wergild การใช้
- The Danish king Hrothgar paid the wergild and had Ecgow swear an oath.
- The core of the group is made up by a number of texts on wergild.
- I think the explanation of what " wergild " was needs to be a little clearer.
- Eysteinn offered Eric as much of Uppsala 鰀 as he wanted, and Borghild, in wergild for Agnar.
- He went to Dane-Land; HrM餲r paid the wergild, and Ecgow swore oaths of friendship to him.
- The'wergild'set a monetary value on each person's life according to their wealth and social status.
- Hro餲ar may have been able to use his family ties to persuade the Wulfings to accept the wergild and end the feud.
- As the W鎔mundings would not or could not pay the expected wergild, Ecgtheow was banished and sought refuge among the Danes.
- The theft provisions of the code allow the killing of thieves caught in the act, without the need to pay wergild.
- Payment to the victim ( or their family ), known as wergild, was another common punishment, including for violent crimes.
- Asking for peace and wergild, Ivar the Boneless tricked 苐la into giving him an area large enough to build the town of York.
- In order to quench the family feud which this kinslaying would have provoked, Ecgberht agreed to pay a wergild for the murdered princelings.
- If he has only 1 hide and cannot pay the tribute, his wergild was 80 shillings and then 70 if he was landless yet free.
- Either Ecg?ow's people could not pay a wergild, or the Wulfings refused to accept it from them; so Ecgow had to leave home.
- Early legislation also directed people to pay specific sums of money, called wergild, as compensation for actions that resulted in someone else's death.
- Ivar, however, stays in England and asks 苐la for wergild, claiming that he can not go home without some compensation to show his brothers.
- He demanded, and received, the payment of " eraic ", a term in early Irish law corresponding approximately with Anglo-Saxon wergild.
- He then humiliated the Saxon aristocracy by enacting a law that the killing of one of them would be no more costly in wergild than the killing of a commoner.
- One of the Germanic ways of resolving a blood feud was either to pay a wergild ( Anglo-Saxon, " man-price " ) or to be banished.
- This caused Hunding's sons Eyj髄fr, 羖fr, Hj鰎var餽 and H醰ar餽 to approach Helgi asking for wergild and the return of the booty Helgi had taken from their father.
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