Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ancient_Germanic_law> ?p ?o }
- Ancient_Germanic_law abstract "Several Latin law codes of the Germanic peoples written in the Early Middle Ages (also known as leges barbarorum \"laws of the barbarians\") survive, dating to between the 5th and 9th centuries. They are influenced by Roman law, ecclesiastical law, and earlier tribal customs.Germanic law was codified in writing under the influence of Roman law; previously it was held in the memory of designated individuals who acted as judges in confrontations and meted out justice according to customary rote, based on careful memorization of precedent. Among the Franks they were called rachimburgs. \"Living libraries, they were law incarnate, unpredictable and terrifying.\" When justice is oral, the judicial act is personal and subjective. Power, whose origins were at once magical, divine and military, as Michel Rouche has pointed out, was exercised jointly by the \"throne-worthy\" elected king and his free warrior companions. Oral law sufficed as long as the warband was not settled in one place. Germanic law made no provisions for the public welfare, the res publica of Romans.The language of all these continental codes was Latin; the only known codes drawn up in any Germanic language were the Anglo-Saxon laws, beginning with the Laws of Æthelberht (7th century). In the 13th century customary Saxon law was codified in the vernacular as the Sachsenspiegel.All these laws may be described in general as codes of governmental procedure and tariffs of compositions. They all present somewhat similar features with Salic law, the best-known example, but often differ from it in the date of compilation, the amounts of fines, the number and nature of the crimes, the number, rank, duties and titles of the officers, etc.In Germanic Europe in the Early Middle Ages, every man was tried according to the laws of his own race, whether Roman, Salian or Ripuarian Frank, Frisian, Burgundian, Visigoth, Bavarian etc.A number of separate codes were drawn up specifically to deal with cases between ethnic Romans. These codes differed from the normal ones that covered cases between Germanic peoples, or between Germanic people and Romans. The most notable of these are the Lex Romana Visigothorum or Breviary of Alaric (506), the Lex Romana Curiensis and the Lex Romana Burgundionum.".
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageExternalLink Ak.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageExternalLink lex.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageExternalLink eml.htm.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageID "30865179".
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageLength "38519".
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageOutDegree "229".
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageRevisionID "699771016".
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Adat.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Afghanistan.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Aistulf.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Alaric_II.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Alemanni.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Alsace.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Rome.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Angles.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Anglo-Saxon_law.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Aqsaqal.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Arab_world.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Arianism.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Australia.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Bavaria.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Bavarians.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Bishop.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Bog_body.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Breviary_of_Alaric.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Burgundians.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Canon_law.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Capital_punishment.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Carloman_(mayor_of_the_palace).
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Category:Customary_legal_systems.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Category:Germanic_legal_codes.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Category:Medieval_law.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Category:Migration_Period.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Central_Asia.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Charlemagne.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Charles_Martel.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Child_murder.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Chindasuinth.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Christian.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Christianity.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Clergy.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Clovis_I.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Code_(law).
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Code_of_Euric.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Code_of_Leovigild.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Corpus_Juris_Civilis.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Coutume.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Cruentation.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Customary_law_in_Australia.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Dagobert_I.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Damages.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Diet_(assembly).
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Duchy.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Duchy_of_Benevento.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Duke.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Duke_of_Swabia.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Early_Irish_law.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Early_Middle_Ages.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Eberhard.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Edictum_Rothari.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Egica.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Engili.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink England.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Erwig.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Euric.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink France.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Frankish_language.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Franks.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Frederic_William_Maitland.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Frisia.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Frisians.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Friuli.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Gallo-Roman_culture.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Gascony.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink German_language.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Germania_(book).
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Germanic_kingship.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Germanic_languages.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Germanic_peoples.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Gothic_language.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Goths.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Grimoald,_King_of_the_Lombards.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Gundobad.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Hanging.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Hispania.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Huns.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Iberian_Peninsula.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Incest.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink India.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Ireland.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Italy.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Jirga.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Kent.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Kingdom_of_Naples.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Kingdom_of_the_Lombards.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Kinship.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Lake_Constance.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Lantfrid.
- Ancient_Germanic_law wikiPageWikiLink Latin.