[1031] Cnut, II. 13, 77.
[1033] K. 1035 (v. 76). The charter is not beyond suspicion, but Kemble has received, and the editors of the Councils (H. & S. iii. 607) have refused to condemn it.
[1034] K. 1020 (v. 60); B. i. 409; H. & S. iii. 528.
[1035] See Brunner, Die Landschenkungen der Merowinger und der Agilolfinger, Forschungen, p. 6: ‘He who receives an order acquires in the insignia of the order which are delivered to him an ownership of an extremely attenuated kind. He can not give them away or sell them or let them out or give them in dowry. When he dies they go back to the giver.’ We are not aware of any English decision on such matters as these. In a charter for Winchester (B. ii. 238) Edward the Elder is represented as saying that the land that he gives to the church is never to be alienated. If, however, the monks must sell or exchange it, then they may return it ‘to that royal family by whom it was given to them.’
[1036] Brunner, Zur Rechtsgeschichte d. röm. u. germ. Urkunde, p. 190; Hist. Eng. Law, ii. 12.
[1037] See Brunner, Landschenkungen, Forschungen, p. 1. In this paper Dr Brunner appealed to our English law, in order that he might settle the famous controversy between Waitz and Roth as to the character of the gifts of land made by the Merovingians. On p. 5 he denies that our rule about ‘words of inheritance’ should be called feudal. Its starting point is the principle that the quality [an English lawyer would add—and the quantity also]of the ‘estate’ (Besitzrecht) can be determined by the donor’s words, by a lex donationis imposed by the donor on the land.
[1038] Brunner, Geschichte der Urkunde, p. 200.
[1039] Heming’s Cartulary, i. 259. ‘Post mortem autem eius, filius eius ... testamentum patris sui irritum faciens....’ Ibid. p. 263: ‘Brihtwinus ... eandem terram Deo et Sanctae Mariae obtulit, eundemque nepotem suum monachum fecit. Filius eius etiam, Brihtmarus nomine, pater ipsius iam dicti Edwini monachi, cum heres patris extitisset, ... ipsam ... villam monasterio dedit.’ Hist. Eng. Law, ii. 250.
[1040] Brunner, Forschungen, p. 22; Hist. Eng. Law, i. 292.