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Welsh law - The laws of the court |  | Welsh law - The laws of the court: Encyclopedia II - Welsh law - The laws of the court |  | The first part of the laws deal with the rights and duties of the king and the officers of the king's court. The order of precedence is set down, first the king, then the queen and then the edling, the designated heir of the king. Then come the officers of the court, first the captain of the household troops, then the priest of the household, then the steward followed by the chief falconer, the court justice, the chief groom and the chamberlain and a ...
See also:Welsh law, Welsh law - Origins, Welsh law - Manuscripts, Welsh law - The laws of the court, Welsh law - The laws of the country, Welsh law - The justices' test book, Welsh law - Administration of the law, Welsh law - Welsh law and Welsh nationality, Welsh law - Welsh law after the Laws in Wales Acts, Welsh law - Notes |  | | Welsh law, Welsh law - Administration of the law, Welsh law - Manuscripts, Welsh law - Notes, Welsh law - Origins, Welsh law - The justices' test book, Welsh law - The laws of the country, Welsh law - The laws of the court, Welsh law - Welsh law after the Laws in Wales Acts, Welsh law - Welsh law and Welsh nationality |  | |
|  |  | Welsh law: Encyclopedia II - Welsh law - The laws of the court
Welsh law - The laws of the court
The first part of the laws deal with the rights and duties of the king and the officers of the king's court. The order of precedence is set down, first the king, then the queen and then the edling, the designated heir of the king. Then come the officers of the court, first the captain of the household troops, then the priest of the household, then the steward followed by the chief falconer, the court justice, the chief groom and the chamberlain and a list of other officers down to the royal laundress.
It introduces a number of legal terms. Sarhad could mean an insult or injury or the payment that was due to a person in the event of an insult or injury, and this varied according to the status of the person concerned, for example the queen's sarhad was one third that of the king. Galanas was the value of a person's life in the event of a homicide. Dirwy was a fine payable for crimes and camlwrw a smaller fine for less serious offences, while ebediw was a death duty payable to the deceased's lord.
Other related archives11th century, 1282, 1284, 12th century, 13th century, 16th century, 9th century, Bleddyn ap Cynfyn, Brehon Laws, Carmarthenshire, Deheubarth, Edward I of England, Gwynedd, Hywel Dda, Ireland, John Peckham, Laws in Wales Acts 1535-1542, Lichfield Gospels, Llywelyn the Great, Llywelyn the Last, Powys, Rhys ap Gruffydd, River Severn, River Wye, Statute of Rhuddlan, Wales, Welsh, Whitland, appanage, cantrefs, commotes, law
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "The laws of the court", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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