[32]. Pollock and Maitland, Hist. i. 476 and ii. 451, ed. of 1898.
[33]. J. Thrupp, Anglo-Saxon Home, p. 145.
[34]. G. G. Coulton, Chaucer and His England, p. 293. London, 1908.
[35]. Pollock and Maitland, i. 478, ii. 450.
[36]. And see Early Assize Rolls for the County of Northumberland, pp. xviii., xix., etc. Durham, Surtees Society, 1891.
[37]. Stubbs, Const. Hist. p. 89.
[38]. Dooms of Alfred, sect. 24. “If any one steal another’s ox and slay or sell it, let him give two for it, and four sheep for one. If he have not what he may give be he himself sold for the cattle.”—Thorpe, Laws, fol. ed. p. 23. Compare Exodus xxii. 3; Pollock and Maitland, Hist., ed. 1895, vol. ii. 514.
[39]. Pollock and Maitland, ii. p. 11.
[40]. The intertribal wars at one time “filled the foreign markets with English slaves,” says J. R. Green, relating the well-known story of Pope Gregory.—Hist. Eng. People, i. 37. London, 1881.
[41]. Hovenden. H. T. Riley’s ed. i. p. 143. London, 1853.