Guta Lag and Guta Saga : the law and history of the Gotlanders
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Bibliographic Information
Guta Lag and Guta Saga : the law and history of the Gotlanders
(Routledge medieval translations, . Medieval Nordic laws / series editors,
Routledge, 2019, c2015
- : pbk
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Note
First published in hardback, 2015
"The book is an amalgamation of two works previously published in the Viking Society for Northern Research Text series. These publications were editions of an MPhil thesis (Guta saga: the History of the Gotlanders) and a PhD thesis (Guta lag: the Law of the Gotlanders) submitted to University College London in 1998 and 2006, respectively"--Foreword
Includes bibliographical references (p. 316-334)
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Guta Lag, the law of the independent island of Gotland, is one of the earliest laws of Scandinavia. The historical appendix to the law, Guta Saga, was written in the thirteenth or fourteenth century. Together, Guta Lag and its accompanying Saga provide an invaluable insight into the lives of the people living on Gotland, the largest of Sweden's Baltic islands, in 1000-1400. Guta Lag and Guta Saga: The Law and History of the Gotlanders is the first time that these two important texts have been translated into English and combined in one edition, accompanied by an extensive commentary and historical contextualisation by Christine Peel.
In the Viking Age, the island of Gotland maintained its own law and administrative system. It was distinctive among Swedish provinces, retaining its own laws until 1645 while mainland provincial laws were all superseded by national law in the mid-fourteenth century. Preserved in eight manuscripts, it illustrates the everyday life and administrative system of the people of Gotland. Guta Saga tells the story of the island from its discovery by the legendary THieluar, who removed the enchantment upon it which led to its inhabitation. Read together, the texts provide a complete picture of an island unique among Scandinavian provinces, offering a rare view of everyday people in medieval Scandinavia.
This innovative and timely translation will be fascinating and essential reading for scholars of Scandinavian studies and legal history.
Table of Contents
List of Figures
Medieval Nordic Laws - A General Introduction by Stefan Brink and Ditlev Tamm
Foreword - Christine Peel
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Maps
Guta lag and Guta saga
General Introduction
Gotland's medieval historical background
Guta lag. The Law of the Gotlanders
Introduction to the Guta lag - its historical background and codicology
Preservation of Guta lag
Nature and content
The nature of Guta lag
Legal system as reflected by Guta lag
System of fines and non-monetary punishments
Oaths
Laws of inheritance
Origins
Date, place and circumstances of composition
Editions and translations of Guta lag
Previous editions
Translations
Criteria applied for the present translation
The Guta Lag - Translation
Additions
Comments to the Guta lag
Appendices
A Comparison of manuscript contents
B Chronology of historical events
C Monetary system
D Penalties exacted
E Oaths and witnesses required
Guta Saga. The History of the Gotlanders
Introduction to the Guta Saga
Historical background
Title
Preservation
Content
Oral and written sources
Date and place of composition
Authorship and circumstances of authorship
Value as a source of history
Language
Editions of Guta saga
The Guta Saga - Translation
Notes
Bibliography
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"