The title Leges Edwardi Confessoris "Laws of Edward the Confessor" refers to an early twelfth-century English collection of 39 laws (c. 1140).
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The text’s own promises are both false and misleading. The prelude spuriously asserts that four years after the Conquest (1070), King William summoned twelve learned English noblemen from every shire to declare, under oath, the laws and customs of the nation in the time of King Edward the Confessor. No such event is known to have occurred. The anonymous author purports to record the Laga Eadwardi, or laws promulgated by King Edward, but Anglo-Saxon laws were last codified in Cnut's day. In fact, he does not display any first-hand knowledge of Anglo-Saxon law, which is neither cited or given in summary (unlike for instance, the Leges Henrici primi).
The value of the compilation for our understanding of English law, both before and after the Conquest, needs to be sought elsewhere. The most recent editor, Bruce O'Brien, argues that what the work offers instead are "apparently original observations of and comments on the English law of the author's day." [1] The primary concerns of the text lay with the king's peace and the peace of the Holy Church, especially in the North Midlands and Yorkshire region bordering on the Danelaw. Although the emphasis is on common law, the same text shows that there were regional differences.
Article 12 presents a number of specific situations under which the king’s protection or peace (mund in Old English codes) could be established:
Other points of interest include references to the wapentake, the reeve of the riding, Peter's Pence, murder fines (murdrum), consciousness about England’s Saxon heritage, and the legal position of Jews in England.
Aided by the Confessor’s legendary status as lawgiver, the compilation enjoyed considerable interest in medieval England. The text is found in a large number of manuscripts. Four recensions have been distinguished, two of which are revisions with additional material being grafted on to the core of the text.
A version of the Leges Edwardi Confessoris was known to Henry de Bracton and to the barons and jurists responsible for the Magna Carta.