and creative symbiosis. This collection
is therefore considerably more than a companion to his eagerly awaited
study of English law before the twelfth century, which will be published
by the same time. It will appeal to all interested in the institutions
and ideologies of the premodern world.
450 pages December 1998
1 85285 175 9 Cased £45.00
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