Nordic Laws

By the end of the Viking Age, the Nordic region was divided between three kingdoms, all of which still exist in the early twenty-first century, albeit with very different borders, and Iceland. In Scandinavia, if we exclude the Sami language, a single vernacular language was spoken during the Early a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sigurdsson, Jon Vidar, Vogt, Helle
Format: Book Part
Language:unknown
Published: Oxford University Press 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/obo/9780195396584-0320
id croxfordunivpr:10.1093/obo/9780195396584-0320
record_format openpolar
spelling croxfordunivpr:10.1093/obo/9780195396584-0320 2023-08-20T04:07:22+02:00 Nordic Laws Sigurdsson, Jon Vidar Vogt, Helle 2023 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/obo/9780195396584-0320 unknown Oxford University Press Medieval Studies ISBN 9780195396584 reference-entry 2023 croxfordunivpr https://doi.org/10.1093/obo/9780195396584-0320 2023-07-28T11:00:03Z By the end of the Viking Age, the Nordic region was divided between three kingdoms, all of which still exist in the early twenty-first century, albeit with very different borders, and Iceland. In Scandinavia, if we exclude the Sami language, a single vernacular language was spoken during the Early and the High Middle Ages: the so-called dönsk tunga or Danish tongue. The English word law originates from the Old Norse noun lög, plural lag. Lög also refers to a region, that is a territory united by the laws. Gulaþingslög, for example, covered the west coast and interior of Norway. In Scandinavia, there were probably about fifteen larger regional administrative regional law assemblies (lögþing) by the end of the Viking Age, with as many different laws. Denmark was unified before the Viking Age and had three lögþing. Denmark’s first national law was enacted in 1683. Sweden was unified in the twelfth century, but the eight/nine provinces kept their own laws until the middle of the fourteenth century, when they were replaced with a national law for the entire kingdom. Norway was unified in the eleventh century. Its four law regions gained a common law in 1274. The national law had to be accepted at the regional law assemblies, and were therefore called Gulathing Law, etc. According to Íslendingabók, written c. 1125, the first laws in Iceland, from c. 930, were modeled on the Gulathing Law. These laws, Grágás, were the law of the Free State, c. 930–1262/64. Between 1262 and 1264, Iceland became a tributary land under the king of Norway, and received two new law books, Járnsíða in 1271 and Jónsbók in 1281, the latter based on the Norwegian national law. The Swedish provincial laws were enhanced with local church law, which were local collections of canon law that covered local matters such as the church building and the support of the priest. The provincial laws in Norway also included church laws, however not the Norwegian national law. The situation was similar in Iceland: Grágás contain church laws, whereas Járnsíða ... Book Part Iceland sami Oxford University Press (via Crossref) Norway Tunga ENVELOPE(8.683,8.683,62.698,62.698)
institution Open Polar
collection Oxford University Press (via Crossref)
op_collection_id croxfordunivpr
language unknown
description By the end of the Viking Age, the Nordic region was divided between three kingdoms, all of which still exist in the early twenty-first century, albeit with very different borders, and Iceland. In Scandinavia, if we exclude the Sami language, a single vernacular language was spoken during the Early and the High Middle Ages: the so-called dönsk tunga or Danish tongue. The English word law originates from the Old Norse noun lög, plural lag. Lög also refers to a region, that is a territory united by the laws. Gulaþingslög, for example, covered the west coast and interior of Norway. In Scandinavia, there were probably about fifteen larger regional administrative regional law assemblies (lögþing) by the end of the Viking Age, with as many different laws. Denmark was unified before the Viking Age and had three lögþing. Denmark’s first national law was enacted in 1683. Sweden was unified in the twelfth century, but the eight/nine provinces kept their own laws until the middle of the fourteenth century, when they were replaced with a national law for the entire kingdom. Norway was unified in the eleventh century. Its four law regions gained a common law in 1274. The national law had to be accepted at the regional law assemblies, and were therefore called Gulathing Law, etc. According to Íslendingabók, written c. 1125, the first laws in Iceland, from c. 930, were modeled on the Gulathing Law. These laws, Grágás, were the law of the Free State, c. 930–1262/64. Between 1262 and 1264, Iceland became a tributary land under the king of Norway, and received two new law books, Járnsíða in 1271 and Jónsbók in 1281, the latter based on the Norwegian national law. The Swedish provincial laws were enhanced with local church law, which were local collections of canon law that covered local matters such as the church building and the support of the priest. The provincial laws in Norway also included church laws, however not the Norwegian national law. The situation was similar in Iceland: Grágás contain church laws, whereas Járnsíða ...
format Book Part
author Sigurdsson, Jon Vidar
Vogt, Helle
spellingShingle Sigurdsson, Jon Vidar
Vogt, Helle
Nordic Laws
author_facet Sigurdsson, Jon Vidar
Vogt, Helle
author_sort Sigurdsson, Jon Vidar
title Nordic Laws
title_short Nordic Laws
title_full Nordic Laws
title_fullStr Nordic Laws
title_full_unstemmed Nordic Laws
title_sort nordic laws
publisher Oxford University Press
publishDate 2023
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/obo/9780195396584-0320
long_lat ENVELOPE(8.683,8.683,62.698,62.698)
geographic Norway
Tunga
geographic_facet Norway
Tunga
genre Iceland
sami
genre_facet Iceland
sami
op_source Medieval Studies
ISBN 9780195396584
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1093/obo/9780195396584-0320
_version_ 1774718968091639808