Word of the Day

: January 17, 2010

Danelaw

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noun DAYN-law

What It Means

1 : the law in force in the part of England held by the Danes before the Norman Conquest

2 : the part of England under the Danelaw

Danelaw in Context

In the 11th and 12th centuries, the Danelaw between the Rivers Tees and Thames was governed much differently than areas to the south and west.


Did You Know?

When the Vikings invaded the east coast of England in the late 800s, their conquests reached as far as the southern kingdom of Wessex, where they were halted by the army of Alfred the Great. The invaders, many of whom were Danish, retreated back north and east to the lands they had conquered, and settled there. This region -- stretching from Essex, just above London, through East Anglia and the eastern Midlands, all the way up to Northumbria -- was distinguished from the surrounding territory by its unique legal practices, which, because they were decidedly Danish in influence, made up what Old English folks down south called the "Dena lagu" or, in today's English, the "Danes' law." Historians later applied the term "Danelaw" not only to the legal system of the region but to that geographical area itself.




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