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A friwif locbore revisited

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 September 2008

Christine Fell
Affiliation:
The University of Nottingham

Extract

Chapter 73 of the laws ‘þe Æðelbirht cyning asette on Agustinus dæge’ reads ‘Gif friwif locbore leswæs hwæt gedeþ, xxx sell' gebete.’ The sole manuscript evidence for the laws of Æthelberht is in the early-twelfth-century Textus Roffensis; since this is so late, the manuscript word division is not necessarily significant. For what it is worth, two of the three crucial words are written locbore and les wæs, but it is not absolutely clear whether friwif is intended as one word or two. The elements are divided by the smallest of spaces. Friwif and locbore do not occur elsewhere in the laws; les wæs occurs also at Æthelberht, ch. 3, written lyswæs. Comparatively recent texts and translations can be found in editions of the Anglo-Saxon laws by Thorpe, Liebermann and Attenborough, and, translation only, in Dorothy Whitelock's English Historical Documents (probably the most widely used and certainly the most readily accessible of the four). The earliest of these editors, Thorpe, avoids the difficulties by leaving certain problematical words in the original: ‘If a free-woman loc-bore commit any leswe let her make a bot of xxx shillings.’ Liebermann offers: ‘Wenn eine Freie, eine Lockenträgerin, etwas Unzüchtiges thut, büsse [ihr Schander ihrem Vormunde] 30 Schll’, where, as Attenborough subsequently and charmingly explains, ‘Liebermann understands as the subject of gebete not the woman, but the man with whom she misconducts herself.’ Attenborough's own translation agrees grammatically with Thorpe's: ‘If a freeborn woman, with long hair, misconducts herself, she shall pay 30 shillings as compensation.’ Whitelock has a minor variant: ‘If a freewoman, with long hair, commits any misconduct, she is to pay 30 shillings compensation.’

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1984

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References

1 Ker, N. R., Catalogue of Manuscripts Containing Anglo-Saxon (Oxford, 1957)Google Scholar, no. 373.

2 Friwif is obviously particularly difficult to check since any editor or dictionary might assume an occurrence of it to be adjective plus noun. But in so far as I have been able to ascertain from A Microfiche Concordance to Old English, ed. Healey, Antonette diPaolo and Venezky, Richard L. (Toronto, 1980)Google Scholar, the combination does not occur.

3 Thorpe, B., Ancient Laws and Institutes of England (London, 1840) 1, 20Google Scholar; Die Gesetze der Angelsächsen, ed. Liebermann, F. (Halle, 19031916) 1, 7Google Scholar; The Laws of the Earliest English Kings, ed. Attenborough, F. L. (Cambridge, 1922), p. 14Google Scholar; and English Historical Documents c. 500–1042, ed. Whitelock, Dorothy, 2nd ed. (London, 1979), p. 393Google Scholar. I have not found any fundamental disagreements about the translation, or substantial additional information, in any other edition of the laws.

4 Stenton, F. M., ‘The Historical Bearing of Place-Name Studies: the Place of Women in Anglo-Saxon Society’, TRHS 4th ser. 25 (1943), 113.Google Scholar

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11 Exeter Book, ed. Krapp and Dobbie, p. 186 (no. 12), and Old English Riddles, ed. Williamson, p. 74 (no. 10).

12 Exeter Book, ed. Krapp and Dobbie, p. 3, line 19.

13 Ibid. p. 134, lines 13–14.

14 Ibid. p. 224, line 3. In my first version of this paper I had a further paragraph on the interesting compound locweard, before I realized that this was an invention of the Microfiche Concordance, where it has replaced the manuscript reading lecweard.

15 Caeghiorde glosses clavicularius in Cambridge, Corpus Christi College 144, 17r: see Lindsay, W. M., The Corpus Glossary (Cambridge, 1921), p. 41.Google Scholar The word is omitted from the Microfiche Concordance.

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19 The Vercelli Book, ed. Krapp, G. P., The Anglo-Saxon Poetic Records 2 (New York, 1932), 37Google Scholar, line 1220.

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23 I am very grateful to Simon Keynes, Alan Prichard, Leslie Webster and Patrick Wormald for reading this through and advising me on various matters.